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

Totally Discouraged About Baking


huevo-no-bueno

Recommended Posts

huevo-no-bueno Apprentice

I'm feeling really discouraged. I've tried making Lorka's popular bread recipe three times and each time it is a flat, dense doorstop. I have to make substitutions, perhaps it is too many.

I hope this isn't too off-topic for the baking list.

I also immediately got a killer headache and shortness of breath when I ate a bit of it. When I was dealing with the flours, my skin started to itch on contact with some of the dust. I wonder if I should not eat sorghum; I have a moderate corn allergy. It seems the better I am at avoiding problem foods, the worse my reactions are when I do react. It isn't life threatening, but each time is a little scarier. I'm mad about this. And I'm mad that I paid $3.29 for that package of sorghum flour. Or maybe the problem is arrowroot. Is anyone allergic to that? Or xanthan gum? I've baked lots of crackers lately with xanthan gum, rice flour, and amaranth and had no reaction to them. I don't think I am sensitive to all corn derivatives.

I don't know of a single recipe that does not require substitutions. Google searches for recipes leave me feeling discouraged. I feel miserable right now, spending all afternoon baking just to have an allergic reaction.

I can't eat:

potato starch--indigestible

tapioca starch--indigestible

garfava flour--indigestible

corn anything--IgE allergy

sorghum(?)--related to corn?

soy--indigestible

eggs--severe allergy

Egg Replacer--gives me a headache

That pretty much means I'm limited to rice flours, coconut flour, millet, amaranth, and quinoa. I think arrowroot starch is probably ok, but I'm not sure right now.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



JNBunnie1 Community Regular

Here, I have a few suggestions. I made Gluten Free By the Bay's (blogger) re-tooled version of Lorka's bread. Check out the bread section on his blog, you'll find the recipe. I made it with millet, sorghum, and amaranth. You could try millet-rice-amaranth, that's actually the combo he calls for. Now, can you tell me whether or not you have had a definitive reaction to flax seeds? If not, they can usually be used as an egg substitute. I forget the ratios, I'm sure there's info on this website. By the Bay's version calls for flaxseed anyway, so if you were to use all arrowroot, and the flax/water boiled solution for egg replacement, I think you'd get some decent bread. I would also try baking it in smaller sizes than a whole loaf. Maybe go for hamburger sized buns by baking them in texas-sized muffin cups, or mini-loaves. Also, your problem may not be sorghum at all, but yeast. Try drinking a bottle of gluten free beer sometime, that's got lots of yeast in it. Or maybe anything else with yeast, because I just remembered most gluten-free beers are made with sorghum. Does wine have natural yeast in it?

Also, there's a website called tropical traditions that sells coconut stuff & flour, has lots of recipes, some of which don't call for any eggs.

huevo-no-bueno Apprentice

JNBunnie,

Thanks for replying. I looked at the sites you mentioned. I don't think Blogger by the Bay's recipe would work for me. I think I have to start from scratch.

I've never reacted to flaxseed before that I know of, but then again, I've never used quite so much in a recipe before. I can try eliminating it to see what happens.

The only new ingredient I tried this weekend was the arrowroot starch, so I believe that is the culprit. I'm probably only slightly sensitive to the sorghum. I'll eliminate the arrowroot and see if that solves the problem.

I think I will go back to the old recipe I was tinkering with that has a higher proportion of coconut flour in it, and add more flaxmeal like in Laurie's bread to give it a similar texture. Coconut flour made without eggs tends to be dense and moist and breakable, almost like the texture of a dessert.

I still have a headache and puffy lips this morning. I have to figure out what this was!

dbmamaz Explorer

Just want to give you some sympathy! When i first went off gluten, I quickly learned I cant handle tapioca. I tried Lorka's bread with some subs and it never really rose but then fell again anyways, and tasted awful to me to boot. Then i did some more testing which eliminated rice and yeast . . . i started on such a restrictive diet that I almost entirely gave up baking. I did come up with a corn meal muffin I can eat when its fresh (but only that same day), and I use it for bread crumbs for turkey burgers and i used them for frying scallops in too (tho the scallops ended up failing the challenge test :( ).

Now its even worse - i tested my son on the same test I used on me (A.L.C.A.T) and he was highly reactive to gliadin, mildy to wheat and not to gluten . . whihc is strange. But he reacted to rice and to millet . . .millet is almost the only grain i can eat other than corn. He, however, was fine with tapioca .. and almonds. SO now i want to experiment on breads I can make him for lunch sandwhiches . . except I cant taste them? Not sure this is going to work . . .

Here's my muffin recipe anyways, not sure if it will help at all - obviously you'd have to replace the potato starch with another starch, and the potato milk with another milk:

1 scant cup cornmeal

1/3 (or more) c corn starch

1/3 (or more) c potato starch flour

huevo-no-bueno Apprentice

dbmamaz,

Thank you for your understanding! I can only handle tapioca starch in small amounts, but I'm better off avoiding it; it really has no nutritional value anyway. I just can't handle starches. The cornmeal is out, because of the corn allergy. Some corn-allergic people can't tolerate any corn derivatives--I find that the sugars don't bother me but the starches and whole grains do.

Millet is pretty hypo-allergenic, and the flour is relatively inexpensive and pleasant-tasting, so that and rice will be my staples for flour blends. I can use sweet rice flour or amaranth to get stickiness like tapioca.

I wonder if that Montina baking supplement would help the bread rise and be springy?

Does anyone know what choice of liquid, oil, or herbs can hide the taste of baking soda?

Thanks!

Wonka Apprentice
I'm feeling really discouraged. I've tried making Lorka's popular bread recipe three times and each time it is a flat, dense doorstop. I have to make substitutions, perhaps it is too many.

I hope this isn't too off-topic for the baking list.

I also immediately got a killer headache and shortness of breath when I ate a bit of it. When I was dealing with the flours, my skin started to itch on contact with some of the dust. I wonder if I should not eat sorghum; I have a moderate corn allergy. It seems the better I am at avoiding problem foods, the worse my reactions are when I do react. It isn't life threatening, but each time is a little scarier. I'm mad about this. And I'm mad that I paid $3.29 for that package of sorghum flour. Or maybe the problem is arrowroot. Is anyone allergic to that? Or xanthan gum? I've baked lots of crackers lately with xanthan gum, rice flour, and amaranth and had no reaction to them. I don't think I am sensitive to all corn derivatives.

I don't know of a single recipe that does not require substitutions. Google searches for recipes leave me feeling discouraged. I feel miserable right now, spending all afternoon baking just to have an allergic reaction.

I can't eat:

potato starch--indigestible

tapioca starch--indigestible

garfava flour--indigestible

corn anything--IgE allergy

sorghum(?)--related to corn?

soy--indigestible

eggs--severe allergy

Egg Replacer--gives me a headache

That pretty much means I'm limited to rice flours, coconut flour, millet, amaranth, and quinoa. I think arrowroot starch is probably ok, but I'm not sure right now.

It sounds like you need a treat. Try these:

Chocolate Chunk Quinoa Cookies

1/3 cup butter, softened

1 cup packed brown sugar

1 large egg

2 tsp. vanilla

1 1/2 cups quinoa flour

1 cup oats (gluten-free oats only, or try quinoa flakes)

1 tsp. baking soda

1/4 tsp. salt

1/2-1 cup chocolate chunks or chips

1/2 cup chopped walnuts or pecans (optional)

1/4 cup dried cranberries or chopped dried apricots

Preheat oven to 325

huevo-no-bueno Apprentice

Thanks Wonka!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Archived

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

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

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - trents replied to Matthias's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      Unexpected gluten exposure risk from cultivated mushrooms

    2. - Matthias posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      Unexpected gluten exposure risk from cultivated mushrooms

    3. - trents replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      9

      how much gluten do I need to eat before blood tests?

    4. - Scott Adams replied to SilkieFairy's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      IBS-D vs Celiac

    5. - Scott Adams replied to Amy Barnett's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      Question

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,324
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    mao5617
    Newest Member
    mao5617
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Who's Online (See full list)

  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Welcome to the celiac.com communiuty, @Matthias! Yes, we have been aware that this can be an issue with mushrooms but as long as they are rinsed thoroughly it should not be a problem since the mushrooms don't actually incorporate the gluten into their cellular structure. For the same reason, one needs to be careful when buying aged cheeses and products containing yeast because of the fact that they are sometimes cultured on gluten-containing substrate.
    • Matthias
      The one kind of food I had been buying and eating without any worry for hidden gluten were unprocessed veggies. Well, yesterday I discovered yet another pitfall: cultivated mushrooms. I tried some new ones, Shimeji to be precise (used in many asian soup and rice dishes). Later, at home, I was taking a closer look at the product: the mushrooms were growing from a visible layer of shredded cereals that had not been removed. After a quick web research I learned that these mushrooms are commonly cultivated on a cereal-based medium like wheat bran. I hope that info his helpful to someone.
    • trents
      I might suggest you consider buckwheat groats. https://www.amazon.com/Anthonys-Organic-Hulled-Buckwheat-Groats/dp/B0D15QDVW7/ref=sr_1_4_pp?crid=GOFG11A8ZUMU&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.bk-hCrXgLpHqKS8QJnfKJLKbKzm2BS9tIFv3P9HjJ5swL1-02C3V819UZ845_kAwnxTUM8Qa69hKl0DfHAucO827k_rh7ZclIOPtAA9KjvEEYtaeUV06FJQyCoi5dwcfXRt8dx3cJ6ctEn2VIPaaFd0nOye2TkASgSRtdtKgvXEEXknFVYURBjXen1Nc7EtAlJyJbU8EhB89ElCGFPRavEQkTFHv9V2Zh1EMAPRno7UajBpLCQ-1JfC5jKUyzfgsf7jN5L6yfZSgjhnwEbg6KKwWrKeghga8W_CAhEEw9N0.eDBrhYWsjgEFud6ZE03iun0-AEaGfNS1q4ILLjZz7Fs&dib_tag=se&keywords=buckwheat%2Bgroats&qid=1769980587&s=grocery&sprefix=buchwheat%2Bgroats%2Cgrocery%2C249&sr=1-4&th=1 Takes about 10 minutes to cook. Incidentally, I don't like quinoa either. Reminds me and smells to me like wet grass seed. When its not washed before cooking it makes me ill because of saponins in the seed coat. Yes, it can be difficult to get much dietary calcium without dairy. But in many cases, it's not the amount of calcium in the diet that is the problem but the poor uptake of it. And too much calcium supplementation can interfere with the absorption of vitamins and minerals in general because it raises gut pH.
    • Scott Adams
      What you’re describing really does not read like typical IBS-D. The dramatic, rapid normalization of stool frequency and form after removing wheat, along with improved tolerance of legumes and plant foods, is a classic pattern seen in gluten-driven disease rather than functional IBS. IBS usually worsens with fiber and beans, not improves. The fact that you carry HLA-DQ2.2 means celiac disease is absolutely possible, even if it’s less common than DQ2.5, and many people with DQ2.2 present later and are under-diagnosed. Your hesitation to reintroduce gluten is completely understandable — quality of life matters — and many people in your position choose to remain strictly gluten-free and treat it as medically necessary even without formal biopsy confirmation. If and when you’re ready, a physician can help you weigh options like limited gluten challenge, serology history, or documentation as “probable celiac.” What’s clear is that this wasn’t just random IBS — you identified the trigger, and your body has been very consistent in its response.
    • Scott Adams
      Here are some results from a search: Top Liquid Multivitamin Picks for Celiac Needs MaryRuth's Liquid Morning Multivitamin Essentials+ – Excellent daily choice with a broad vitamin/mineral profile, easy to absorb, gluten-free, vegan, and great overall value. MaryRuth's Liquid Morning Multivitamin – Classic, well-reviewed gluten-free liquid multivitamin with essential nutrients in a readily absorbable form. MaryRuth's Morning Multivitamin w/ Hair Growth – Adds beauty-supporting ingredients (biotin, B vitamins), also gluten-free and easy to take. New Chapter Liquid Multivitamin and New Chapter Liquid Multivitamin Orange Mango – Fermented liquid form with extra nutrients and good tolerability if you prefer a whole-food-based formula. Nature's Plus Source Of Life Gold Liquid – Premium option with a broad spectrum of vitamins and plant-based nutrients. Floradix Epresat Adult Liquid Multivitamin – Highly rated gluten-free German-made liquid, good choice if taste and natural ingredients matter. NOW Foods Liquid Multi Tropical Orange – Budget-friendly liquid multivitamin with solid nutrient coverage.
×
×
  • 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.