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

Looking For Easter Recipes


MindySue

Recommended Posts

MindySue Newbie

Hello, I was diagnosed the first week of December 2007. I am just learning how to follow diet. Every year my family comes over to my home for Easter and I don't know what to make. Besides no gluten I can't have dairy and having trouble with egg and chocolate. The egg and chocolate where allergies I had years earlier- did natural things to clear these up and was able to have both for the past three years, but they seem to be acting up for me again. Does anyone have recipe suggestions that my family will enjoy. To them my diet is bland or gross. Please help. I would for all of us to eat together and enjoy it! (Christmas- I had to bring my own food and then watch them eat Christmas cookies and such :( ) Thanks for reading. Mindy


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



sickchick Community Regular

Are you having dinner or brunch Sweetie?

Here's some ideas for ya, take em as you need em:)

Everything is going to be ok I promise! :D

lovelove

I developed this recipe for Valentine's day...

Chicken Breasts in Raspberry Wine Sauce

Gluten Free, Soy Free and Dairy Free

4 Chicken Breasts (Free-Range if you can get them)

3 cloves Garlic, Minced

1 cup Organic Veggy Broth

1/2 cup Reisling

1 ts Lemon Juice

1/4 cup Seedless Raspberry Preserves

1/4 ts Thyme

2 ts salt

Salt & pepper chicken breasts, set aside.

In a medium saucepan add veggy broth,lemon juice, garlic, thyme, salt, and preserves. Heat to boil, while whisking, then add wine and bring back to boil. Turn heat down to low, and grill chicken breasts.

Serve chicken breasts with wine sauce and steamed asparagus and white rice.

Serves 4.

You could serve raspberry champagne cocktails!

Green12 Enthusiast
Hello, I was diagnosed the first week of December 2007. I am just learning how to follow diet. Every year my family comes over to my home for Easter and I don't know what to make. Besides no gluten I can't have dairy and having trouble with egg and chocolate. The egg and chocolate where allergies I had years earlier- did natural things to clear these up and was able to have both for the past three years, but they seem to be acting up for me again. Does anyone have recipe suggestions that my family will enjoy. To them my diet is bland or gross. Please help. I would for all of us to eat together and enjoy it! (Christmas- I had to bring my own food and then watch them eat Christmas cookies and such :( ) Thanks for reading. Mindy

Welcome to the forum Mindy :)

All these diet changes are overwhelming at first, then cooking for a crowd on top of it all is definitely an added stress. Once you learn more about the diets Dos and Dont's and get the hang of modifying your meals it will become routine!

What about a nice gluten-free Ham and all the sides, like roasted potatoes and roasted asparagus.

Since you can't do dairy or eggs, that cuts out a lot of cheesy dishes and casseroles, but there are a lot of wonderful side dishes that are vegetable based and perfect for Easter.

This is a recipe I often make:

Roasted Dijon Potatoes

1/3 c gluten-free dijon mustard (I use Annie's)

2 tbsp olive oil

1 clove garlic minced

6 medium red skinned potatoes (about 2 lbs), cut into chunks

salt and pepper to taste

Mix together dijon mustart, olive oil, garlic in a small bowl. In a large bowl add potatoes and toss to coat with mustard mixture. Season with salt and pepper.

Place potatoes in a greased baking pan or shallow baking sheet (I use a large jelly roll type cookie sheet that has the one inch sides)

Bake at 425 degrees for 35-40 minutes or until potatoes are fork tender and slightly browned, stirring occasionally.

Serves 4

Both these Roasted Asparagus recipes come from The Food Network:

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

MindySue Newbie
Are you having dinner or brunch Sweetie?

Here's some ideas for ya, take em as you need em:)

Everything is going to be ok I promise! :D

lovelove

I developed this recipe for Valentine's day...

Chicken Breasts in Raspberry Wine Sauce

Gluten Free, Soy Free and Dairy Free

4 Chicken Breasts (Free-Range if you can get them)

3 cloves Garlic, Minced

1 cup Organic Veggy Broth

1/2 cup Reisling

1 ts Lemon Juice

1/4 cup Seedless Raspberry Preserves

1/4 ts Thyme

2 ts salt

Salt & pepper chicken breasts, set aside.

In a medium saucepan add veggy broth,lemon juice, garlic, thyme, salt, and preserves. Heat to boil, while whisking, then add wine and bring back to boil. Turn heat down to low, and grill chicken breasts.

Serve chicken breasts with wine sauce and steamed asparagus and white rice.

Serves 4.

You could serve raspberry champagne cocktails!

Thank you so much for replying and for the recipe. The chichen with raspberry sauce sounds good.

But my mom just mentioned to me today that my brother feels that maybe I should not have Easter. This is part relief and part sad, as I feel left out. Moms responce to me was why can't you just take a pill for this and be over it. (I was adopted and so no one in my family is affected by Celiac Disease.) So at this point I am not sure if I will have an Easter Brunch or Dinner. Thank you again.

MindySue Newbie
Welcome to the forum Mindy :)

All these diet changes are overwhelming at first, then cooking for a crowd on top of it all is definitely an added stress. Once you learn more about the diets Dos and Dont's and get the hang of modifying your meals it will become routine!

What about a nice gluten-free Ham and all the sides, like roasted potatoes and roasted asparagus.

Since you can't do dairy or eggs, that cuts out a lot of cheesy dishes and casseroles, but there are a lot of wonderful side dishes that are vegetable based and perfect for Easter.

This is a recipe I often make:

Roasted Dijon Potatoes

1/3 c gluten-free dijon mustard (I use Annie's)

2 tbsp olive oil

1 clove garlic minced

6 medium red skinned potatoes (about 2 lbs), cut into chunks

salt and pepper to taste

Mix together dijon mustart, olive oil, garlic in a small bowl. In a large bowl add potatoes and toss to coat with mustard mixture. Season with salt and pepper.

Place potatoes in a greased baking pan or shallow baking sheet (I use a large jelly roll type cookie sheet that has the one inch sides)

Bake at 425 degrees for 35-40 minutes or until potatoes are fork tender and slightly browned, stirring occasionally.

Serves 4

Both these Roasted Asparagus recipes come from The Food Network:

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

Thank you for responding and the recipes. where do you fine gluten-free Dijon Mustard-Annie's? My familt at time is reconsidering me to have Easter. I did not know that there was a gluten-free mustard. I get more hope each time I find something new I can have. Thank you again. Mindy

Green12 Enthusiast
Thank you for responding and the recipes. where do you fine gluten-free Dijon Mustard-Annie's? My familt at time is reconsidering me to have Easter. I did not know that there was a gluten-free mustard. I get more hope each time I find something new I can have. Thank you again. Mindy

You can find Annie's products at Whole Foods and most health food stores :)

JNBunnie1 Community Regular
Thank you so much for replying and for the recipe. The chichen with raspberry sauce sounds good.

But my mom just mentioned to me today that my brother feels that maybe I should not have Easter. This is part relief and part sad, as I feel left out. Moms responce to me was why can't you just take a pill for this and be over it. (I was adopted and so no one in my family is affected by Celiac Disease.) So at this point I am not sure if I will have an Easter Brunch or Dinner. Thank you again.

I'm so sorry to hear your family sounds so uncaring. I hope things get better for you on that front. There is a person on this forum called NoGluGirl who has a list of foods that you can get at any walmart that are gluten free, Of course you always need to check labels as ingredients change, but it's a good start. You should find her and send her a private message and ask if she'll send it you.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



sickchick Community Regular

Enjoy your Easter Sweetie!! :)

Takala Enthusiast

"why can't you just take a pill for this and get over it?"

They don't make a pill that one could feed to difficult family members who criticize other's cooking, or it would be a best seller.

All we have to do is get you into the recipe search section of this site, and then to a health food store or grocery with a gluten free aisle, and then you can eat spendidly and if they don't want to partake, too bad for them !

Can you do peanut butter and rice ? You can mix peanut butter, sugar or honey or maple syrup, and crumbled Lundberg rice cakes (easiest way to find gluten free puffed rice cereal is to take a Lundberg disc and break it up into a bowl with your fingers... ) and bake it into a type of rice crispy cereal treat. Or use gluten free marshmellows.

You can make bake fruit crisp crumbles by taking good fruit, mixing it with sugar or honey, and spices, and topping it with a crumble mix made up of a type of oil you can tolerate, a type of grain you can tolerate, like a gluten free flour mix, store bought or homemade, and chopped nuts you've ground up in the blender, and some more sugar. Then bake it until the fruit bubbles and the top is browned. I buy nuts in the largest bags I can find at a farmer's market type outlet, and then store them in the freezer/ refrigerator and grind them as needed by tossing a half cup in the blender and a few seconds later I have nut meal that would cost a fortune in the stores. Nut meals can be added to almost any sort of gluten free grain to give it a delicious taste and more fat and protein. Oils can be used in place of melted butter for a lot of things.

For flavoring, nothing beats using citrus zest or lemon juice, I just take a washed, whole orange or lemon and grate it against the grater a few zips and get the outer part of the peel that way and use it as needed. You can still eat the orange or juice the lemon afterwards. Don't waste those peels !

My standard fallback in the easy department is either baked chicken breasts with extra virgin olive oil, fresh garlic slices, and real rosemary (can't kill that stuff, you should really try growing some in a pot or in the yard, heavenly flavor fresh ) and some lemon juice or balsamic vinegar, or rice pasta (Tinkyada is the best) with tomato sauce and some gluten-free sausage or meat. Classico sauce is gluten free, there are some other brands I think, or just tossing together a tomato sauce is very easy, add some more fresh herbs, and it's 10 times better than the junk you get commercially. If you can't find gluten free sausage you can take hamburger and add salt, pepper, real apple cider or balsamic vinegar (not grain vinegar) sage, and some tabasco sauce and fennel or anise seed and make sausage flavored meat.

if you get to where you can tolerate egg again,

Real mayonaise (read the labels) is gluten free and when mixed with other enticing ingredients in a little cup or bowl instantly transforms itself into Secret Super Sauce. Otherwise you can use olive oil. Or olive oil mixed with alternative milk product. ("nut milk in a box" )

Mayonaise (or olive oil) and gluten-free honey mustard= secret fish sauce

Mayonaise, and ketchup= secret french dressing

Mayonaise, ketchup, mustard, maple syrup and chipotle tabasco= secret BBQ sauce

Mayonaise, alt. milk product, cider vinegar, pinches of cumin, basil, salt, pepper= secret Ranch dressing

Some types of ketchup are supposed to be gluten free. Read the labels.

If one is just avoiding lactose and not dairy totally,

safe gluten-free yogurt, olive oil, cider vinegar, cumin, basil, salt pepper= another secret Ranch dressing

I hope this gives you a few ideas.

MindySue Newbie
I'm so sorry to hear your family sounds so uncaring. I hope things get better for you on that front. There is a person on this forum called NoGluGirl who has a list of foods that you can get at any walmart that are gluten free, Of course you always need to check labels as ingredients change, but it's a good start. You should find her and send her a private message and ask if she'll send it you.

Thank you for that info, I will look her up. Thanks Mindy

MindySue Newbie
"why can't you just take a pill for this and get over it?"

They don't make a pill that one could feed to difficult family members who criticize other's cooking, or it would be a best seller.

All we have to do is get you into the recipe search section of this site, and then to a health food store or grocery with a gluten free aisle, and then you can eat spendidly and if they don't want to partake, too bad for them !

Can you do peanut butter and rice ? You can mix peanut butter, sugar or honey or maple syrup, and crumbled Lundberg rice cakes (easiest way to find gluten free puffed rice cereal is to take a Lundberg disc and break it up into a bowl with your fingers... ) and bake it into a type of rice crispy cereal treat. Or use gluten free marshmellows.

You can make bake fruit crisp crumbles by taking good fruit, mixing it with sugar or honey, and spices, and topping it with a crumble mix made up of a type of oil you can tolerate, a type of grain you can tolerate, like a gluten free flour mix, store bought or homemade, and chopped nuts you've ground up in the blender, and some more sugar. Then bake it until the fruit bubbles and the top is browned. I buy nuts in the largest bags I can find at a farmer's market type outlet, and then store them in the freezer/ refrigerator and grind them as needed by tossing a half cup in the blender and a few seconds later I have nut meal that would cost a fortune in the stores. Nut meals can be added to almost any sort of gluten free grain to give it a delicious taste and more fat and protein. Oils can be used in place of melted butter for a lot of things.

For flavoring, nothing beats using citrus zest or lemon juice, I just take a washed, whole orange or lemon and grate it against the grater a few zips and get the outer part of the peel that way and use it as needed. You can still eat the orange or juice the lemon afterwards. Don't waste those peels !

My standard fallback in the easy department is either baked chicken breasts with extra virgin olive oil, fresh garlic slices, and real rosemary (can't kill that stuff, you should really try growing some in a pot or in the yard, heavenly flavor fresh ) and some lemon juice or balsamic vinegar, or rice pasta (Tinkyada is the best) with tomato sauce and some gluten-free sausage or meat. Classico sauce is gluten free, there are some other brands I think, or just tossing together a tomato sauce is very easy, add some more fresh herbs, and it's 10 times better than the junk you get commercially. If you can't find gluten free sausage you can take hamburger and add salt, pepper, real apple cider or balsamic vinegar (not grain vinegar) sage, and some tabasco sauce and fennel or anise seed and make sausage flavored meat.

if you get to where you can tolerate egg again,

Real mayonaise (read the labels) is gluten free and when mixed with other enticing ingredients in a little cup or bowl instantly transforms itself into Secret Super Sauce. Otherwise you can use olive oil. Or olive oil mixed with alternative milk product. ("nut milk in a box" )

Mayonaise (or olive oil) and gluten-free honey mustard= secret fish sauce

Mayonaise, and ketchup= secret french dressing

Mayonaise, ketchup, mustard, maple syrup and chipotle tabasco= secret BBQ sauce

Mayonaise, alt. milk product, cider vinegar, pinches of cumin, basil, salt, pepper= secret Ranch dressing

Some types of ketchup are supposed to be gluten free. Read the labels.

If one is just avoiding lactose and not dairy totally,

safe gluten-free yogurt, olive oil, cider vinegar, cumin, basil, salt pepper= another secret Ranch dressing

I hope this gives you a few ideas.

Thank you for all the recipe ideas and tips. I will try them. ...if you ever find that pill for the family let me know!! :D My husband and son have been a great support and one brother also-as he has a close friend with celiac disease. It is just the rest---. Thanks for the support. Mindy

Green12 Enthusiast
Thank you for all the recipe ideas and tips. I will try them. ...if you ever find that pill for the family let me know!! :D My husband and son have been a great support and one brother also-as he has a close friend with celiac disease. It is just the rest---. Thanks for the support. Mindy

Mindy, there are lots of resources and info on this forum, and helpful people.

Anything you need, just ask!

I'm glad your family member realized it would be better to have Easter somewhere else this year, that will take the pressure off of you to feed everyone else.

MindySue Newbie
Mindy, there are lots of resources and info on this forum, and helpful people.

Anything you need, just ask!

I'm glad your family member realized it would be better to have Easter somewhere else this year, that will take the pressure off of you to feed everyone else.

Juliem, You are definitely correct. At first I was hurt, but now I am relieved. Having Easter elsewhere will make it more enjoyable for me. Thanks Mindy

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - RMJ replied to Me,Sue's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      Nausea

    2. - Colleen H posted a topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      0

      Stomach burning and neuropathy

    3. - sleuth replied to fatjacksonthecat's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      18

      Nicotine Gum For Gluten Symptoms.. Am I Crazy?

    4. - Scott Adams replied to fatjacksonthecat's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      18

      Nicotine Gum For Gluten Symptoms.. Am I Crazy?

    5. - Me,Sue posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      Nausea


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,837
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Juliane
    Newest Member
    Juliane
    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

    • RMJ
      I have trouble with nausea. It often starts when I’m anxious about something (home repairs, sick dog) but continues long after the home is repaired or the dog is healthy again. When it happens I eat less and lose weight.  My gastroenterologist suggested ginger or peppermint tea. I don’t know if that will work or not because I haven't had the problem since she suggested it.
    • Colleen H
      Hello  I'm not sure what to think . Seems no matter what I do I get sick. I had some yogurt with only 2 grams of sugar and is labeled gluten free ...the strawberry version seemed to really set me off My jaw is burning as well as my stomach and my feet.  Horrible pain..plus acid reflux and nausea... sensitivity to touch pain. ..yikes !! I don't know if it's from the lactose in the yogurt or if I'm getting an ulcer  This condition can make you question yourself quite a bit.  Then if you are not sure the anxiety comes 😞 Does any of these symptoms sound familiar to anyone? The neuropathy is quite intense.  What do you eat or drink after this happens  Open to suggestions  Thank you 
    • sleuth
      Of course my son is on a 100% gluten free diet.  I wish his symptoms were not debilitating as there are right now.  He cannot work, even when a miniscule of cross contamination occurs.  It's not just GI distress, but intense fatigue, brain fog, depression, anxiety, insomnia, etc.  It's literally neurological inflammation.  Not to be taken lightly here.  We have sought out many other possible ways to cope during this window of time (8 months!!!!)  without success.   AN-PEP does not help and seems like studies on this are not well researched.  So, we are trying this out because research shows some promising results.  And, all participants showed no cravings afterwards, no signs of addiction.  The patch is different than the oral route such as smoking, vaping, gum, pouch, etc. 
    • Scott Adams
      Have you tried AN-PEP enzymes, for example, GlutenX (who is a sponsor here)? A lot of research has shown that it can break down small amounts of gluten in the stomach, before it reaches the intestines. It might be a better approach than risking nicotine addiction, and the questionable research around this. I also hope that he’s trying to be 100% Gluten-Free.
    • Me,Sue
      Hi all  I was diagnosed Coeliac a few years ago and follow a gluten free diet. The list of foods that I can eat without a problem grows shorter on a weekly basis. [I also have diabetes and asthma also].  BUT the reason I am posting this is because I seem to struggle with nausea quite a lot, which is really quite debilitating, and I was wondering if others suffer from nausea, even if following a gluten free diet. 
×
×
  • 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.