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

Needs Family Meal Ideas; There's a Catch


elle's mom

Recommended Posts

elle's mom Contributor

OK, I can handle being free of all these foods myself, not a problem. Problem is will my hubby and kids eat what I make and I do enough cooking I can't cook two meals for every meal.....so I need lots of ideas to experiment with. The criteria are gluten-free, DF, soy, egg & yeast free.....we love rice, corn, and nuts. Also tomato and potato are welcome. Chicken, fish, pork, and beef all OK. And of course any fruit or veggie. Bring on all your ideas and suggestions from breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner, and dessert. I am dying to know how/what I can bake without eggs. Remember we are a family of 6 (although only five actually participate in eating, but baby will be soon too). Please include brands if you can, thanks!!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



AKcollegestudent Apprentice

OK, I can handle being free of all these foods myself, not a problem. Problem is will my hubby and kids eat what I make and I do enough cooking I can't cook two meals for every meal.....so I need lots of ideas to experiment with. The criteria are gluten-free, DF, soy, egg & yeast free.....we love rice, corn, and nuts. Also tomato and potato are welcome. Chicken, fish, pork, and beef all OK. And of course any fruit or veggie. Bring on all your ideas and suggestions from breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner, and dessert. I am dying to know how/what I can bake without eggs. Remember we are a family of 6 (although only five actually participate in eating, but baby will be soon too). Please include brands if you can, thanks!!

Tacos. Hands down, my easiest meal to make. Corn tortillas (or rice tortillas, though I haven't found them around my area in a while), a gluten free taco mix, hamburger, and then you can use tomatoes, salsa, onions, rice cheese if you actually like it (I don't. I find it vaguely appalling.), rice, beans, corn---really, the sky's the limit.

Stir fries are my easy go-to dinner: protein (chicken or beef for me, as pork makes me sick in large quantities), any vegetable, rice, corn pasta, or rice noodles (Asian rice noodles, not rice pasta), and then any sauce you want to use. I've used everything from vinaigrette to a splash of wine (because it cooks off quickly) to a little bit of horseradish sauce.

Stews and soups are my saving grace--throw stuff in the pot or crockpot and chances are good it'll taste good. As there's one of me, a single large soup (my soup pot's about 3 quarts) will last me several days.

I get most of my baked good recipes from Karina at glutenfreegoddess.blogspot.com--she's got a whole list of things she can't eat, including eggs, dairy, soy, and gluten. The ingredient lists don't always look normal, but I've found the baked goods generally turn out well. (I think my favorite "I am not feeding this to my friends and definitely not to relatives!" moment was in the middle of making a cake that called for sweet potato puree and all I had was canned squash. But the cake tasted fabulous and no one ever figured out what it was made with.)

tarnalberry Community Regular

Stir-fries (yes, without soy)

Sauteed veggies & meat (italian or mexican flavors)

Lots of mexican foods (just leave out the cheese)

Lots of soups (chicken soup, lentil soup, tomato vegetable soup)

Stews (chicken, beef, veggie, etc.)

Pasta dishes - salads, esp.

About the only thing you really would need to do is make your own broth/stock (which you can freeze in ice cube trays), and lots and lots of things will be easy to either take directly out of a recipe, or make only small modifications to.

Wolicki Enthusiast

Breakfast

Arrowhead Mills Rice and Shine Hot cereal with brown sugar, cinammon and blueberries

Rice cakes with peanut butter and banana

Lunch,

Lettuce wraps or rice paper wrappers with almost anything inside: carrots, lettuce, sprouts, turkey, etc.

Soups with chicken, carrots, onions, celery and turnips- yum. Add some quinoa curly veggie noodles.

Spaghetti made from quinoa or corn, tomato sauce with ground meat.

Fruit salad, chicken salad, mac salad made with corn pasta

Shepherd's Pie topped with mashed potatoes

If you get bored of mashed potatoes, add some pureed peas or carrots.

Cook rice with chicken stock, peas and rice to change it up.

Risotto made with chicken stock and butternut squash.

Plain grilled chicken or pork chops with this great seasoning: McCormick cinammon and chipotle. It's not spicy hot, so the kids will eat it. It makes pork, chicken and fish taste great, grilled or baked.

purple Community Regular

Ditto Karina, here are a few of her recipes that should work for you:

Open Original Shared Link

She lists lots of ways to sub ingredients for this recipe. I divide dough into 2 8x8" pans sometimes, blending in different add-ins like raisins, craisins, chopped dates, nuts, pumpkin seeds, etc.

Use Ener G Egg replacer for the eggs. Buckwheat flour for the quinoa flour and quinoa flakes for the oats, if desired.

Cut into granola bars, wrap and freeze. Tastes like apple crisp or ginger bread.

Open Original Shared Link

Use spectrum shortening, ener g egg replacer, decrease sugar to 1 cup.

I use less choc chips.

You could omit the choc and add some dried fruit or leave plain.

Open Original Shared Link

I made muffins with this recipe.

Karina has lots of great tips and subs on her site!

Waffles

Open Original Shared Link

use any milk like almond, decrease to 1 1/2 cups and keep bananas in the freezer(thaw and use). I get 15 waffles, adding berries or mini chips to some.

Chocolate Cupcakes

https://www.celiac.com/gluten-free/index.php?showtopic=55428

Use 3/4 tsp. xanthan gum if your flour mix doesn't already have it. Mine is sorghum, cornstarch and tapioca flour.( I made these for Valentines Day, scrumptious!

Cinnamon Toast Crunch with Nuts

https://www.celiac.com/gluten-free/index.php?showtopic=54578

use almonds or walnuts

Wraps

Open Original Shared Link

multipurpose use, recipe makes only 2 so make lots. I pressed mine out onto inverted cake pans.

Brownie In A Mug

2 T. white rice flour

2 T. potato starch or cornstarch

1/8 tsp. xanthan gum

2 T. baking cocoa

3 T. white sugar

1 1/2 T. veg. oil or lite olive oil

1 T. chocolate chips

Put dry ingredients in a mug and stir. Add wet ingredients and stir. Stir in choc chips. Microwave 1 minute. Don't over cook. Stir and eat.

Chili and Onion Roasted Potatoes

2 lbs. baking potatoes

2 T. olive oil

1 tsp. chili powder

1 tsp. onion salt

Cut potatoes into wedges. Place all ingredients into a large plastic bag. Toss to coat. Spread potatoes onto large cookie sheet and bake at 450 degrees for about 30 minutes or until tender.

Pop your own popcorn in lots of coconut oil, no need to add any butter.

purple Community Regular

I just bumped into this new recipe from Karina:

Open Original Shared Link

I LOVE chocolate and can't wait to try this recipe...but...it will have to wait until I visit my gluten-free/vegan dd :(

p.s. I have read that her buckwheat choc chip cookies are very good but I still haven't tried them.

p.s.s.

I just discovered her wrap recipe that looks great except I might reduce the thyme a bit:

Open Original Shared Link

VickiLynn Newbie

My quick supper tonight was diced onions, carrot & celery sauteed in olive oil. I added ground turkey & cooked thoroughly. Next added broth (chicken or vegetable). Swanson is gluten-free, along with a can of tomatoes (in any form you like). While that is simmering I boiled some potatoes for mashed potatoes. When potatoes were done I thickened the turkey mixture with gluten-free cornstarch. Serve the turkey gravy with veggies over the potatoes. This took around 30 mins and is really good. Get Bette Hagman's cookbooks, she has many recipes that are egg free, yeast free, dairy free, or any combination.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



elle's mom Contributor

Wow! Thanks you guys!! I am starting to realize there is life after gluten, dairy, soy, egg, and yeast; who would've thought! I am super excited to buy some ingredients and get going. This is just what I needed :D

purple Community Regular

Here is a recipe you could try for a bread replacement. I made it once w/o egg and it was a little more dense and didn't rise as much but still good.

Quickie Flaxmeal Skillet Bread

Open Original Shared Link

for comments:

Open Original Shared Link

or

Open Original Shared Link

You will need to use an egg replacement and a buttermilk. For that you could try a non-dairy milk with some lemon juice or vinegar added, let sit a few minutes.

The yeast is for flavor not for rising so omit it.

Just tweak it until you get it right. Oh yeah, I made rolls with it too. Both of those 2 times-gluten-free/egg and dairy free.

Wish you well!

AKcollegestudent Apprentice

I just bumped into this new recipe from Karina:

Open Original Shared Link

I LOVE chocolate and can't wait to try this recipe...but...it will have to wait until I visit my gluten-free/vegan dd :(

p.s. I have read that her buckwheat choc chip cookies are very good but I still haven't tried them.

p.s.s.

I just discovered her wrap recipe that looks great except I might reduce the thyme a bit:

Open Original Shared Link

I know that buckwheat's grown on me over the course of the past 9 months, but when I first made the choc chip cookies...I was *not* a fan. My test tasters didn't mind them, but they definitely weren't the tastiest thing that I've made from Karina's site. It's interesting because I really do think that's the only one of her recipes that I haven't flat out loved.

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. - tiffanygosci posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      0

      New Celiac Mama in My 30s

    2. - knitty kitty replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      8

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,

    3. - Yaya replied to Jhona's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      29

      Does anyone here also have Afib

    4. - larc replied to Jhona's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      29

      Does anyone here also have Afib

    5. - klmgarland replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      8

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,921
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Serena Rodriguez
    Newest Member
    Serena Rodriguez
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Who's Online (See full list)

  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • tiffanygosci
      Hello all! My life in the last five years has been crazy. I got married in 2020 at the age of 27, pregnant with our first child almost two months later, gave birth in 2021. We had another baby in April of 2023 and our last baby this March of 2025. I had some issues after my second but nothing ever made me think, "I should see a doctor about this." After having my last baby this year, my body has finally started to find its new rhythm and balance...but things started to feel out of sorts. A lot of symptoms were convoluted with postpartum symptoms, and, to top it all off, my cycle came back about 4m postpartum. I was having reoccurring migraines, nausea, joint pain, numbness in my right arm, hand and fingers, tummy problems, hives. I finally went to my PCP in August just for a wellness check and I brought up my ailments. I'm so thankful for a doctor that listens and is thorough. He ended up running a food allergy panel, an environmental respiratory panel, and a celiac panel. I found out I was allergic to wheat, allergic to about every plant and dust mites, and I did have celiac. I had an endoscopy done on October 3 and my results confirmed celiac in the early stages! I am truly blessed to have an answer to my issues. When I eat gluten, my brain feels like it's on fire and like someone is squeezing it. I can't think straight and I zone out easily. My eyes can't focus. I get a super bad migraine and nausea. I get so tired and irritable and anxious. My body hurts sometimes and my gut gets bloated, gassy, constipated, and ends with bowel movements. All this time I thought I was just having mom brain or feeling the effects of postpartum, sleep deprivation, and the like (which I probably was having and the celiac disease just ramped it up!) I have yet to see a dietician but I've already been eating and shopping gluten-free. My husband and I have been working on turning our kitchen 100% gluten-free (we didn't think this would be so expensive but he assured me that my health is worth all the money in the world). There are still a few things to replace and clean. I'm already getting tired of reading labels. I even replaced some of my personal hygiene care for myself and the kids because they were either made with oats or not labeled gluten-free. I have already started feeling better but have made some mistakes along the way or have gotten contamination thrown into the mix. It's been hard! Today I joked that I got diagnosed at the worst time of the year with all the holidays coming up. I will just need to bring my own food to have and to share. It will be okay but different after years of eating "normally". Today I ordered in person at Chipotle and was trying not to feel self-conscious as the line got long because they were following food-allergy protocols. It's all worth it to be the healthiest version of myself for me and my family. I would be lying if I said I wasn't a little overwhelmed and a little overloaded!  I am thankful for this community and I look forward to learning more from you all. I need the help, that's for sure!
    • knitty kitty
      On the AIP diet, all processed foods are eliminated.  This includes gluten-free bread.  You'll be eating meats and vegetables, mostly.  Meats that are processed, like sausages, sandwich meats, bacons, chicken nuggets, etc., are eliminated as well.  Veggies should be fresh, or frozen without other ingredients like sauces or seasonings.  Nightshade vegetables (eggplant, potatoes, tomatoes, peppers) are excluded.  They contain alkaloids that promote a leaky gut and inflammation.  Dairy and eggs are also eliminated.   I know it sounds really stark, but eating this way really improved my health.  The AIP diet can be low in nutrients, and, with malabsorption, it's important to supplement vitamins and minerals.  
    • Yaya
      Thank you for responding and for prayers.  So sorry for your struggles, I will keep you in mine.  You are so young to have so many struggles, mine are mild by comparison.  I didn't have Celiac Disease (celiac disease) until I had my gallbladder removed 13 years ago; at least nothing I was aware of.  Following surgery: multiple symptoms/oddities appeared including ridges on fingernails, eczema, hair falling out in patches, dry eyes, upset stomach constantly and other weird symptoms that I don't really remember.  Gastro did tests and endoscopy and verified celiac disease. Re heart: I was born with Mitral Valve Prolapse (MVP) and an irregular heartbeat, yet heart was extremely strong.  It was difficult to pick up the irregular heartbeat on the EKG per cardiologist.  I had Covid at 77, recovered in 10 days and 2 weeks later developed long Covid. What the doctors and nurses called the "kickoff to long Covid, was A-fib.  I didn't know what was going on with my heart and had ignored early symptoms as some kind of passing aftereffect stemming from Covid.  I was right about where it came from, but wrong on it being "passing".  I have A-fib as my permanent reminder of Covid and take Flecainide every morning and night and will for the rest of my life to stabilize my heartbeat.   
    • larc
      When I accidentally consume gluten it compromises the well-being of my heart and arteries. Last time I had a significant exposure, about six months ago, I had AFib for about ten days. It came on every day around dinner time. After the ten days or so it went away and hasn't come back.  My cardiologist offered me a collection of pharmaceuticals at the time.  But I passed on them. 
    • klmgarland
      So I should not eat my gluten free bread?  I will try the vitamins.  Thank you all so very much for your ideas and understanding.  I'm feeling better today and have gathered back my composure! Thank you kitty kitty   I am going to look this diet up right away.  And read the paleo diet and really see if I can make this a better situation then it currently is.  
×
×
  • 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.