Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Rice/corn Allergy


whitball

Recommended Posts

whitball Explorer

I have had problems with corn and rice flour. I have very little experience with the variety of flours available and do not know which combinations work. My work involves lots of driving and I cover two counties in Michigan. Eating out has turned out the be a bad thing for me. I eat many meals in my car and have found that pancakes are very easy to snack on. Are there any suggestions for a good pancake mix?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



tarnalberry Community Regular

I'd get a bag of Bob's Red Mill amaranth flour and use the recipe on there - as I recall, it's entirely amaranth flour.

Mango04 Enthusiast

I don't have the bag nearby, but I've seen recipe for pancakes on the back of a package of Bob's coconut flour. I don't remember it containing any corn or rice.

kbabe1968 Enthusiast

You could mix potato flour and sorghum....that would work....

Our pancakes are:

1 cup flour (do 1/2 potato flour - not starch - and half sorghum)

2 tsp baking powder

1 Tbs sugar

pinch salt

1 egg, beaten

1 cup milk

2 Tbs oil

Mix the dry. mix the wet. Pour wet into dry.

I'm sure you could try quinoa flour too, that might work.

We mixed rice & sorghum this week and they were great....a little more dense, but so tasty.

whitball Explorer

thank you all for the suggestions. I'll try them!

corinne Apprentice

This might not be what you're looking for, but I can't eat any grains at all. For pancakes, I put 2 ripe bananas in the blender with 2 eggs then pour into a hot oiled pan. I cook the batter slowly over low heat until solid enough to turn. It takes a bit of practice to get the cooking down, but they taste good.

RiceGuy Collaborator

I've seen recipes for buckwheat pancakes (it's not even a grain really), though I have not tried them. Besides the sorghum already mentioned, there's millet flour, and tapioca flour may work in combination with these or other flours. I'm sure there are other which may work well too.

Something else which make for great road snacks are muffins. The same flours can be used there as well. Soy flour adds a nice moistness and texture to muffins.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



confusedks Enthusiast

Buckwheat flour pancakes are SOOO good! I make them all the time. Especially if you pre mix the dry ingredients and then add the wet ones when your'e ready to make them, like early in the morning before work, school, etc. They are really good and for a treat I add "Enjoy Life's" chocolate chips which are free of just about every allergen. Oh, the recipe is on the back of most buckwheat flour boxes.

Kassandra

Blue Newbie

Here are some I found surfing the net one day. I became addicted to the plain peanut butter recipe, using gluten-free strawberry fruit spread for dipping.

PLAIN NUT BUTTER PANCAKES

by Caroline

1 tablespoon nut butter

1 whole egg

2 egg yolks

dash of baking soda

Whisk ingredients together until batter is thick but still runny. Fry in buttered skillet as you would conventional pancakes.

PLAIN PEANUT BUTTER PANCAKES

by Carol

1 egg, well beaten

1 rounded tablespoon peanut butter (or nut butter of your choice)

1 pinch of baking soda

1 pat butter

Beat egg every well.

Add peanut butter and baking soda and stir until blended.

Heat a six inch skillet and add butter swirling it around the edges of the pan.

Pour batter into pan, moving pan so batter distributes evenly.

Turn heat down to medium.

When pancake is set, carefully turn with spatula.

Turn off heat.

Cook until pancake can easily be removed.

Top with honey.

BANANA PEANUT BUTTER PANCAKES (if you can tolerate some fruit)

by Sheila

1 ripe banana

1/4 cup peanut butter

2 eggs

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

Mix all ingredients with a mixer. Spoon into hot buttered skillet and brown on both sides

Tip: Small pancakes are easier to turn.

SNEAKY VEGGIE PANCAKES

by Angie

4 eggs

1 cup squash (or any other pureed vegetable)

1 tsp Cinnamon

1 tsp vanilla

1 TBL melted coconut oil

Mix all ingredients well and prepare as pancakes.

Kellygirl Rookie

4 eggs

1 cup squash (or any other pureed vegetable)

1 tsp Cinnamon

1 tsp vanilla

1 TBL melted coconut oil

Mix all ingredients well and prepare as pancakes.

Blue Newbie
4 eggs

1 cup squash (or any other pureed vegetable)

1 tsp Cinnamon

1 tsp vanilla

1 TBL melted coconut oil

Mix all ingredients well and prepare as pancakes.

This recipe works really well with baby food instead of the pureed vegetables. Just thought I would share that. Blueberries and sweetpotatoes are good. You can also use Nutmeg instead of cinnamon.

Be creative, sometimes it sounds aweful and tastes GREAT!

Kelly

That sounds like it would be fantastic with apples, cherries or strawberries :D

whitball Explorer

These sound pretty good. I love peanut butter and squash. Thank you!

Mini Newbie
I have had problems with corn and rice flour. I have very little experience with the variety of flours available and do not know which combinations work. My work involves lots of driving and I cover two counties in Michigan. Eating out has turned out the be a bad thing for me. I eat many meals in my car and have found that pancakes are very easy to snack on. Are there any suggestions for a good pancake mix?

TEFF!! Teff flour makes THE best pancakes. And it's such a healthy flour too :)

Use mostly teff flour, and a a bit of arrowroot or tapicoa starch, then add in the other usual suspects (salt, baking powder, eggs, milk, cinnamon, etc). I like to add a scoop of pumpkin myself! I've never gone wrong with this - and I just sort of throw them together, no recipe required. oh, and the best one's I've made? I added the pumpkin and some chocolate chips....HEAVEN!

Nathan's mom Apprentice
TEFF!! Teff flour makes THE best pancakes. And it's such a healthy flour too :)

Use mostly teff flour, and a a bit of arrowroot or tapicoa starch, then add in the other usual suspects (salt, baking powder, eggs, milk, cinnamon, etc). I like to add a scoop of pumpkin myself! I've never gone wrong with this - and I just sort of throw them together, no recipe required. oh, and the best one's I've made? I added the pumpkin and some chocolate chips....HEAVEN!

Dittos for Teff. I'm in love with it now. I like Millet or Teff or a combination. Teff is also great for bread, etc. I recently made some rice/millet pancakes that were not as thick as they should have been and seemed to deflate as soon as I got them off the grill. I added some Teff to the last half of the mix (enough to thicken it up a bit) and voila! It was a completely different and wonderful pancake. As far as I know, millet and teff are in the same family. Teff is a really small seed so make sure what you are buying is flour if you don't have a mill. Bob's Red Mill sells the teff flour but it is expensive. If you can latch on to a co-op that gets free shipping on stuff and buys from Azure, they sell teff seed and flour in more bulk sizes. I guess you could call Azure and see if there is a group in your area?

Dianne W. Rookie
You could mix potato flour and sorghum....that would work....

Our pancakes are:

1 cup flour (do 1/2 potato flour - not starch - and half sorghum)

2 tsp baking powder

1 Tbs sugar

pinch salt

1 egg, beaten

1 cup milk

2 Tbs oil

Mix the dry. mix the wet. Pour wet into dry.

I'm sure you could try quinoa flour too, that might work.

We mixed rice & sorghum this week and they were great....a little more dense, but so tasty.

I too am looking for pancake recipes free of rice/corn. I will try this one tomorrow. But I have to also avoid milk and egg at this point.

Have you ever used substitutes for the egg and milk as well? If I use the Ener-G egg replacer and an applesauce/apple juice combo instead of the milk, do you think I should add xanthan gum to help them stay together? If so, how much xanthan gum for the 1 cup of flour?

Thanks!! Dianne

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,547
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    gizmo1jazz2
    Newest Member
    gizmo1jazz2
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Scott Adams
      Your post demonstrates the profound frustration and isolation that so many in the Celiac community feel, and I want to thank you for channeling that experience into advocacy. The medical gaslighting you endured for decades is an unacceptable and, sadly, a common story, and the fact that you now have to "school" your own GI specialist speaks volumes about the critical lack of consistent and updated education. Your idea to make Celiac Disease a reportable condition to public health authorities is a compelling and strategic one. This single action would force the system to formally acknowledge the prevalence and seriousness of the disease, creating a concrete dataset that could drive better research funding, shape medical school curricula, and validate the patient experience in a way that individual stories alone often cannot. It is an uphill battle, but contacting representatives, as you have done with Adam Gray, is exactly how change begins. By framing it as a public health necessity—a matter of patient safety and protection from misdiagnosis and neglect—you are building a powerful case. Your voice and your perseverance, forged through thirty years of struggle, are exactly what this community needs to ensure that no one else has to fight so hard just to be believed and properly cared for.
    • Scott Adams
      I had no idea there is a "Louisville" in Colorado!😉 I thought it was a typo because I always think of the Kentucky city--but good luck!
    • Scott Adams
      Navigating medication safety with Celiac disease can be incredibly stressful, especially when dealing with asthma and severe allergies on top of it. While I don't have personal experience with the HealthA2Z brand of cetirizine, your caution is absolutely warranted. The inactive ingredients in pills, known as excipients, are often where gluten can be hidden, and since the FDA does not require gluten-free labeling for prescription or over-the-counter drugs, the manufacturer's word is essential. The fact that you cannot get a clear answer from Allegiant Health is a significant red flag; a company that is confident its product is gluten-free will typically have a customer service protocol to answer that exact question. In situations like this, the safest course of action is to consider this product "guilty until proven innocent" and avoid it. A better alternative would be to ask your pharmacist or doctor to help you identify a major national brand of cetirizine (like Zyrtec) whose manufacturer has a verified, publicly stated gluten-free policy for that specific medication. It's not worth the risk to your health when reliable, verifiable options are almost certainly available to you. You can search this site for USA prescriptions medications, but will need to know the manufacturer/maker if there is more than one, especially if you use a generic version of the medication: To see the ingredients you will need to click on the correct version of the medication and maker in the results, then scroll down to "Ingredients and Appearance" and click it, and then look at "Inactive Ingredients," as any gluten ingredients would likely appear there, rather than in the Active Ingredients area. https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/   
    • Scott Adams
      What you're describing is indeed familiar to many in the Celiac community, especially in the early stages of healing. When the intestinal villi are damaged from Celiac disease, they struggle to properly digest and absorb fats, a condition known as bile acid malabsorption. This can cause exactly the kind of cramping and spasms you're seeing, as undigested fats can irritate the sensitive gut lining. It is highly plausible that her reactions to dairy and eggs are linked to their higher fat content rather than the proteins, especially since she tolerates lean chicken breast. The great news is that for many, this does improve with time. As her gut continues to heal on a strict gluten-free diet, her ability to produce the necessary enzymes and bile to break down fats should gradually return, allowing her to slowly tolerate a wider variety of foods. It's a slow process of healing, but your careful approach of focusing on low-fat, nutrient-dense foods like seeds and avocado is providing her system the best possible environment to recover. Many people with celiac disease, especially those who are in the 0-2 year range of their recovery, have additional food intolerance issues which could be temporary. To figure this out you may need to keep a food diary and do an elimination diet over a few months. Some common food intolerance issues are dairy/casein, eggs, corn, oats, and soy. The good news is that after your gut heals (for most people who are 100% gluten-free this will take several months to two years) you may be able to slowly add some these items back into your diet after the damaged villi heal. This article may be helpful: Thank you for sharing your story—it's a valuable insight for other parents navigating similar challenges.
    • Beverage
      I had a very rough month after diagnosis. No exaggeration, lost so much inflammatory weight, I looked like a bag of bones, underneath i had been literally starving to death. I did start feeling noticeably better after a month of very strict control of my kitchen and home. What are you eating for breakfast and lunch? I ignored my doc and ate oats, yes they were gluten free, but some brands are at the higher end of gluten free. Lots of celics can eat Bob's Red Mill gluten-free oats, but not me. I can now eat them, but they have to be grown and processed according to the "purity protocol" methods. I mail order them, Montana Gluten-Free brand. A food and symptoms and activities log can be helpful in tracking down issues. You might be totally aware, but I have to mention about the risk of airborne gluten. As the doc that diagnosed me warned . . Remember eyes, ears, nose, and mouth all lead to your stomach and intestines.  Are you getting any cross contamination? Airborne gluten? Any pets eating gluten (they eat it, lick themselves, you pet them...)? Any house remodeling? We live in an older home, always fixing something. I've gotten glutened from the dust from cutting into plaster walls, possibly also plywood (glues). The suggestions by many here on vitamin supplements also really helped me. I had some lingering allergies and asthma, which are now 99% gone. I was taking Albuterol inhaler every hour just to breathe, but thiamine in form of benfotiamine kicked that down to 1-2 times a day within a few days of starting it. Also, since cutting out inflammatory seed oils (canola, sunflower, grapeseed, etc) and cooking with real olive oil, avocado oil, ghee, and coconut oil, I have noticed even greater improvement overall and haven't used the inhaler in months! It takes time to weed out everything in your life that contains gluten, and it takes awhile to heal and rebuild your health. At first it's mentally exhausting, overwhelming, even obsessive, but it gets better and second nature.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.