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

Cookless Recipes


Karli

Recommended Posts

Karli Rookie

The thermometer will hit over 100 again today... Do you have ideas for meals that take very little cooking ... or meals that can be cooked in the early morning and served later?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



munkee41182 Explorer

What about Crock pot cooking? I usually throw in some chicken, veggies, spices and some liquid. what about a taco salad or a tostada. instead of trying to cook meat, just cut up some veggies, smear some refried beans on it and call it a taco salad (and a little sour cream too if you can have it). Tostada, same thing, but just layer it on a corn tortilla. I usually cook up some rice in the microwave for this too, give me a little more texture.

celiac-mommy Collaborator

I second the crock pot! Although it's only 59 degrees right now in PDX ( :huh: ), at 6am I threw in 4 frozen chicken breasts, bottle of grilling sauce and can of drained pineapple tidbits, turned on low and it will be done by 5. It smells AMAZING, I'll serve on gluten-free toast with a salad.

Lockheed Apprentice

This is my lazy recipe

gluten-free Corn tortilla

Spaghetti sauce

Garlic Powder

Onion Powder

cheese

smear spaghetti sauce on the corn tortilla. Sprinkle on garlic and onion powder to taste. Top with cheese and bake at 350F for 7-10 minutes in the oven.

I also like to add oregano, but hubby doesn't like oregano so much. And you can add ham to it for a Canadian bacon like feel.

sickchick Community Regular

You could sever this salad with sesame chicken strips B)

Green Pea Salad with Sesame Ginger Dressing

Gluten Soy & Dairy Free

salad:

2 cups frozen peas (thawed)

1/2 cup red bell pepper cut into cube shapes

1/4 cup shredded carrots

1/4 cup slivered almonds

dressing:

3 tb sesame oil

3 tb lemon juice

1 clove garlic (minced, fresh)

2 tb ginger (shredded, fresh)

3 tb honey

1 ts kosher salt

In a medium mixing bowl, add peas, bell pepper, carrots, and slivered almonds.

In a small mixing bowl, add sesame oil. lemon juice, minced garlic, ginger, honey,

and salt. Whisk together, then pour over peas, bell pepper, carrots & almonds.

Toss together, cover and refrigerate until ready to serve.

Makes 4 servings.

lpellegr Collaborator

Who says dinner has to be baked in the oven? Save that stuff for cool weather. Have breakfast or lunch for dinner, and only use the stovetop if you have to cook. Announce to the familly that hot steaming-in-your-face meals will go on vacation for a while. Notice also that most of these don't take much time to put together, saving you even more sweat.

Salads - only interesting with lots of toppings. Crumbled bacon, any kind of cheese, leftover meat in bite-size pieces (ham slice or steak from grill or frying pan, thin-sliced chicken marinated in anything interesting and sauteed), hard boiled eggs, nuts, raw veggies (broccoli, peppers, onions, cauliflower, shredded carrots, canned beans, beets).

Peanut butter or cream cheese on celery or on waffles. Serve with fruit.

Gluten-free rice side dishes like risotto or Lundberg's mixes, with cut-up veggies and cooked shrimp or bite-sized meat leftovers, cheese. Mix together like a casserole or keep separate on the plate.

Tuna salad, egg salad, etc. Who needs bread, eat them out of a bowl with a fork or scoop up with carrots or rice crackers.

Deli ham and cheese on a corn tortilla, microwaved just long enough for cheese to soften, then rolled up. Or precooked strips of chicken, beef, or whatever, rolled up with cheese, salsa, lettuce, dressing, or whatever sounds good.

Tyson precooked roast chicken - 7 minutes in the microwave. Serve with lots of veggies or salad.

Scrambled eggs, breakfast sausage, bacon. Omelettes.

Chop small and stir-fry: bok choy or any interesting cabbagy thing (Napa or even regular cabbage would work), onions, garlic, carrot shreds, broccoli florets, peppers, etc with your choice of Chinese-ish seasonings - gluten-free soy sauce, sesame oil, ginger. Throw bean sprouts on for the last minute if you have them, add some peanuts or cashews. Thicken the sauce if you like with a spoonful of cornstarch in a few spoonfuls of water and cook until clear and thick. Add cooked shrimp or meat (or don't), serve with or without rice.

Hummus with carrots, celery, Mary's Gone Crackers for dipping.

Rice pasta with sauce if you can stand the steaming pot of water. Ditto for rice elbow macaroni with melted Velveeta. Add veggies on the side to nutritionify your kids (or yourself).

ShayFL Enthusiast

Taboule made with quinoa, add pre-cooked chicken.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



elonwy Enthusiast

How bout getting creative with sandwiches? I grabbed some Ener-G bread (I like this best for sandwiches), got some cream cheese, salami, spicy mustard and arugula and made little sandwiches. Throw in some cole slaw or a salad, you got yourself a non-cook, light meal. Hefty up a cobb salad as a meal, or any salad, really. Throw in some meat or chicken and some toast, its a meal. Cook something big late at night (like soup or something) then divvy it up into microwave portions for heating up when its hot. This is what I do :)

purple Community Regular

Fry your meat in the a.m. then just microwave at dinner time. Tacos/Nachos are fast. Top with fresh veggies and whatever else.

GlutenGalAZ Enthusiast

I live in Arizona and its been 100+ for the past week (finally starting to cool down some ha not much though).

During the summer we BBQ a lot. Steak, chicken and hamburgers then we put frozen steam vegetable packs in the microwave and or instant potatoes on the stove. If you make extra meat on the BBQ then you can have leftovers for the next night or lunch the next day.

Juliebove Rising Star

I like really quick things that require no cooking at all or only the use of the microwave. Like hotdogs, Ian's chicken nuggets, ham steak or precooked smoked pork chops and canned beans.

Salads of all kinds. 1/2 a melon hollowed out and filled with cottage cheese or ice cream, sorbet or yogurt and all kinds of berries.

An apple hollowed out and filled with peanut butter, or stuffed celery.

purple Community Regular

cool bean salad, high in fiber and protein...peppers and onions too.

missy'smom Collaborator
cool bean salad, high in fiber and protein...peppers and onions too.

Yes, I had forgotten about that. One of my favorite foods on a hot day. That plus some good quality olives and cheese and maybe some garlic bread. Yum!

purple Community Regular
Yes, I had forgotten about that. One of my favorite foods on a hot day. That plus some good quality olives and cheese and maybe some garlic bread. Yum!

YUM!!!

babysteps Contributor
Tuna salad, egg salad, etc. Who needs bread, eat them out of a bowl with a fork or scoop up with carrots or rice crackers.

Any canned meat can make a tasty salad - salmon is one of my favorites (there's often a few choices of type or grade, whatever's cheapest is still plenty tasty!!), some mayo & seasonings, maybe some frozen peas (just run under warm water briefly to thaw, or put some in the fridge in the morning for use in the afternoon) or other no-cooking required vegetable.

Also, canned garbonzo beans (chick peas) are tasty, can be added to a meat salad or eaten on their own as a side dish - add some oil and or vinegar and seasoning for a yummy dish. No cooking required, just rinse in water.

Fillets of any mild fish, topped with salsa, can be cooked very quickly in a (gluten-free) toaster oven. If the house is too hot, plug the toaster oven in to an outlet in the garage or outdoors.

If you are going to cook rice or gluten-free pasta or quinoa, etc, make a double (or more) batch, use the leftovers later. leftovers can be great cold (well, room temperature) in salads. A little oil on the leftover rice or pasta or quinoa helps keep it from forming a block in the refrigerator. Short time in the microwave can revive to nice and warm if you wish, but if it's that hot cold is better :D

Mango04 Enthusiast

I guess I'm on an avocado kick:

Corn Thins topped with Applegate Farms smoked chicken, avocado, mayo, salt, pepper

Garbanzo beans mixed with avocado, tomato, shallot, carrot, olive oil, balsamic, salt, pepper

Black beans, fresh salsa, corn tortillas, avocado

tuna, celery, carrots, red onion, tomato, mayo, lemon, salt, pepper... served with rice crackers

chopped salad: romaine, carrot (shaved with peeler), turkey lunch meat, cucumbers, olive oil, wine vinegar

Wonka Apprentice
The thermometer will hit over 100 again today... Do you have ideas for meals that take very little cooking ... or meals that can be cooked in the early morning and served later?

The grill is your friend. In the summer I grill everything, meat, vegies, potatoes even gluten-free french bread (heat the whole grill, turn off the burners over the bread and leave the others on to act like an oven - works brilliantly)

GlutenGalAZ Enthusiast

Last summer before we got out new BBQ we used our George Foreman Grill a lot for hambugers mainly though, but you can use it with chicken, vegetables etc.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,140
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    KP009
    Newest Member
    KP009
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      My migraines generally have their onset during the early morning hours as well. Presently, I am under siege with them, having headaches all but two days so far this month. I have looked at all the things reported to be common triggers (foods, sleep patterns, weather patterns, stress, etc.). Every time I think I start to see a pattern it proves not to pan out in the long run. I'm not sure it's any one thing but may, instead, be a combination of things that coalesce at certain times. It's very frustrating. The medication (sumatriptan or "Imatrix") is effective and is the only thing that will quell the pain. NSAIDs, Tylenol, even hydrocodone doesn't touch it. But they only give you 9 does of sumatriptan a month. And it doesn't help that medical science doesn't really know what causes migraines. They know some things about it but the root cause is still a mystery.
    • Scott Adams
      These are labeled gluten-free: https://www.amazon.com/Corn-Husks-Tamales-Authentic-Flavorful/dp/B01MDSHUTM/
    • Wheatwacked
      Just a gluten free diet is not enough.  Now you have to identify and replenish your malnutrition.  Celiac disease is co-morbid with malabsorption syndrome.  Low vitamin D, Low Thiamine caused Gastointeston Beriberi, low choline, low iodine are common the general population, and in newly diagnosed Celiacs in the western culture its is more likely.  It takes time to heal and you need to focus on vitamins and minerals.  Gluten free foods are not fortified like regular processed foods.  
    • Sarah Grace
      Dear Kitty Since March I have been following your recommendations regarding vitamins to assist with various issues that I have been experiencing.  To recap, I am aged 68 and was late diagnosed with Celiac about 12 years ago.  I had been experiencing terrible early morning headaches which I had self diagnosed as hypoglycaemia.  I also mentioned that I had issues with insomnia, vertigo and brain fog.   It's now one year since I started on the Benfotiamine 600 mg/day.  I am still experiencing the hypoglycaemia and it's not really possible to say for sure whether the Benfotiamine is helpful.  In March this year, I added B-Complex Thiamine Hydrochloride and Magnesium L-Threonate on a daily basis, and I am now confident to report that the insomnia and vertigo and brain fog have all improved!!  So, very many thanks for your very helpful advice. I am now less confident that the early morning headaches are caused by hypoglycaemia, as even foods with a zero a GI rating (cheese, nuts, etc) can cause really server headaches, which sometimes require migraine medication in order to get rid off.  If you are able to suggest any other treatment I would definitely give it a try, as these headaches are a terrible burden.  Doctors in the UK have very limited knowledge concerning dietary issues, and I do not know how to get reliable advice from them. Best regards,
    • knitty kitty
      @rei.b,  I understand how frustrating starting a new way of eating can be.  I tried all sorts of gluten-free processed foods and just kept feeling worse.  My health didn't improve until I started the low histamine AIP diet.  It makes a big difference.   Gluten fits into opioid receptors in our bodies.  So, removing gluten can cause withdrawal symptoms and reveals the underlying discomfort.  SIBO can cause digestive symptoms.  SIBO can prevent vitamins from being absorbed by the intestines.  Thiamine insufficiency causes Gastrointestinal Beriberi (bloating, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea or constipation).  Thiamine is the B vitamin that runs out first because it can only be stored for two weeks.  We need more thiamine when we're sick or under emotional stress.  Gastric Beriberi is under recognised by doctors.  An Erythrocyte Transketolace Activity test is more accurate than a blood test for thiamine deficiency, but the best way to see if you're low in thiamine is to take it and look for health improvement.  Don't take Thiamine Mononitrate because the body can't utilize it well.  Try Benfotiamine.  Thiamine is water soluble, nontoxic and safe even at high doses.  I thought it was crazy, too, but simple vitamins and minerals are important.  The eight B vitamins work together, so a B Complex, Benfotiamine,  magnesium and Vitamin D really helped get my body to start healing, along with the AIP diet.  Once you heal, you add foods back in, so the AIP diet is worth doing for a few months. I do hope you'll consider the AIP diet and Benfotiamine.
×
×
  • 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.