Friday, July 29, 2011

Fontina, Fennel and Caramelized Onion Grilled Gluten-Free Pizza

Ingredients:



 
1 fennel bulb, sliced

2 small yellow onions, sliced

1-2 tbs butter

5 ounces shredded fontina cheese

fennel fronds

1 Gluten Free Bistro par-baked pizza crust

1 tbs olive oil, sprinkled with a mixture of fresh or dried herbs (oregano, basil, parsley, etc) 


Directions:

  1. Heat butter in skillet over medium heat. When butter begins to melt, swirl it around to coat bottom of pan. Add fennel slices and onion. Cook over medium to low heat for about 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Onions and fennel will brown and  caramelize. Sprinkle with sea salt.  Set aside. 

  2. Heat grill to medium-low. Brush top of pizza crust with1 tbs herbed olive oil.

  3. Sprinkle crust with, cheese, caramelized fennel and onion and fennel fronds.   
4. Transfer to grill, and cook until crispy and cheese begins to melt, 5-10 minutes depending on grill. Transfer to a cutting board and slice. 



Enjoy!


Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Gluten, Then and Now

by Julie McGinnis, MS, RD

Over the past decade, the frequency of conversations about gluten intolerance (GI) and celiac disease (CD) in the United States has gone from almost unheard of to commonplace. Chances are your local supermarket sells dozens of items labeled “gluten free” where none existed five years ago. Restaurants and school lunch programs frequently offer gluten-free alternatives. What happened?

Before I dive into that discussion, I want to clarify some terms to minimize confusion. "Gluten" is the general term for a mixture of tiny protein fragments (called polypeptides), which are found in cereal grains such as wheat, rye, barley, spelt, faro, and kamut. Gluten is classified in two groups: prolamines and glutelins. The most troublesome component of gluten is the prolamine gliadin. Gliadin is the cause of the painful inflammation in gluten intolerance and instigates the immune response and intestinal damage found in celiac disease. Although both conditions have similar symptoms (pain, gas, bloating, diarrhea), or sometimes no gastrointestinal symptoms at all, celiac disease is an autoimmune reaction to gluten that can cause severe degradation of the small intestine; whereas, gluten intolerance/sensitivity is an inability to digest gliadin with no damage to the intestines.

The medical community’s use of improved diagnostic tools (saliva, blood, and stool tests; and bowel biopsies) as well as self-diagnosis by aware individuals has certainly contributed to the swelling ranks of people afflicted with these maladies; however, that’s not the whole story. A combination of hybridized grains, America’s growing appetite for snacks and fast food, and the genetics of gluten intolerance and celiac disease have brought discussions of these once uncommon conditions front and center.  

Again, what happened?

New evidence indicates that the hybrid versions of grains we eat today contain significantly more gluten than traditional varieties of the same grains. Experts such as Dr. Alessio Fasano, medical director of the Center for Celiac Research at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, believe this recent increase in the amount of gluten in our diet has given rise to the number of people suffering from gluten intolerance and celiac disease.

According to Fasano, “The prevalence of celiac disease in this country is soaring partly because changes in agricultural practices have increased gluten levels in crops.” He further states, “We are in the midst of an epidemic.”

For example, the ancient wheat that Moses ate was probably very different from our wheat today. Moses lived about 3,500 years ago, when wheat, spelt, and barley were all popular grains. Modern wheat varieties, however, have been bred to grow faster, produce bigger yields, harvest more efficiently, and bake better bread. The downside to today’s hybridized cereal grains is that they contain more gluten.  

Celiac disease was once considered a rare malady and was estimated to have afflicted approximately 1 in 2,000 people in the United States. According to research done by the Mayo Clinic, CD is four times more common today that it was five decades ago. This increase is due to increased awareness and diagnostics, and the estimate today is that 1 out of every 133 people in the United States has celiac disease. To read more facts and figures please read The University of Chicago Celiac Disease center at http://www.uchospitals.edu/pdf/uch_007937.pdf   

Here are estimates for other parts of the world:

  • 3 in 100: United Kingdom

  • 1 in 370: Italy

  • 1 in 122: Northern Ireland

  • 1 in 99: Finland

  • 1 in 133: United States

  • Once thought rare for African-, Hispanic- and Asian-Americans, current estimates in these populations: 1 in 236

  • 1 in 30 are estimated to have gluten intolerance in the United States.


More than 6,000 years before Moses was born, an agricultural revolution took place in the Middle East that allowed humans to embrace farming (sowing and harvesting wild seeds), herding, and other forms of agriculture and move away from our hunter-fisher-gatherer ancestors. This was the first major introduction of gluten into the human diet.

According to Dr. Loren Cordain, PhD, author of The Paleo Diet, “The foods that agriculture brought us—cereals, dairy products, fatty meats, salted foods, and refined sugars and oils- proved disastrous for our Paleolithic bodies…. studies of the bones and teeth early farmers revealed that they had more infectious diseases, more childhood mortality, shorter life spans, more osteoporosis, rickets, and other bone mineral density disorders than their ancestors thanks to the cereal-based diet. They were plagued with vitamin and mineral deficiencies and developed cavities in their teeth.”

In other words, people traded their health for sustainable food sources and a less nomadic way of life.

Two hundred years ago, the global diet received another big injection of gluten with the birth of the Industrial Revolution and steam-powered mills that were able to produce refined-grain flours that had significantly longer shelf lives, making flour (aka: gluten) more accessible and available to an almost global market. “We were able to mill and process grains for consumption and eat them in larger quantities than we had ever done in the past,” writes Cordain.

Jack Challem, “The Nutrition Reporter,” offers a different long view of human consumption of gluten: “Look at in another way, 100,000 generations of people were hunter-gatherers, 500 generations have depended on agriculture, and only 10 generations have lived since the start of the industrial age, and only two generations have grown up with highly processed fast foods. This short period of time in the course of man’s existence that grains have been around has proven that many of us are not physiologically able to tolerate gluten.”

Historical evidence of people having trouble digesting gluten was first documented in the 2nd century A.D. when the Greek physician Aretaeus of Cappadocia, diagnosed patients with celiac disease. The symptoms included “wasting and characteristic stools.” Since Aretaeus’ time, the disease has gone by a variety of names, including “non-tropical sprue,” “celiac sprue,” “non-celiac gluten intolerance,” “gluten intolerance enteropathy,” and “gluten sensitive enteropathy.”

Fast forward to 1950, when the Dutch pediatrician Willem-Karel Dicke proposed wheat gluten was the cause of the disease. His theory was based on observations that celiac children improved during World War II when wheat was scarce in Holland.

As Challem points out, today, thanks in large part to the fast food and snack food industries, gluten is in just about every kind of food imaginable.

So Why Can’t Everyone Handle Gluten?

People who carry any of the genes for CD and GI (expressed or not) are more susceptible to developing either condition. You can carry two dominate genes for celiac disease and perhaps end up developing CD or you can carry one dominant gene and one recessive gene and develop only GI. Your genes determine the body’s immune response in the presence of gluten, and many different health problems may result from that response. Some people may have their brain affected and develop cognitive problems such as depression or impaired brain function, while others suffer pancreatic problems and develop diabetes. Research still needs to be done to answer the question as to why these maladies affect different parts of the body in different people.

When populations that are genetically predisposed to CD and GI are exposed to cereal grains with higher gluten content, there’s little wonder why more people are having these genes “turned on” and develop gluten sensitivity on a much larger scale—especially now that the flour made from these grains are part of the “hidden ingredients” in foods from ice cream to lunch meats.

OK, Now What?

So, gluten has changed, and we have changed, and it appears not for the better. Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on how you look at it, identifying and eliminating the foods and ingredients from your life that do not work for your body is the only answer. There is no magic pill to take to make it all go away.

If you, or someone you know, is experiencing major health issues that aren’t getting better, enlisting a knowledgeable physician who understands the complexities of CD and GI testing is an excellent idea; however, on average, it takes the medical community 10 years to diagnose people who are suffering with severe health problems from undiagnosed CD and GI. 

The Bottom Line

Gluten intolerance is not a fad diet. I have seen countless cases display miraculous improvements in long standing ailments—simply by adapting this lifestyle. Even if you have a test for CD and it comes back negative and medical community clears you to continue eating gluten, but you feel better without it, listen to your body. You know yourself far better than anyone else and you deserve good health. If you have doubts about your diet, try going gluten-free for two weeks and see how you feel. Those with more advanced illnesses (autoimmune diseases and such) will usually not experience changes until they have been gluten-free for six months to a year.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Asparagus & Sun Dried Tomato Gluten-Free Grilled Pizza




Ingredients

 - 1 bunch asparagus, thick ends removed and cut into thirds

 - 1 bunch scallions, trimmed and cut into thirds

 - 1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes (oil-packed), plus oil from the jar

 - 2  10" Gluten Free Bistro par-baked pizza crusts

 - 1 cup ricotta cheese

 

Directions

  1. Heat grill to medium. In a large bowl, combine asparagus, scallions, and 1 tablespoon sun-dried tomato oil; season with salt and pepper. Grill, turning occasionally, until vegetables are tender, 6 to 9 minutes. Remove from grill and set aside.

      2. Brush each crust with 1 tbs sun-dried tomato oil.

      3. Dividing evenly, top crusts with ricotta, then asparagus, scallions, and sun-dried tomatoes; season with salt and pepper.

    4.  Slide onto grill and cook until crusts are crispy and cheese is melted, 5 to 9 minutes. Transfer pizzas to a cutting board, slice, and serve.

 

Sunday, July 17, 2011

West Coast Grilled Gluten-Free Pizza






Ingredients

  1. 2 tablespoon olive oil

  2. 1 Gluten Free Bistro par-baked pizza crust

  3. 2-3 heirloom tomatoes, thinly sliced crosswise

  4. 2 scallions, white and green parts separated, thinly sliced

  5. 1 log (5 ounces) soft goat cheese, crumbled

  6. Coarse salt and ground pepper

  7. 1 bag (5 ounces) baby spinach

  8. 1 avocado, halved, pitted, peeled, and diced

  9. 2 tablespoons red-wine vinegar

Directions

  1. Heat grill to medium-low. Brush top of pizza crust with  1 tbs olive oil.

  2. Scatter crust with tomatoes, scallion whites, and cheese; season with salt and pepper, and slide onto grill. Cook, rotating occasionally, until crispy and cheese begins to melt, 5-10 minutes depending on grill. Transfer to a cutting board.

  3. In a medium bowl, combine spinach, avocado, scallion greens, vinegar, and remaining tablespoon oil; season with salt and pepper, and toss to combine. Pile mixture onto pizza; halve, and serve.





Friday, July 15, 2011

GF Breakfast Pear Bread with Lemon & Pecans



 

Ingredients

1 egg

1/4 cup melted butter

1 cup white sugar


1 cup pear sauce (can substitute natural apple-sauce)

1 tsp bourbon vanilla extract

1.5 tsp grated lemon zest

1tbs fresh lemon juice

1.5 cups The Gluten Free Bistro's All Purpose Flour Blend (www.theglutenfreebistro.com)

1 tsp baking soda

1 tsp salt

1/2 tsp cinnamon

1/4 tsp ground nutmeg

1/2 cup chopped pecans



Directions:



Pre-heat oven to 350° F. Using a standing mixer beat egg slightly, then add sugar and melted butter. Beat until well combined. Add pear sauce, lemon juice, lemon zest, and vanilla and continue to beat on slow-medium speed for about 1 minute. In a separate bowl, mix together flour, soda, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg and then add  into wet mixture. Beat until smooth. Fold in pecans.  Pour into a greased (with butter) and floured (using GF flour) bread loaf pan. Bake for 55 min to 1 hour at 350° F. Enjoy!

 


Thursday, July 14, 2011

Orange Cardamom Muffins

Ingredients:

1 cup Bistro Blend Whole Grain Gluten-Free Flour

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1/8 teaspoon salt

¼ teaspoon ground cardamom

1/4 cup butter or margarine, softened

1/2 cup sugar

1 egg

1/2 cup sour cream

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

zest of 1 orange

juice of ½ orange

 Directions:

Preheat oven to 350°F. Lightly spray cups of mini muffin pan with nonstick cooking spray or line with paper liners. Makes 2 dozen muffins.

Sift & combine flour, baking powder, baking soda, cardamom and salt until well incorporated.

In mixer bowl with whisk attachment, beat 1/4 cup softened butter and 1/2 cup sugar until light and fluffy.

Add egg; beat until smooth.

Mix sour cream, vanilla, orange juice, and orange zest in a separate bowl, then add to butter, sugar, egg, beat until well incorporated.

Remove bowl from mixer.

FOLD in flour mixture; mix just until dry ingredients about 90% mixed in. (Do not overmix, this will make for tough muffins.)

Using cookie dough scoop, drop one scoop of batter into each muffin cup. Bake 14 minutes or until light golden brown. Do not overbake. Cool in pan 5 minutes then remove from pan onto cooling racks.


Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Gluten-Free Penne with Bolognese Sauce



Ingredients:
2 slices of smoked bacon, preferably free-range or organic
2 medium onions
2 cloves of garlic
2 carrots
2 celery stalks
olive oil
2 heaping tsp dried oregano
1 lb good-quality ground beef, turkey, or pork
sea salt and fresh ground pepper
2, 14 ounce cans of diced tomatoes (no salt added)
1 small can tomato paste
small bunch of fresh basil
4 ounces fresh grated Parmesan cheese
1 lb The Gluten Free Bistro's Penne

Directions:
Finely dice the bacon. Peel and finely chop the onions, garlic, carrots and celery. Place a large pan on medium to high heat.  Add 2 lugs of olive oil, sliced bacon and oregano to your pan. Cook and stir until bacon is lightly golden. Add the chopped veggies to the pan and saute for about 7 minutes until softened. Stir in the ground beef/pork breaking it up with a fork. Add the canned tomatoes and tomato paste.


Fill one of the empty cans with water and add to the pan. Stir in a good pinch of salt and pepper.

Pick the basil leaves off the stalk and store leaves in the fridge for later. Finely dice the basil stalks and stir into the pan. Bring to a boil. Turn down the heat and simmer with a lid on and slightly askew for 1 hour, stirring every now and again. Take the lid off and cook for another 20 minutes. Keep an eye on the sauce as it cooks, and if you think it's starting to dry out, add a splash of water.

Remove the Bolognese sauce from heat. Stir in half of the grated parmesan cheese (save remaining for garnish). Tear and stir half of the basil into the sauce (save remaining for garnish). Season with additional salt and pepper. You can now allow it to cool, bag it and freeze or keep it warm while you cook your gluten free pasta!  Enjoy!!!

Monday, July 11, 2011

The Gluten Free Bistro’s Products Now Available at Lucky’s Market!

Boulder, CO (July 11, 2011) - The Gluten Free Bistro’s product line will be sold retail at Lucky’s Market in Boulder, CO (www.luckysmarket.com). The line offers an array of gluten-free products including: frozen pizza crust, fresh-style (frozen) penne and fettuccine, and dough ball. Since 2004, Lucky‘s Market has served the Boulder community as the city's only locally-owned and operated supermarket.  They specialize in providing fresh, natural, organic and locally-grown foods.  Lucky’s Market will be selling this amazing line of gluten-free products that was formerly only available at restaurants.

Kelly McCallister, CFO for The Gluten Free Bistro states, “Lucky’s Market is a perfect fit for our locally owned product line. We are excited for North Boulder shoppers to have a convenient spot to buy our delicious and healthy products.”

The Gluten Free Bistro is dedicated to providing products with exceptional taste and high quality nutritious ingredients. Our gourmet products are the #1 choice among chefs and critics for superior texture and flavor. As innovators in healthy gluten-free living, our products are made with 100% whole grain flours that provide protein, fiber, minerals, antioxidants and B vitamins. Enjoy all natural 100% non-GMO gluten-free foods that are low in sodium and sugar. 

The Gluten Free Bistro was founded by three gluten-intolerant Boulder locals who were dissatisfied with the gluten-free foods available. After many years, they have perfected modern, healthy and divine tasting gluten-free products. The company's founders include two nutritionists and a foodie. Now, those with gluten intolerance and celiac disease can have pizza or fresh-style pasta in a trendy restaurant, pizzeria, or at home. No more feeling left out! Please visit www.theglutenfreebistro.com for a complete directory of restaurant and retail locations that carry our product or call 720.329.3254. Join our fan club on Facebook (The Gluten Free Bistro Famous Pizza Crust) or follow us on Twitter/Foursquare (gfreebistro) to keep on top of the latest news.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Gluten-Free Vegan Baked Beans

1 cup chopped onion

1 cup chopped bell peppers, any color

6 minced garlic cloves

1 T olive oil

1 cup tomato sauce, no salt added

1/3 cup coconut palm sugar

1 T white wine vinegar

1 T agave syrup, maple flavor

1 T Dijon mustard

1 T smoked paprika

¾ t kosher salt

½ t ground pepper

¼ t cayenne

2 cans of 15-oz beans of choice (garbanzos, black, kidney, great northern), rinsed

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Spray a 8x8 casserole dish with cooking spray.

In a large skillet, add onion, bell peppers, garlic, and olive oil and sauté on medium heat until tender, about 5 minutes.

Turn temperature down to low.

Add tomato sauce thru cayenne in ingredients above, and mix well into the onion mixture.

When well mixed, add in rinsed beans.

Pour into presprayed 8x8 casserole dish and cover with aluminum foil.

Bake at 325 covered for 30 minutes.

Uncover, bake for 30 more minutes.

 Enjoy!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Gluten-Free Lime Coconut Poundcake

Gluten Free and Dairy Free



 Ingredients:

1 c sugar

½ c virgin coconut oil, melted

¾ c So Delicious Vanilla Coconut Milk

2 large whole eggs

1 large egg white

zest of 1 lime

juice of ½ lime

1 ¾ c Bistro Blend Whole Grain GF Flour

2 t baking powder

¼ t freshly grated nutmeg

¼ t salt

Directions:

  • Preheat oven to 350°F.

  • Grease 9x5 loaf pan.

  • Cream together the sugar, whole eggs, & egg whites.

  • Add vanilla coconut milk, eggs, lime zest, & lime juice.

  • Sift together the flour, baking powder, nutmeg, and salt. 

  • Fold dry ingredients into the wet ingredients until just combined.

  • Pour mixture into greased loaf pan and smooth the top with a spatula.

  • Bake until golden brown.  When toothpick is inserted, it should come out clean.

  • Approximate bake time: 60 minutes

  • Allow to cool for 15 minutes, then remove from loaf pan and place on wire rack; allow it to cool completely before serving.