The Liebster Awards

Tina from Whisks and Chopsticks presented me with a Liebster award (German for ‘dearest’ or ‘favorite’). You can give it to new and exciting blogs with fewer than 200 followers. Now I’m not sure how many followers the blogs I’ve listed below have, but they’re all relatively new, having been started in 2011 or later.

I wanted to take this chance to thank these bloggers for what they do and also to introduce them to you, my readers. It’s easy to find well-known bloggers who have been posting for years. Discovering a new blog that you enjoy is like finding buried treasure, so I’d like to share these treasures with you.

This award is meant to be passed along or “paid forward” and the following rules apply:

  1. Thank your Liebster Blog Award presenter on your blog
  2. Link back to the blogger who presented the award to you
  3. Save the blog award (right click, save image as) and upload it to your blog post
  4. Present the Liebster Blog Award to 5 blogs of 200 followers or less who you feel deserve to be noticed
  5. Let them know they have been chosen by leaving a comment on their blog

So thank you Tina, for awarding me, and for introducing me to your favorite new blogs!(Click here to see Tina’s favorite new blogs) Here are my gluten-free choices:

Wendy from Palm Trees and Gluten Free
Gluten-free travel and recipes

Justine from The Nourished You
Holistic nutrition and gluten-free recipes from a registered dietician and awesome gluten-free cooking teacher

The Primalist
Paleo living, health, and recipes

Pam from I’m A Celiac
Gluten-free recipes, product reviews, and restaurant reviews

Dee from Dee Living Free
A new gluten-free recipe blogger who just started blogging this April
Welcome, Dee!

There’s my 5, plus Tina’s blog makes 6 blogs for you to check out. Happy blogging! :)

Tina from Whisks and Chopsticks
Recipes for homemade foods and baked goodies with wholesome ingredients from scratch…almost, including some that are gluten-free.

Share your favorite food blogs, new or old. They don’t even have to be gluten-free. Sometimes it’s fun to just look at the pictures. In the quilting world we call that “Eye Candy” when you just admire the visual beauty of something without bothering over the work of actually making it.

Ooka Gluten Free

Two words: Blown. Away.

Gluten free at a Japanese hibachi restaurant? I was skeptical at first. No, make that slightly terrified.

Ooka’s website, while beautiful, is suspiciously silent on the subject of gluten. No gluten-free menu. No lawyer-approved small-print disclaimer. All I had to go on was that my friends take their gluten-intolerant sister-in-law there all the time.

I’ve eaten “gluten-free” at all kinds of restaurants with varying degrees of success. From the great (Adventures in Gluten-Free Eating) to the not-so-great (The Great Gluten-Free Pizza Debate) and everything in between. Ooka was by far the best gluten-free restaurant experience I’ve ever had.

The menu is modern and minimalist. No mention of gluten-free in print either. It’s something like In and Out’s Secret Menu. That’s a shame, because every gluten-free diner within 50 miles of an Ooka restaurant should know about it.

It’s refreshing to order off the regular menu and then simply add “gluten-free”. The staff seem experienced with handling diners who have food restrictions. I ordered the salmon dinner, gluten-free. Before I could say anything more, the server politely inquired if I was able to eat rice. (Which I’m not due to a grain intolerance beyond gluten.) Wow! Did she read my mind? When I told her I couldn’t eat the rice, she offered me the choice of an extra salad or soup in its place. Nice!

Let’s start with the salad and soup.

The salad, with a dressing made from ginger, garlic, and carrots, was a delight to both eyes and mouth. Fresh, flavorful, and refreshing.

The soup was a clear beef broth with mushrooms and sweet onions. Not the usual Japanese restaurant miso soup. Although I like miso soup, I really enjoyed trying something different.

This. Changes. Everything.

When you think of gluten-free dining, Japanese hibachi is not the first thing that comes to mind, or even the second, or the third. Done right however, it can easily rise to the top of your list.

Haven’t you ever wished you could go into the kitchen of a restaurant and watch over the preparation of your food to make sure it doesn’t get cross-contaminated? I know I have.

With a teppan grill, the chef brings the ingredients to you and cooks your food right in front of you. Not only do you get to supervise the cooking of your food, you get to be entertained as well. One of the best kinds of entertainment for those of use who happen to be food-obsessed. The only thing that might make it better is if the chef let me get behind the grill and taught me a tip or two about using those awesome knives. Of course that would be a horrendous nightmare for the legal department. Finger with your teriyaki chicken, anyone?

At Ooka, the chef removed my food before the noodles and gluten-filled sauces hit the grill. Genius! I felt perfectly at ease eating my food.

Marinated in lemon juice, the salmon was divine. Proving once again that quality ingredients don’t need excessive adornment. I didn’t even miss any of the accompanying sauces. The hibachi vegetables and shrimp were delightful too.

Salad, broth, salmon, and veggies. The perfect paleo meal. Not a single ill effect. I slept well that night and ran 5 miles early the next morning. I want to take one of Ooka’s chefs home with me. I could eat this meal every day.

Another gluten-free benefit I’d never thought of before: The grill is cleaned after each and every time its used (right before your eyes, too). Spotless. Glutenless. After all, nobody wants to sit down at a table right in front of a dirty grill.

Congratulations Ooka, you won me over. Gluten-free dining now has a new standard to aim for. And as for all you other gluten-free hopefuls, time to step up to the plate.

Ooka has restaurants in Riverside, California, where I ate, as well as Montgomeryville, Doylestown, and Willow Grove in Pennsylvania.

The Great Gluten-Free Pizza Debate

Domino’s rolls out new gluten-free crust with gluten-dusted rolling pin. Stirs up controversy in the celiac and gluten-free community. *Yawn!* Where have I heard this one before? … Oh, yeah. We’ve been through this before, last year with California Pizza Kitchen.

For those of you who are journalists on the food and lifestyle beat, here’s a real time-saver for you. Next year when some other pizza chain jumps on the gluten-free bandwagon, just fill in the blanks, add a few irate quotes from well-known celiac bloggers, and a lawyer-approved statement from the chain’s corporate headquarters, and you’re good to go.

____________ rolls out new gluten-free crust with gluten-dusted rolling pin. Stirs up controversy in the celiac and gluten-free community.  ____________ from www.____________.com had this to say: “______________________________________________.”  ____________ declined to comment on exactly how a gluten-free pizza made in a facility where you can’t even breathe without inhaling semolina dust is truly gluten-free.

No need to thank me.

But seriously. I’m relatively new to the gluten-free community. Just started eating gluten-free last year. So I don’t know if this sort of thing is a yearly event or a new phenomenon.

Last year, I mulled over whether or not I should indulge in California Pizza Kitchen’s new “gluten-free” pizza. The fact that it came with a disclaimer worried me. I talked to the server about the conditions in the kitchen as well as the other ingredients in the crust, since at that time I was not able to eat eggs or dairy.

Here’s the result of that conversation:

  1. High risk of cross-contamination
  2. Crust contains eggs
  3. And quite possibly dairy (I don’t recall exactly), never mind the cheese on top

Three strikes and you’re out, wannabe gluten-free pizza chefs!

I opted for a gluten-free grilled veggie salad (or something like that) instead and ended up being glutened anyway with a clandestine crouton in my mouth. Thanks, CPK.

Personally, if I ever had any emotion for the gluten-filled-gluten-free pizza issue, I lost it a long time ago. I didn’t even come close to being able to eat CPK’s last year, and now that I can eat eggs and occasional dairy, I can’t eat the gluten-free grains that replace the wheat flour, so I couldn’t try Domino’s “gluten-free” pizza even if it was certified gluten-free.

At some point you just have to let go for your own sanity.

For you that might mean frequenting independent restaurants that serve a truly gluten-free pizza or making your own from scratch. And avoiding chains that pretend.

For me, that means I’m not going to ever eat pizza again (gluten-free or otherwise), and I’m OK with that. There are many delicious, whole foods that support my health, not tear it down.

Advocacy and promoting safe dining conditions for celiacs is a fine cause. And sometimes that includes pointing out when corporations are just pretending. Just don’t let yourself get so worked up that your health suffers from the stress of obsessing over it all. YOU and your well-being are worth more than that!

What do you think about the gluten-free pizza debate?

My Gluten-Free Pantry: the good, the bad, & the ugly

Let’s take a peek in my kitchen to see what we’ll find in my gluten-free pantry.

The Good

Gluten-free items clearly marked. Use a sharpie pen to write the contents on the container, or stick on a blank address label and write on that. Don’t rely on your memory, some ingredients look similar. Four months later you may not remember what that powdery stuff in the container with the orange lid was. Aluminum-free baking powder? Sweet potato starch? Something else all together? If it’s a perishable item you can write the date as well.

The Bad

All-purpose wheat flour in an unmarked ziploc bag. Right on the shelf next to the ziploc bag of rice flour. I should probably toss them both out since I no longer eat wheat or rice, but sometimes I use them when cooking food for my family, who do love a good traditional from-scratch mac and cheese, or some mochi (glutinous rice cake) every now and then.

The Ugly

True story: Once when I was baking I grabbed the unmarked bag of wheat flour, thinking it was something else, and poured it into my mixing bowl right on top of my coconut flour. I immediately realized something wasn’t right, so I tasted the wheat flour to make sure that it really was wheat flour. Duh! End of baking session. Some mistakes you only make once.

The Makeover

Problem solved. I’m not going to mix that one up ever again.

 

Do you keep gluten-ful ingredients in your kitchen for other people in your family? How do you prevent cross-contamination?

My Gluten Story

My body was trying to tell me something, but I wasn’t paying attention. Maybe if I had listened, my body wouldn’t have needed to get out the megaphone and shout so loudly.

A silent bird for a serious morning.

One morning I woke, not to sunshine and birdsong, but to a burning back pain that shot down my arms and up my neck. No physical injury, it just appeared out of the blue.

I was diagnosed with arthritis and muscle tension the year before, but this was by far the worst I’d experienced. Ever. Not a single pain killer could touch it. Natural childbirth was nothing in comparison. I didn’t realize it at the time, but this was not the random event it seemed to be, rather it was the culmination of years of increasing symptoms that I had simply ignored.

Goodbye Gluten! Goodbye Pain!

I turned to a pain clinic for relief. Unfortunately there was a 5-week wait until the next available appointment. In retrospect, if I had my mind about me I would have gone directly to the emergency room and begged for an epidural.

I had to do something. I couldn’t just sit and suffer for 5 weeks, so I stopped eating wheat because I heard somewhere that wheat was inflammatory. I had never even heard of the word “celiac”.

The most immediate and noticeable effect of removing wheat from my diet was an end to my migraines. I went from 10-20 headache days a month, many of them excruciating, down to 1 or 2 very mild headaches a month. This observation was confirmed a month later when I indulged in a bread basket and was rewarded with a killer migraine, plus bloating and fatigue. It took at least a week to recover from that episode. Thank you very much, garlic naan. I’m done with gluten. Forever.

So long, latte.

By the time I had my appointment the pain had eased up enough so that standing was fairly comfortable. Both sitting and lying down were still torturous.

The pain doctor recommended giving up coffee in addition to gluten to lessen the inflammation some more, and sent me to a physical therapist. The back pain was so bad that by comparison the caffeine withdrawal headaches didn’t bother me at all.

The physical therapist said pain like that usually resolves on its own within 72 hours. He hadn’t ever seen a case that dragged on for over a month like mine. Even so, with exercises and massage we were able to bring the back and neck pain under control in a few weeks.

Encouraged, I asked my physical therapist to help me with the tingling and numbness in my fingers and we took care of that problem as well. The tingling and numbness, blamed on repetitive stress injury, had been chronic with occasional bad flare-ups for probably 5 years, and I had just learned to live with it as a normal, everyday part of life.

With the exercises, massage, and diet changes, life started to improve. Random joint pains stopped. Occasional pain in my feet when I walked, reminiscent of my previous case of pregnancy-induced osteoporosis, also disappeared.

Migraines gone. Back and other pain gone. Numbness gone. All through natural, drug-free means. Fantastic improvement and relief in just a few short months. But little did I realize the roller coaster ride that was still ahead of me.

Ups and Downs

I was floored by the fatigue and depression that my triple latte habit had masked for at least 3 years. I often spent at least half the day, or more when I could, lying on the couch. I watched a lot of Food Network. Couldn’t muster up the energy to cook much of anything or even the appetite to eat, but I watched a lot of other people cook a lot of food I couldn’t eat even if I had the energy or desire to cook. I lost interest in everything I loved to do. I neglected my family and friends.

Eventually I fell into a pattern of a week or two of improvement followed by a week or two of decline. I never knew from day to day what symptoms I would have, how severe they would be, or whether I would be good for anything at all. So next I visited a holistic DO to find out if there were other food sensitivities that were causing these problems.

We discovered more symptoms I had gotten used to. Me: “You mean bloating, near-constant nausea, and chronic diarrhea isn’t normal? Or being light-headed and dizzy half the time? And perpetual sleep deprivation? Brain fog so thick that it’s hard to string 10 words together to form a sentence without stopping to search my brain for the word I want, just like when you first start to study a foreign language? Only I’m speaking English, my own native language.”

A Natural Prescription for Health

We added supplements to my diet to address a host of deficiencies and imbalances, and started an elimination diet, removing common allergens such as dairy, eggs, peanuts, even refined sugar and vegetable oils. Some improvement, followed by the usual decline.

Other problematic foods appeared and we dutifully removed them. First corn, followed by soy and oats. Even certified gluten-free oats were almost as bad as gluten itself. Then millet, quinoa, and teff. There may have been some other grains, I eventually lost track.

We also worked on reducing and managing my ever-increasing stress. I saw a neuropsychiatrist to learn bio-feedback, stress management, and meditation. I have to admit, I was initially skeptical of this approach, but it really did help. First by dealing with the stress of yo-yo symptoms and second by my learning to listen to my body and notice issues while they are still small, before they have a chance to morph into major problems.

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back

My gluten-free almond raspberry coffee cake, one of many delicious recipes that I had to quit working on because the ingredients started making me sick.

A pattern started to emerge: when I got sick, a grain or grain-like substance was the usual culprit. I would remove the offending food, start to feel better and replace it with a different grain, which I then ate a lot of, due to a new obsession of recipe development and testing, as well as carb-induced cravings. That replacement grain soon became the new offending food, and the cycle started all over again.

A serving or two of a non-gluten grain brought back most of my symptoms, making it easy to identify troublesome foods. Luckily not the migraines though.

Most worrisome was the sudden fatigue that would come on after eating something I was sensitive to. Kind of like eating till you pass out, except without the gluttony. I was afraid to eat anything if I had to get in a car and drive afterwards, because it was impossible to keep my eyes open. I took a lot of naps. In retrospect, it was probably way too early to be eating grains of any kind. I should have waited until my digestive system was completely healed.

More Unexpected Benefits

My seasonal allergies disappeared. All the grasses and weeds were still outside in full force, they just didn’t bother me anymore.

My dentist had worried over my tooth enamel for the past 2 years, so much so that I was certain all my teeth were ready to fall out of my mouth at any moment. I even had a special prescription toothpaste. Happily, at my last dental appointment, my dentist said my enamel was perfectly fine.

Challenging Prescriptions to Follow

In spite of great improvement, adrenal fatigue and other random problems were still persisting. My DO suggested eating meat and adding back other animal products such as eggs and dairy. I made a half-hearted attempt, preferring my mostly-vegan lifestyle. I added an extra serving of fish a week and reintroduced butter and eggs to my baking. (By the way, butter makes a world of difference in gluten-free scones.) Naturally, I got only half-hearted health improvement for these efforts.

Digestive issues, pain, and problems with carbs increased. If I wanted to eat breakfast, I had to plan extra time to let the nausea pass before I could proceed with the day’s activities. It got to the point that a couple bites of rice would leave me instantly curled up in a ball on the floor with severe cramps and nausea. Rice was the shocker. It’s supposed to be so gentle and allergy-free, baby’s first food.

At some earlier point in this adventure, I predicted (or maybe wished for) a complete recovery by March 2012, roughly one year after the back pain incident. I started training for the LA Marathon, which was to be an anniversary celebration of sorts. My DO warned me against such a plan, said I should wait until my gut was healed, but that was advice I didn’t want to hear. I promised to take it easy, but didn’t and things got out of control within a couple months. Increasing difficulty with post-exercise recovery forced me to quit running.

Back to a Traditional Medical Model

About the time I was having increasing difficulties with rice and exercise, I switched health insurance, and lost all coverage for holistic medicine. I was back to the world of waiting.

Waiting to see an allergy doctor, who was very sympathetic, but couldn’t do anything for me since I was dealing with food sensitivities, not true allergies.

Waiting to see my primary care doctor, who gave me a prescription for Prilosec. I took Prilosec for about a week or so before I decided it was pointless and quit.

Waiting to see a GI doctor, who gave me a colonoscopy and a lifelong prescription for IBS drugs. That helped reduce the nausea and cramping, but I was concerned about taking 8 pills a day for the rest of my life. If you do the math, that comes out to 2,920 pills a year!

Fitting the Final Pieces of the Puzzle

Only healthy whole foods for me!

Left to my own devices, all I had was a dwindling food supply and the unheeded advice about meat from my DO. So I adopted a paleo-style diet: grass-fed organic meat, wild fish, non-starchy veggies, fruit, nuts, eggs, healthy oils, and occasionally a bit of dairy. No grains, legumes, starchy vegetables, refined sugar, or processed foods.

Improvements were rapid. WIthin three weeks I was back to normal. A real normal. Healthy like I hadn’t felt in years. Full of energy. The way I am supposed to feel. I was so giddy with excitement that I was bouncing off the walls, unable to settle down and focus on serious business for weeks.

Even the digestive problems resolved. Nausea, cramps, bloating, diarrhea, and bleeding gone.

My immune system relaxed enough to finally let a virus in. My immune system had been so pumped up for so long, I hadn’t had a cold or flu for at least 4 years. And all that time I was so proud of whatever it was I was doing that kept me so “healthy” I never got a cold. I never suspected my immune system was out of whack, attacking not only germs, but the food I ate, and my body itself.

Then and Now

At the end of April 2012 I stopped taking my IBS drugs, and the digestive problems have not returned. I am still hyper vigilant about my diet, preferring to eat only supportive foods that make me feel great. I still avoid carbs like the plague. I can’t think of a single forbidden food that tempts me even a little bit. The cravings are completely gone. Healthy is far more appetizing.

Doing a gluten challenge is definitely unappealing. I think I’ll pass. It took me over a year of concerted effort to regain my health. I just want to enjoy it. There’s a definite difference between my previous “improvements” and the way I feel now. I can’t put it into words, but I know it’s for real this time.

Other people notice the difference too. I must have looked like hell, because the first thing out of their mouth when they saw me before was: “Are you OK?” Now they say they can tell I’m doing much better.

Before this all began, I used to think that I ate a healthy diet. And it was a healthy diet: lots of fresh fruits and veggies, whole grains, low in refined sugar and processed foods, mostly vegan. It’s just not healthy for me.

When I wake up in the morning, full of energy and free from aches and pains, I am still wide-eyed with amazement. I love every single day. I’ve taken up running again. Gradual and careful this time. No problems with recovery. Maybe a marathon is in my future, maybe a half, but if not, I’ll still be happy to just run a few miles in the sunshine.

My stress is gone. I’m able to laugh and smile again. I can make plans for the future, and not worry that I’ll be too sick to carry them out.

Helping Each Other

I never realized how widespread food intolerance really is. At first I felt so alone. So many people, when they hear what I’ve been through, confide to me that they or some of their loved ones are struggling with food sensitivities too.

Now I know it’s all too common and I’m not alone. I share my problems and tips that have helped me with others, and they share with me. I hope my experiences and the recipes I create will benefit others who are facing food intolerance problems.

If you have a food intolerance story of your own, please share. This is a confusing issue to deal with, especially in the beginning. You never know who your experiences may be able to help.

Read more gluten-free stories at Gluten Free Birmingham. Thanks, Jenny for everything you’re doing to spread awareness!

 

 

 

Cauliflower Couscous

One issue when removing foods from your diet is what to do with the big empty space left on your plate. Vegetarians have tofu dogs and chickenless nuggets. Gluten-free folks have Udi’s bread and Tinkyada pasta. Now that I’m grain-free, cauliflower is one of my favorite low-carb grain replacement foods.

There are many wonderful ways you can serve cauliflower: roasted, curried, mashed, etc. But have you ever turned your cauliflower into couscous? Ground up into couscous-size bits in the food processor, cauliflower is the perfect grain or starch replacement on your paleo plate (and of course, it’s naturally gluten-free as well). I was missing something to put underneath a good curry, and cauliflower couscous is just the thing.


I usually use whatever cauliflower is available at my local produce stand. If you can find them, purple, orange, or green varieties of cauliflower are beautiful and just as delicious as white cauliflower. Check out the World’s Healthiest Foods website to learn more about cauliflower’s health benefits, including anti-inflammatory and digestive support properties.

I prefer to lightly saute the cauliflower. This makes the cauliflower more mild tasting than when it’s raw. After sauteing and seasoning I serve it warm, usually with a curry or other stew. Or I chill the cooked cauliflower couscous and use it to make a grain-free tabouleh salad. Use your favorite tabouleh recipe and add extra lemon juice to the dressing. If you can find baby cauliflower heads, buy them. The flavor of baby cauliflower is naturally sweet and mild, and they are a delicious treat served raw in a salad.

This recipe is quick and easy and lends itself well to unlimited variations. Try adding minced onions or other chopped veggies, curry powder, smoked paprika, or other seasonings customized to go with whatever menu you’ve planned.

Fresh chives, either garlic, onion, or both are a fragrant and colorful addition to cauliflower couscous. Chives are easy to grow, and if you keep a pot of them on your porch, you’ll almost always have fresh herbs to brighten up your dishes. Chive blossoms make a pretty (and edible) garnish. The purple flowers in my photos are from onion chives. Garlic chives have white flowers, which are lovely too. If you don’t have any chives, feel free to substitute a handful of another fresh herb you have: basil, cilantro, mint, oregano, parsley, or thyme.

Cauliflower Couscous

Ingredients

    Cauliflowers vary in size. One medium head of cauliflower should provide at least 8 cups of raw cauliflower couscous (which will reduce down to about 6 cups after cooking.) For a larger cauliflower, add 1 extra tablespoon each of the oil and chives, and 1 extra clove of garlic for every additional 2 cups of raw cauliflower couscous.
  • One head of cauliflower (8 cups of raw cauliflower couscous)
  • 1/4 cup olive oil (or coconut oil, ghee, or olive oil/butter combination)
  • 4 cloves garlic, crushed
  • 1/4 cup finely chopped fresh chives (optional)
  • sea salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

Instructions

  1. Wash cauliflower ahead of time and thoroughly dry. Excess water will make the finished couscous soggy.
  2. Chop cauliflower into florets up to two inches and stems into 1/2 to one inch pieces.
  3. Process cauliflower florets and stems in a food processor fitted with the S-blade. Do not overfill the food processor. The cauliflower should process into couscous-sized pieces in 10-30 seconds. You may need to process it in batches.
  4. If cauliflower gets stuck and does not rotate in the food processor or several chunks of cauliflower remain unprocessed after 30 seconds, you will need to chop the florets/stems smaller or process less cauliflower per batch.
  5. When all the cauliflower is processed, measure or roughly estimate the amount of raw cauliflower couscous. Adjust the amount of oil, garlic, and chives accordingly if you are going to cook more or less raw cauliflower couscous than 8 cups.
  6. Place the oil in a large pan on medium heat. When the oil is hot, saute the garlic for one to two minutes or until golden, stirring to prevent sticking and burning.
  7. Add the raw cauliflower couscous to the garlic and oil in the pan and stir to distribute the garlic and oil throughout the cauliflower.
  8. Cook the cauliflower for three to five minutes or until as crisp/tender as you prefer, stirring frequently for even cooking.
  9. Remove pan from the heat and add the optional chives and salt and pepper to taste, stirring to combine well.
  10. Serve hot as a vegetable side dish or grain replacement, or chill and add to a salad.
http://www.laurawestkong.com/gff/2012/cauliflower-couscous/

What’s your favorite replacement food?

(This recipe was shared at: Fill Those Jars Friday, Gluten Free Friday)

California Chocolate Pudding

Vegan desserts. Just another culinary oxymoron like white chocolate or healthy junk food?

Technically it is possible to make all kinds of sweet treats from donuts to red velvet cupcakes without animal products. While many debate what it means to be a vegetarian, the definition of vegan is crystal clear: no animal-sourced ingredients, period. But when I think of vegan cuisine, I think of fresh, natural, healthy whole foods which only happen to be, by the way, animal-free.

dates
Raw agave syrup and organic cane juice certainly have more syllables than sugar. Unfortunately, more syllables does not equal healthy or natural. Try sweetening your treats with a natural, delicious, healthy whole food such as dates. (While dates do have fewer syllables than sugar, that’s not what makes them so healthy. ;-) )

Dates are my all-time favorite natural sweetener. They add a rich, complex sweetness to desserts and are delicious in savory dishes too. They are a good source of potassium and other minerals. I have never personally had a blood sugar problem or carb intolerance with dates, but if blood sugar or food intolerance are issues for you, it’s always a good idea to consult your health care provider first.

What makes dates a healthy sweetener is that they are a whole food: the fiber and nutrients have not been removed. Beets and sugar cane were also healthy whole foods once upon a time before they were processed into sparkly white powder. While honey and maple syrup are certainly natural, to your body they are primarily sugar with traces of nutrients. I prefer to use maple syrup and honey as sweet flavorings rather than as a sweetener. Think spoonfuls, not cupfuls.

I usually soak dates in water or some other liquid and blend them into a smooth date butter for use in desserts. A high-powered blender like a Blend-Tec or VitaMix is perfect for this. (but not absolutely necessary if you don’t have one.) Use more or less liquid depending on the consistency you’re looking for. To try date-sweetened desserts, you can start with my easy California Chocolate Pudding recipe below, but don’t be afraid to experiment with dates in your favorite recipes.

Some people like to use date sugar, which is simply finely ground dried dates (still a whole food, nothing’s been removed but the water, which dates don’t have much of to begin with). I’ve never tried date sugar myself, but I’ve heard it’s a good substitute for regular sugar in recipes. If you have experience with date sugar, I’d love to hear about it in the comments below!

recipe makeover
Here’s a classic vegan recipe: Chocolate Avocado Mousse.

Chocolate. Avocado. What’s not to love? How about those unhealthy (and unnecessary) sweeteners? I’ve replaced them with, surprise, dates! Healthy and delicious. And of course, still gluten and dairy free. I’m new to paleo and therefore, still learning, but I think we can call this recipe paleo-friendly as well. I’m not going to call it mousse, though. Mousse means foam in French, and although it certainly is creamy (thanks to our good friend, avocado), foamy it is not. Pudding is just right. And I’m calling it California pudding because, well, here in sunny southern California, I’m fortunate to be surrounded by avocado and date trees!

It’s pudding, not chiffon cake. The recipe’s not going to fall flat or explode if you change a thing or two, so feel free to experiment and add your own special touch. If you’re a chocolate aficionado, see how different cocoa powders taste in the pudding. A mix of half regular cocoa and half raw cacao powder is divine! 1/2 teaspoon almond extract in place of the 1 teaspoon vanilla is a good variation. Another is: 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon and 1/2 teaspoon vanilla. If I hadn’t tossed out all my coffee, I would give espresso a try in the pudding, either brewed in place of the water or add a spoonful of instant. Please come back and share the results of your variations with me!

This is perfectly sweet if you’re used to the mild sweetness of real dark chocolate or if you generally avoid refined sugar in your diet. If you prefer a sweeter dessert, replace some of the water with maple syrup or your favorite liquid sweetener. Or simply pour the maple syrup over the top like a chocolate-maple sundae.

My favorite way to serve California Chocolate Pudding is with sliced bananas. Fresh berries are great, too. Macadamia nuts are a super paleo topping. Trader Joe’s sells dry toasted, chopped macadamias now, which are as fantastic on salads as they are on chocolate pudding. But I digress, let’s get on to the recipe, shall we?

California Chocolate Pudding

Yield: 4 servings

Serving Size: 3/4 cup

Ingredients

  • 1 cup water
  • 1/2 cup chopped dates
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • pinch of salt
  • 1/2 cup cocoa powder
  • 1-1/2 cups mashed avocado (about 2 medium)

Instructions

  1. Soak chopped dates in water. For a high-powered blender cutting the dates into fourths is enough. For a regular blender or food processor cut into smaller pieces and use hot water. (The easiest way to measure is by volume: Use a clear liquid measuring container and add the water to the 8 ounce line first. Add chopped dates until the mixture reaches the 12 ounce line.) Let them soak for 1/2 hour.
  2. Blend dates and water until smooth. In a Blend-Tec use the "Whole Juice" button. In a food processor, start out with just the dates and add the soaking water gradually to avoid leakage. Push mixture down with a spatula as necessary.
  3. Add the vanilla, salt, and cocoa powder and pulse to combine. Push mixture down with a spatula as necessary.
  4. Add the mashed avocado and pulse to combine until smooth. (Mashed avocado is both easier to measure accurately and easier to blend smoothly into the chocolate mixture. The final mixture will be somewhat thick and you will not be using your machine to smash the avocado, just to combine it with the other ingredients.)
  5. If necessary, add extra water a tablespoon or two at a time to help the ingredients combine smoothly. (Avocado is a natural ingredient, after all, and sometimes they vary in their moisture content. Adding more water can also make the pudding less thick if you prefer a lighter consistency.)
  6. Chill before serving.
http://www.laurawestkong.com/gff/2012/california-chocolate-pudding/

(This recipe was shared at: Gluten Free Friday)

Grain-Free and Still Fabulous!

We interrupt this regularly scheduled blog post to bring you a friendly message from Larry the Lawyer: “We wish to advise Gluten Free & Fabulous is a registered TRADEMARK of Gluten Free Fabulous, LLC. We therfore request you take the name Glutn Free Fabulous down immediately. We thank you for your prompt attention to this matter and trust we wil not need to persue this any further.”

Thanks, Larry. That’s exactly the thing I want to deal with when I have a migraine.

Lucky for Larry, as an artist, I am familiar with and respectful of copyright issues. Lucky for me, I had already been considering changing my blog header to ‘Grain-Free Fabulous’ to celebrate my new found freedom from grains. I just hadn’t gotten around to it yet. Conveniently ‘gluten’ and ‘grain’ both begin with ‘G’ so the new tagline fits nicely with my current URL.

Grain-free and fabulous! Chocolate-y goodness coming later this week. If only all the world’s problems could be solved with a little bit of photoshopping.