Thursday, October 27, 2011

Science of Gluten Intolerance

Despite increasing awareness of gluten intolerance, many people continue to be misdiagnosed or undiagnosed because the condition is misunderstood. It's believed as many as one in 20 people in the United States is affected by some form of gluten sensitivity. Because symptoms are so numerous and widely varied, it is often mistaken for something else, such as irritable bowel syndrome. Gluten intolerance affects the intestines specifically, but many of the symptoms seem to be unrelated. Skin rash, headaches, joint pain, numbness, tooth or gum problems, and fatigue can be indications of the condition that could go unrecognized. Despite growing interest among doctors, PhD programs, and online support groups, there remains no effective test for gluten intolerance. Until now, most patients who don't have celiac disease have been told there's nothing wrong with them at all.


Gluten intolerance can be separated into two categories: celiac disease and non-celiac gluten intolerance. Celiac disease is diagnosed through blood tests and a biopsy of intestinal tissue. Biopsies in patients with celiac disease will reveal damage to the villi, tiny cilia on the intestinal lining necessary to absorb nutrients from food, whereas non-celiac gluten intolerance will not. The villi are damaged when the body interprets the presence of gluten as a threat and sends out antibodies. The antibodies attack, and the result is the flattening of the villi.


This damage will not be present in non-celiac gluten intolerant people. The only way to diagnose this condition is to switch to a gluten-free diet and see if symptoms diminish. However, people who suspect they have a type of gluten intolerance shouldn't adopt a gluten-free diet until comprehensive testing for celiac disease is complete. Removing gluten from the diet can produce negative tests results even if the condition is present, interfering with proper diagnosis.


Gluten is a mixture of two proteins called glutenin and gliadin. It is typically found in grassy grains like wheat, barley, rye, and spelt. Because oats are usually harvested and processed together with these grains, cross-contamination can occur. Therefore, gluten can be present in oat products as well. It's also present in other foods in the form of protein additives.


The only treatment for all types of gluten intolerance is removing gluten more or less entirely from one's diet. Great care must be taken because it is present in many sources that aren't as obvious as bread, pasta, or cereal. Many convenience foods such as gravies, custards, soups, and sauces are thickened with wheat, rye, and barley flour. Some colorings and additives also contain gluten. The USDA currently doesn't require food labels to include information about gluten content, so it's necessary for consumers to educate themselves about what ingredients usually include gluten in order to avoid them.


It's unclear why intolerance to a substance that's been a staple of the human diet for thousands of years is on the rise. Positive blood tests for celiac disease have risen four-fold in the last 50 years. It can develop at any time, including childhood and old age. Some experts believe some change in the environment has triggered the onset of this condition.


In any case, further research is needed for more complete understanding of this problem. In the meantime, it's important for people to be educated to recognize the symptoms and be aware of this condition as a possible cause. Until a better solution is found, recognizing gluten as the problem and eliminating it is the only answer.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Food and Health Carnival Oct 27

Lisa's Gluten-Free Advice and Healthy Living



Do you have a Favorite Recipe, a Great Tip, a Great Resource or a Giveaway? Do you have a Giveaway Linky or Recipe Carnival on your blog? Or maybe you would just like to share your Food or Health Blog/Website.Add your link to my Food and Health Carnival.


All I ask for in return is for you to add my blog button above to your blog and/or a link to my website. Lisa’s Gluten-Free Advice and Healthy Living. Another idea is that you could add my link to your blog roll. Thank-You.




Add Your Gluten-Free and/or Healthy Living Blog to my Directory.
(if you added your blog to this directory before, please add it again. Thank-you).


If you like my blog, I would love it if you would sign up for my newsletter. (in the blue box on the right hand column).


This week I will share with you: Gluten-Free in College


Use InLinkz for your linkys.






Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Gluten Free Oats

Long before the fancy cereal flavors hit the supermarket shelves of it was cans and boxes of oatmeal that has rocked a supermarket floor. Each child has had a had tried bowls and bowls of oatmeal, and this ritual is also extended to those who suffer from celiac disease. Thus, we find gluten free oats widely available on the market today.


Despite recent scientific studies that conclude that oats are safe for most celiacs, those who are skeptical about the validity of this claim can still enjoy their gluten free oats. If you are willing to give it a try with a meal of oats usually just for the sake of argument to verify whether the hypothesis is true for you, experts say to eat only half to three quarter cup oatmeal, every day. But for children you can serve more than a quarter cup per day.


Most people wonder about the term gluten free oats. What this simply means that the FDA related the gluten free labels on products containing less than 20 ppm of gluten. So when you come across a gluten free oatmeal package, it simply means that the gluten content is minimal and is not completely gone. It was reported, that there where consumers have reacted with even that small amount of gluten. These are extreme cases of celiac disease. However, we also know that when you eat gluten free oats, people still may experience oat peptides and complications related to celiac disease, but either go unnoticed or is misdiagnosed to some other condition. The main issue is the complications of celiac disease is that it is difficult to determine the cause. That's why the doctors will be amiss in explaining the essential details of how gluten free oats may or may not affect your health.


The best thing you can do about your diet is to have an open mind and be up to date with the news. The medical industry and scientific breakthroughs are always so fragile and changing. So you can learn in the next half hour or so that the digestion of gluten free products do not do any good to you. But until you get your hands on such news, You will have no choice but to follow, those fantasy worded advices: "stay healthy: eat certified gluten free oats, only.”

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Gluten Free Holiday Food Fair

Gluten-Free Holiday Food Fair
The NW Oregon GIG Branches are having a Food Fair on
Saturday, October 22nd, 10:00am till 2:00pm


The International Fellowship Family
4401 NE 122nd St., Portland, OR
(NE 122nd & Sandy, across from Kmart)
$5 per person, $10 per family, Kids under 12 are free!

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Food and Health Carnival Oct 20

Lisa's Gluten-Free Advice and Healthy Living


Do you have a Favorite Recipe, a Great Tip, a Great Resource or a Giveaway? Do you have a Giveaway Linky or Recipe Carnival on your blog? Or maybe you would just like to share your Food or Health Blog/Website.Add your link to my Food and Health Carnival.


All I ask for in return is for you to add my blog button above to your blog and/or a link to my website. Lisa’s Gluten-Free Advice and Healthy Living. Another idea is that you could add my link to your blog roll. Thank-You.




Add Your Gluten-Free and/or Healthy Living Blog to my Directory.
(if you added your blog to this directory before, please add it again. Thank-you).


If you like my blog, I would love it if you would sign up for my newsletter. (in the blue box on the right hand column).


This week I will share with you: Gluten-Free Flours and Binding Agents


Be sure and check out my current giveaways located on my right side bar. Have a great week.



Use InLinkz for your linkys.







Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Food and Health Carnival Oct 13

Lisa's Gluten-Free Advice and Healthy Living


Do you have a Favorite Recipe, a Great Tip, a Great Resource or a Giveaway? Do you have a Giveaway Linky or Recipe Carnival on your blog? Or maybe you would just like to share your Food or Health Blog/Website.Add your link to my Food and Health Carnival.


All I ask for in return is for you to add my blog button above to your blog and/or a link to my website. Lisa’s Gluten-Free Advice and Healthy Living. Another idea is that you could add my link to your blog roll. Thank-You.




Add Your Gluten-Free and/or Healthy Living Blog to my Directory.
(if you added your blog to this directory before, please add it again. Thank-you).


If you like my blog, I would love it if you would sign up for my newsletter. (in the blue box on the right hand column).


This week I will share with you: Gluten Free Books


Be sure and check out my current giveaways located on my right side bar. Have a great week.



Use InLinkz for your linkys.





 


Monday, October 10, 2011

Gluten Free Flour

Gluten is the protein compounds in wheat that binds the dough together when baking goods, gluten free flour thus lacks this binding agent, so when making baked food with gluten free flour you may need to add binding agents to thicken the dough. Foods made out of gluten free flour is the safest choice for people with celiac disease, a condition where the gluten is not tolerated by the small intestine and leads to various complications if gluten is not checked from the system.
 
There are quite a large number of gluten free flour available, though there may be certain handicaps when preparing certain kinds of food with gluten free flour and certain substitutes will have to be added. Amaranth flour also known as African spinach, Indian spinach, Chinese spinach, and elephant’s ear is gluten free flour made from the seed of the plant Amaranth.  This flour is very nutritious and high in protein and good alternative to wheat flour and can be ideally used for baking.


Arrowroot flour is also gluten free flour and is made up from the ground root of the Arrowroot plant; it can be used for thickening sauces and stews because the flour in it self is tasteless and not recommended for baking as such though certain biscuits are manufactured commercially with this flour.


Brown rice flour is also a gluten free flour and is milled from unpolished rice, thus retaining the brown color, this is an extremely nutritious choice for brown rice has a higher vitamin, bran and fiber content than white rice flour, however due its high fiber content it will be slightly grainy in texture and has a nutty taste to it.


Corn flour  also known as cornstarch , is a gluten free flour and it is milled from corn and comes in a white powdery flour, it is generally used to thicken soups and sauces and has a bland taste to it if used on its own, but when used with other ingredients it can yield a quite a distinctive flavor.


Buckwheat flour despite its name has no inclusion of wheat and is a completely gluten free flour and has a connection to the rhubarb family, buckwheat flour is made up by grinding the seeds of the plant in to a fine flour.  It has pleasant nutty taste but does have an overpowering taste and sometimes even a bitter after taste, however it can be used on its own to make pancakes and waffles with rather pleasant results.