Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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

Thankgiving


Darla

Recommended Posts

Darla Newbie

Hi everyone, my grandson was diagnosed w/celiac when he was 2. He almost died and only by my daughter-in-law was he diagnosed. She spent many hours on the internet cause the drs. said there was nothing wrong w/him. I guess thats there answer for I DON'T KNOW. Anyway, thanksgiving is at my house this year and I am wondering if anyone can give me a recipe for gravy that he can eat. I am using his butter and everyone else will be to but I don't want to leave him out of anything. Thank you in advance for any help you can give me. God bless :rolleyes:


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kabowman Explorer

Arrowroot flour should work for giblet gravy.

-Kate

tarnalberry Community Regular

You can use a lot of different things for making gravy - arrowroot, corstarch, rice flour... I wouldn't go with potato flour, but many of the other ones work just fine.

gZimmiZ Rookie

Darla,

Last week I tried Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free All Purpose Baking Flour to make

gravy for Chicken Fried Steak and Gravy. (I know it isn't the healthest meal, but sometimes...........) I coated the meat with the mix and fried it. For the gravy I used the pan juices, Bob's mix and milk to stir up gravy. It turned really good. Corn Starch mixed in cold water first would make gravy too. I found recipes for Chicken Pot Pie and many other gluten free recipes on the Bob's Red Mill Website. Good Luck! PZ

gZimmiZ Rookie

Darla,

Last week I tried Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free All Purpose Baking Flour to make

gravy for Chicken Fried Steak and Gravy. (I know it isn't the healthest meal, but sometimes...........) I coated the meat with the mix and fried it. For the gravy I used the pan juices, Bob's mix and milk to stir up gravy. It turned really good. Corn Starch mixed in cold water first would make gravy too. I found recipes for Chicken Pot Pie and many other gluten free recipes on the Bob's Red Mill Website. Good Luck! PZ

traci Apprentice

You know I was wondering about that flour for fried chicken, gonna try it now.

Ok heres that pecan pie recipe again.. after all what is Thanksgiving without pecan pie, nothing at my house.

3 Cups Pecan pieces

1/4 C sugar

1/4 cup butter or margerine, melted

1 bag of caramels

2/3 C whipping cream

1 pkg of semi sweet baking chocolate

1/4 c powdered sugar

1/2 tsp vanilla

Of course it goes without saying gluten-free stuff on all this

Preheat oven to 350 Place 2 cups of pecans in food processor (you could just beat them up with a rolling pin in a zip bag if no food processor) Process or beat till finely ground. Mix with granulated sugar and butter. Press firmly into pie plate on bottom and up the sides. Bake 12-15 mins till lightly browned. Cool completely, if the crust puffs up, gently press it flat with spoon.

Microwave caramels and 1/3 cup of whipping cream in bowl, on high for 2 1/2 to 3 mins, or until caramel is totally melted but make sure you stir after each minute in nuker. Pour into cooled crust. Chop (rough chop, dont beat these up to dust) the rest of pecans, sprinkle on caramel. Let this cool for at least 10 mins till caramel starts to set up.

Place chocolate, remaining 1/3 cup whipping cream, powdered sugar in saucepan, cook over low heat until melted (you could use double boiler here less chance of scorching) stir constantly. When melted, add vanilla, stir into chocolate, pour over cooled caramel, spread it around, refridge at least 2 hours. Store any leftovers (yeah right) in the fridge.

I make easy gravy, when I dont wanna mess with meat drippings by using gluten free broth, for thanksgiving would use chicken, put however much you want in saucepan, along with bay leaf, 1/4 tsp of garlic powdered if you must, I use fresh. For thanksgiving I am also going to add just a smidge of dried sage, like a pinch. Let it simmer gently for 5- 10 mins then turn heat off and let sit until fairly cool, take out the bay leaf, make a corn starch slurry, cornstarch first then cold water, make it pretty thick, stir it into the cooled broth, put back on heat, bring to boil, stir stir stir VOILA gravy. If you want it really pretty, add 1 tsp of dried parsley. If you let the broth cool a bit then add your cornstarch and bring back to boil stirring the whole time, you wont have those nasty lumps. Also for a richer gravy, more like you would get if you did use meat drippings, add 1 tsp butter for every 12 oz gravy, when you have it thickened and turn the heat off, just stir the butter in, its shiny and the mouth feel is more like the real thing.. yummy.

Anyone ever try dressing, stuffing with gluten-free bread? Does it work?

dkmb Newbie

If you make cornbread and use gluten-free flour for the regular it comes out very good. My husband likes it better than "real people" flour. (that is him keeping humor in our lives). If you cut the baked cornbread into small squares and even use the crumbs, bake it in a 425 degree oven until toasted, just like the mixes in the store, it will come out great. You can add just about anything else to the mix that you like in your stuffing. No one complains when it is the only stuffing on the table.

DK


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Boojca Apprentice

We have always only used cornstarch as the thickener for gravy. The first time I saw someone using flour I was stunned. And this was pre-celiac disease!!! So, just make it the way you normally would but use cornstarch instead. We always put the cornstarch in some cold water first to prevent clumping, mix it up and THEN put it in the hot broth.

traci Apprentice

Thank you dkmb, I am going to try it.

I have always used mostly cornstarch to thicken a lot of things.. used roux a few times, flour and fat. I find its easier to work with you if put cornstarch in cup, then add cold water and stir it into something that is NOT boiling.. no lumps then. :D

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. - Dora77 posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      0

      Permanent Floating & Undigested Stools for a Year

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

      Status Update...

    3. - cristiana replied to Tyoung's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      7

      Increasing symptoms after going gluten free

    4. - Jy11 replied to Jy11's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      14

      Conflicting results

    5. - Pasballard replied to Tyoung's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      7

      Increasing symptoms after going gluten free


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      127,976
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    AbacoRage17
    Newest Member
    AbacoRage17
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121k
    • Total Posts
      70.5k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Dora77
      For some context: I have type 1 diabetes (T1D) (since 11 years) and celiac disease(since 4 years) For about a year now, I’ve been experiencing permanent floating and undigested stools. I’ve had a pancreas elastase test done. The first result was extremely low at 44, but a second test came back at 236. My doctor said that since one result is normal, it rules out pancreatic insufficiency because, according to them, elastase levels would always stay low if that were the issue. However, could the 236 have been a false result? My doctor also thinks I don’t have pancreatic insufficiency because I’m able to gain weight. I also get hgh injections as my bone age is younger than my real age, this also contributes to weight gain, so I dont know if weight gain can rule out malabsorption. But maybe if I had real malabsorption I wouldnt gain any weight even with hgh? For celiac, I’m on a gluten-free diet, but there might b small cross-contamination from things like pepper labeled as “may contain gluten.” or sausages which dont have gluten ingredient but say may contain. My doctor said that small amounts like this wouldn’t harm me and even mentioned that an occasional small exposure to gluten may not do much damage (which seems questionable since I thought even tiny amounts could be harmful). She also said that when Im older (Im m17) I could try eating small amounts of gluten and do antibody blood tests to see if I can tolerate small amounts or not. For reference, I’m asymptomatic when it comes to celiac, so I have no idea if I’ve been “glutened” or not. My first concerning celiac blood test was semi high IgA, then 3 months later we did a check up and my IgA was high so it was confirmed celiac. Since than I’ve had celiac antibody tests done yearly to see how my diet is going, and they’ve been negative, but I’ve heard those aren’t always reliable. I’ve never had a follow-up endoscopy to confirm healing. I also always kept eating „may contain gluten“ food. (I live in Germany so I dont know if „may contain gluten“ is as risky as in the usa but I suppose both are as risky) These stool issues started around the same time I was doing excessive heavy lifting at the gym. Could stress or lifting have triggered this, or is that less likely since the symptoms persist even after I stopped lifting? Occasionally, I’ll feel very mild stomach discomfort, but it’s rare and not severe. My doctor (also a dietist) said floating, undigested stools could still be “normal,” but that doesn’t seem realistic to me. Could this be impacting my vitamin or protein absorption? I also did a fructose intolerance breath test and had a high baseline of 20 ppm, but it never increased—only decreased over time. I fasted for 12 hours and didn’t eat fructose beforehand, but my stomach didn’t feel completely empty during the test. Could this mean the test was inaccurate? For lactose intolerance, I did the breath test but only fasted 10 hours and had eaten lactose prior because I wasn’t aware of the proper diet restrictions. My results were: 14, 12, 15, 25, 35, 40, 40 ppm—which would be considered positive. But given that I didn’t fast long enough or follow the right diet, could this result be unreliable? Has anyone else dealt with similar symptoms? What ended up being the cause for you? And sorry for the long text!
    • TerryinCO
      The Docs' and NP haven't committed to Celiac determination yet but say go gluten-free diet because...  And I have with improved physical results - feeling better; overall functions better, and more energy.  Still 10 pounds down in weight but I still have BMI of ~23.  It's been just over a month now gluten-free diet.  I'm fortunate I get along with diary/milk well and most other foods. I wanted ask about this site's sponsor, gliadin X.  If this is legit, seems like a good product to keep on hand. Though it says it's only a safety for incidental gluten contact - not a substitue for gluten-free diet. What's your input on this? This may be sensitive subject since they're a sponsor. I've used resources here and other sites for information, gluten-free food/product lists. So thank you for all that support. That's it for now - Stay warm...  -2F this morning in Colorado!
    • cristiana
      I did suffer with gastric symptoms before diagnosis, but got all sorts of weird and wacky symptoms after going gluten free.   Things got much better once my antibodies fell to normal levels, but it took years (please don't panic, many people's go to normal levels relatively quickly when following a gluten-free diet). Causes of the symptoms you mention that I also experienced were iron supplements, a temporary dairy intolerance (this is common in coeliacs and should pass when your gut heals properly), and eating oats, as mentioned above.  Other symptoms I got were musculoskeletal pain after diagnosis, but again, once my coeliac blood tests were normal, I had no more pain. I did notice patterns emerging in foods that I reacted to and learned to steer clear of them, then gradually reintroduced them when my gut healed, such as soya, pure oats and dairy products.    You might like to keep a food diary. Cristiana
    • Jy11
      Well the conflicting results continue as the biopsy has come back negative. 😵‍💫 Waiting to discuss further but I really don’t know what to think now? Eight biopsy’s were taken from duodenum which surely should be sufficient if it was coeliac? 
    • Pasballard
      I have Celiacs and want you to be aware of the amount of weight you can potentially put on if you rely on gluten free snacks, bread etc.,they  are high in carbs.  I put on 25 lbs in a short amount of time.  Whole Foods are the best way to go but I struggle with this.  The cost of gluten free is also a problem.  I love black licorice but most have gluten.  My favorite chili seasoning as well.  The list is endless.  I take  Advil liquid gels and had no idea until I read this.  I hope you do better than I have done.  I feel I am destined to suffer daily no matter what.  My aunt didn’t take care of herself and died from complications.  I hope you can get on a good routine.
×
×
  • Create New...