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gluten-free In The Inland Empire, Southern California


trustyourguts

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trustyourguts Rookie

Hello all,

My name is Judith and I live in the IE in southern cal. I self diagnosed myself and my 2 kids recently.

I would like to meet someone else in the area who is gluten-free.

Judith


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VioletBlue Contributor

Hi Judith. I'm Violet. What part of IE are you in? I live up in Big Bear. Sort of IE. I'm single, 44, no kids. Diagnosed with a combination of blood tests, enterolab tests and medical history. I'm gluten free over two months now.

  • 4 years later...
bethwelsh Newbie

This is a super old post, but I thought I'd see if either of you still check in. I'm in San Bernardino. I've got one kid gluten free for behavior troubles that indicate a sensitivity, and a baby who may have celiac, but is too young to test. At the very least, he stopped spitting up/throwing up every day when I removed gluten from his diet.

I'm hoping to find some shared resources about great places to buy stuff, and maybe someone to share recipes with. Gluten free is so expensive that having several eyes to tell me where the deals are, and whom I can tell about great deals I've found (soy flour at henry's for $.79 a pound for example)would be so welcome.

-beth

  • 4 weeks later...
*Sara* Newbie

This is a super old post, but I thought I'd see if either of you still check in. I'm in San Bernardino. I've got one kid gluten free for behavior troubles that indicate a sensitivity, and a baby who may have celiac, but is too young to test. At the very least, he stopped spitting up/throwing up every day when I removed gluten from his diet.

I'm hoping to find some shared resources about great places to buy stuff, and maybe someone to share recipes with. Gluten free is so expensive that having several eyes to tell me where the deals are, and whom I can tell about great deals I've found (soy flour at henry's for $.79 a pound for example)would be so welcome.

-beth

Hi Beth,

I live in San Diego and just joined the forum tonight. I would love to exchange information. I was diagnosed over a year ago but just recently started a completely gluten free diet. I love Whole Foods, Trader Joe,s and Henry's for gluten free shopping. I am currently looking for a good gluten free bread machine.

sa1937 Community Regular

Hi Beth,

I live in San Diego and just joined the forum tonight. I would love to exchange information. I was diagnosed over a year ago but just recently started a completely gluten free diet. I love Whole Foods, Trader Joe,s and Henry's for gluten free shopping. I am currently looking for a good gluten free bread machine.

Welcome, Sara! You might want to google the forum for bread machines (check the upper right hand corner of your screen for the search button). There have been quite a few threads about bread machines. Personally I bought KitchenAid stand mixer instead thinking it would be more versatile. But there are others here who love their bread machines.

  • 1 month later...
lilu Rookie

Hi, Sara and Beth! We're in Agoura Hills (other side of the SF valley). DH is the affected family member, but I'm the cook, so Here I am. We're just starting our gluten-free adventure, only been on the diet for a few weeks. So far I've found that sticking to "home cooking" or as Sylvia has called it in many of her posts "whole food" cooking, is both a) the easiest way to stay gluten-free, B) the healthiest way to stay gluten-free, and c) the cheapest way to stay gluten-free!

We have made a couple exceptions to this rule - gluten-free bread (we like Udi's - I think even Ralph's might carry it in the freezer case, I know Whole Foods does) and cereal (chex still costs the same). Also, I'm working on making up a gluten-free flour mixture I can use like regular flour for most of my recipes. I've tried both Jules' and Mary France's recipes/blends, but they both use some corn flour, which in my opinion makes everything taste like corn bread. I'm going to substitute in some sorghum flour and see how that goes. I've heard it tastes a lot more wheat-like. Their websites are great for cooking ideas... Nearlynormalcooking.com and glutenfreecookingschool.com. I also get a lot of recipes on cdkitchen.com. There's even a gluten free search option on recipes.com.

We typically have rice or potatoes, veggies, salad and meat for dinner now. Pretty easy. DH takes leftovers for lunch. Cereal, gluten-free toast, eggs, fruit, yogurt for breakfast. Nuts, cheese, fruits and veggies with peanut butter as snacks. So far it's working out pretty well for us and the grocery bill hasn't gone up too much.

Hope to hear from you soon. Would love to exchange ideas!

sa1937 Community Regular

Hi, Sara and Beth! We're in Agoura Hills (other side of the SF valley). DH is the affected family member, but I'm the cook, so Here I am. We're just starting our gluten-free adventure, only been on the diet for a few weeks. So far I've found that sticking to "home cooking" or as Sylvia has called it in many of her posts "whole food" cooking, is both a) the easiest way to stay gluten-free, B) the healthiest way to stay gluten-free, and c) the cheapest way to stay gluten-free!

We have made a couple exceptions to this rule - gluten-free bread (we like Udi's - I think even Ralph's might carry it in the freezer case, I know Whole Foods does) and cereal (chex still costs the same). Also, I'm working on making up a gluten-free flour mixture I can use like regular flour for most of my recipes. I've tried both Jules' and Mary France's recipes/blends, but they both use some corn flour, which in my opinion makes everything taste like corn bread. I'm going to substitute in some sorghum flour and see how that goes. I've heard it tastes a lot more wheat-like. Their websites are great for cooking ideas... Nearlynormalcooking.com and glutenfreecookingschool.com. I also get a lot of recipes on cdkitchen.com. There's even a gluten free search option on recipes.com.

We typically have rice or potatoes, veggies, salad and meat for dinner now. Pretty easy. DH takes leftovers for lunch. Cereal, gluten-free toast, eggs, fruit, yogurt for breakfast. Nuts, cheese, fruits and veggies with peanut butter as snacks. So far it's working out pretty well for us and the grocery bill hasn't gone up too much.

Hope to hear from you soon. Would love to exchange ideas!

Yes, I eat pretty simply, too. It is a whole lot cheaper and so many things I've eaten my whole life are naturally gluten-free or can be made that way with simple substitutions. Plus I'm lazy. :P

I bought Jules Shepard's book, Free For All Cooking, and she has substitutions for just about everything for gluten-free, dairy-free, soy-free, egg-free, nut-free and vegetarian (not necessarily vegan). I also bought her flour, which does have a bit of corn flour in it but honestly I can't taste the corn flour. You should easily be able to substitute the small amount of it with sorghum flour...I would think the properties would be similar.

Nearlynormalcooking.com is now Open Original Shared Link and she also active on Open Original Shared Link and generously shares recipes and personally answers questions.

Another site I like is Open Original Shared Link and you can search for "gluten-free whatever"and come up with lots of recipes.


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  • 2 weeks later...
cap6 Enthusiast

Hello ~ for any of you that are interested we have a new support group in Hemet that meets the 2nd Saturday of every month, 9:30 a.m. (to whenever we wind down) at the Red Robin on Florida Ave. We had 19 people show last month! Red Robin is great, they have a special prep area just for us and our server is Celiac/cross contamination trained. For any more infor you can call Jenny 951 288-5999.

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    • Mari
      There is much helpful 'truth' posted on this forum. Truths about Celiac Disease are based on scientific research and people's experience. Celiac disease is inherited. There are 2 main Celiac 'genes' but they are variations of one gene called HLa - DQ What is inherited when a person inherits one or both of the DQ2 or the DQ8 is a predisposition to develop celiac disease after exposure to a environmental trigger. These 2 versions of the DQ gene are useful in diagnosing  celiac disease but there are about 25 other genes that are known to influence celiac disease so this food intolerance is a multigenic autoimmune disease. So with so many genes involved and each person inheriting a different array of these other genes one person's symptoms may be different than another's symptoms.  so many of these other genes.  I don't think that much research on these other genes as yet. So first I wrote something that seem to tie together celiac disease and migraines.  Then you posted that you had migraines and since you went gluten free they only come back when you are glutened. Then Scott showed an article that reported no connection between migraines and celiac disease, Then Trents wrote that it was possible that celiacs had more migraines  and some believed there was a causal effect. You are each telling the truth as you know it or experienced it.   
    • tiffanygosci
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    • tiffanygosci
      Thank you all for sharing your experiences! And I am very thankful for that Thanksgiving article, Scott! I will look into it more as I plan my little dinner to bring with on the Holiday I'm also glad a lot of research has been done for Celiac. There's still a lot to learn and discover. And everyone has different symptoms. For me, I get a bad headache right away after eating gluten. Reoccurring migraines and visual disturbances were actually what got my PCP to order a Celiac Panel. I'm glad he did! I feel like when the inflammation hits my body it targets my head, gut, and lower back. I'm still figuring things out but that's what I've noticed after eating gluten! I have been eating gluten-free for almost two months now and haven't had such severe symptoms. I ate a couple accidents along the way but I'm doing a lot better
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