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What's For Breakfast Today?


GlutenFreeManna

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love2travel Mentor

Lunch for breakfast - tuna melt with lots of capers and lemon juice. Handful of frozen grapes. Delicious!


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Marilyn R Community Regular

Cinnamon rice pudding and sliced banana.

I'm going to put that in my regular breakfast repertoire.

Jestgar Rising Star

Cinnamon almond pancakes with home made apple-molasses syrup and home made butter.

love2travel Mentor

Cinnamon almond pancakes with home made apple-molasses syrup and home made butter.

Now that is the perfect breakfast in my opinion.

Marilyn R Community Regular

Jestgar, you just got the ultimate lick of approval. :D

love2travel Mentor

Scrambled Eggs with Mushroom Ragout and Mushroom Jus

Crispy Potato Crisps with Parsley Salt

Fresh blueberries

squirmingitch Veteran

A bowl of Amaranth & a Fuji apple.


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TIBZY Newbie

hello all :)

love2travel Mentor

hello all :)

Hi! Welcome here. So, what was your breakfast today? :)

Maggie Mermaid Apprentice

Breakfast burrito made with a brown rice tortilla filled with scrambled eggs, shredded cheese, steamed bok choy, & diced turkey bacon.

Jestgar Rising Star

I dunno. Pancakes? Muffins?

sora Community Regular

Two scrambled eggs and leftover steamed potatoes fried with garlic and rosemary and a bowl of greek yogurt with strawberries and blackberies.

Skylark Collaborator

Grain-free. Scrambled eggs and a sliced apple.

Marilyn R Community Regular

Papaya and apple. If I'm feeling better tomorrow, I'll have a gluten-free toasted bagel with cream cheese, smoked Alaskan salmon, capers and minced hard cooked egg white. :D

love2travel Mentor

Potato Gnocchi with Rose Sauce

Frozen Grapes

alex11602 Collaborator

I made waffles with the Namaste pancake and waffle mix and we had tomato, garlic and rosemary sausage on the side.

  • 2 weeks later...
Cathey Apprentice

I never ever make breakfast, maybe a dozen times a year when the boyz are home. This pass Sunday our youngest was home from school, he goes.

White Corn tortilla as the base covered w/ 2 sunny side eggs, surrounded the plate with black beans, pico de gallo, sheared lettuce, sliced tomato, fresh avocado, chipole aioli and roasted seasoned red potato. Fresh fruit on the side. Yum, boyz aren't home offend but I try and make it special.

love2travel Mentor

Raspberry, peach and lime smoothie. Scrumptious!

love2travel Mentor

Delicious homemade cornbread with butter. Black plum.

love2travel Mentor

Wild blueberry and peach smoothie with lime and flax seed.

cahill Collaborator

A protein shake with strawberries

  • 3 weeks later...
tuxedocat Apprentice

I eat congee most mornings. This is a Chinese dish that is sort of like a "cream of rice".

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You can add whatever you like to it, such as frozen peas/carrots or leftover meat. I generally eat it with shrimp or leftover chicken, mushrooms, green onions, bean sprouts, some peanuts for crunch, then season with sesame oil and gluten-free soy sauce.

It is very, very easy to make!

  • 2 weeks later...
love2travel Mentor

Peach and lime smoothie.

lpellegr Collaborator

Leftover meatloaf and New Jersey strawberries. Or maybe potato salad.

Mom23boys Contributor

Since it is a holiday weekend with everyone home and we don't get to eat out, I'm making my baked corndogs again. I chopped up the hot dogs, added corn and green chile. This gives me another chance to experiment with my hm flour.

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    • 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.
    • captaincrab55
      Imemsm, Most of us have experienced discontinued, not currently available or products that suddenly become seasonal.   My biggest fear about relocating from Maryland to Florida 5 years ago, was being able to find gluten-free foods that fit my restricted diet.  I soon found out that the Win Dixie and Publix supper markets actually has 99% of their gluten-free foods tagged, next to the price.  The gluten-free tags opened up a  lot of foods that aren't actually marked gluten-free by the manufacture.  Now I only need to check for my other dietary restrictions.  Where my son lives in New Hartford, New York there's a Hannaford Supermarket that also has a gluten-free tag next to the price tag.  Hopefully you can locate a Supermarket within a reasonable travel distance that you can learn what foods to check out at a Supermarket close to you.  I have dermatitis herpetiformis too and I'm very sensitive to gluten and the three stores I named were very gluten-free friendly.  Good Luck 
    • rei.b
      Okay well the info about TTG-A actually makes a lot of sense and I wish the PA had explained that to me. But yes, I would assume I would have intestinal damage from eating a lot of gluten for 32 years while having all these symptoms. As far as avoiding gluten foods - I was definitely not doing that. Bread, pasta, quesadillas (with flour tortillas) and crackers are my 4 favorite foods and I ate at least one of those things multiple times a day e.g. breakfast with eggs and toast, a cheese quesadilla for lunch, and pasta for dinner, and crackers and cheese as a before bed snack. I'm not even kidding.  I'm not really big on sugar, so I don't really do sweets. I don't have any of those conditions.  I am not sure if I have the genes or not. When the geneticist did my genetic testing for EDS this year, I didn't think to ask for him to request the celiac genes so they didn't test for them, unfortunately.  I guess another expectation I had is  that if gluten was the issue, the gluten-free diet would make me feel better, and I'm 3 months in and that hasn't been the case. I am being very careful and reading every label because I didn't want to screw this up and have to do gluten-free for longer than necessary if I end up not having celiac. I'm literally checking everything, even tea and anything else prepacked like caramel dip. Honestly its making me anxious 😅
    • knitty kitty
      So you're saying that you think you should have severe intestinal damage since you've had the symptoms so long?   DGP IgG antibodies are produced in response to a partial gluten molecule.  This is different than what tissue transglutaminase antibodies are  produced in response to.   TTg IgA antibodies are produced in the intestines in response to gluten.  The tTg IgA antibodies attack our own cells because a structural component in our cell membranes resembles a part of gluten.  There's a correlation between the level of intestinal damage with the level of tTg antibodies produced.  You are not producing a high number of tTg IgA antibodies, so your level of tissue damage in your intestines is not very bad.  Be thankful.   There may be reasons why you are not producing a high quantity of tTg IgA antibodies.  Consuming ten grams or more of gluten a day for two weeks to two months before blood tests are done is required to get sufficient antibody production and damage to the intestines.  Some undiagnosed people tend to subconsciously avoid lots of gluten.  Cookies and cakes do not contain as much gluten as artisan breads and thick chewy pizza crust.  Anemia, diabetes and thiamine deficiency can affect IgA antibody production as well.   Do you carry genes for Celiac?  They frequently go along with EDS.
    • rei.b
      I was tested for celiac at the same time, so I wasn't taking naltrexone yet. I say that, because I don't. The endoscopy showed some mild inflammation but was inconclusive as to celiac disease. They took several biopsies and that's all that was shown. I was not given a Marsh score.
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