Support the Work

If you have found the information on this blog useful, enjoyable, candid, or inspirational ... help keep it reader supported, journalistically driven, available to all, and advertiser-free. If you are able and inspired to do so, please consider a subscription to this blog. You can drop a dime or two every month, every year, or whenever you feel moved.

It will keep me writing, gathering facts, and interviewing the experts.

Love,

Elisabeth

CLICK HERE TO SUPPORT THE WORK

Parent / Sponsor

 

 

NEED TO FIND SOMETHING?
Join The Email List

Get Tastiness to Your Inbox

* indicates required

A blog about all things allergen-free and delicious

Entries by Elisabeth Veltman, The Tender Foodie (166)

Friday
Jul192013

Symptoms of Celiac Disease & Some Guides to Help

This is a great infographic of some of the major symptoms of celiac disease. The graphic is put together by The Gluten Dude, who has some interesting stuff on his site. If these symptoms ring true for you, look below the graphic for a few more articles that might help you figure this out with your doctor.

Celiac Disease Symptoms

 

Celiac Disease Symptoms – Courtesy of Gluten Dude

 

 

Guides to Why & What to Do - Discuss with You Doctor

Interview with Alessio Fasano Part I: Should Anyone Eat Gluten?

Interview with Alessio Fasano Part II: How to Get Tested for Celiac Disease

Interview with Alessio Fasano Part III: Gluten Sensitivity

What is a Food Allergy, Anyway?

Follow Your Gut (Part 1): What's Eating My Daughter's Stomach?

Follow Your Gut (Part 2): Going Through a Celiac Biopsy


There is also something called "silent celiac" which can happen in some people who are asymptomatic but who have celiac disease. I hope this helps any of you who are trying to get to the bottom of some crazy stuff!

Thursday
Jun272013

Ice. The Diamonds of Cuisine: Interview with Randy Finch, Ice Guru

Randy Finch in a photograph by Steph Harding from 2012

PHOTOGRAPHS BY STEPH HARDING

Interview by Elisabeth Veltman

 

Chef, artist, TV personality, and chainsaw genius, Randy Finch, along with his partner Derek Maxfield, have come to embody the words, “ice” and “art.” Their team has been featured on the Discovery Channel; are in “Ripley’s Believe it Or Not”, and were featured in a show called “Ice Brigade” on The Food Network. I had the privilege to catch Randy for a chat, and visit his very “cool” studio with Steph Harding, photographer, for a fun departure from our regularly scheduled subject matter (food allergies).  

TENDERFOODIE:  Ice sculpture has rather utilitarian roots didn’t it?  But, within a century it became quite an elaborate art form.  When did the art of ice sculpture really begin?

RANDY:  The beginning is debatable. The first documented ice sculpture, was the famous ice palace of 1740, commissioned As seen in Women's Lifestyle Magazine, June 2013by Empress Anna Ivanovna of Russia. She had commissioned this palace and staged a mock wedding there.

TENDERFOODIE:  I read about that! She forced some guy she was angry with to marry one of her servants, spend the entire night in the palace, and expected them to sleep on a bed made of pure ice.

RANDY: Yes! I actually have an original article about this from 1741. It was published in a gentleman’s magazine at the time. The palace was quite elaborate, with trees, birds, and an elephant all made of ice.  

TENDERFOODIE:  Wow.  Tell us more about how ice sculpture has evolved since then.

RANDY:  Mostly, ice was used to keep food cool on the table, and it evolved into art. This was a technique used in the creation of Peach Melba. In fact, they originally used ice swans to display that dessert.

TENDERFOODIE:  Oh, Peach Melba! Created for the legendary opera singer, Nelly Melba, correct?



RANDY:  That is correct.  In the early 1900’s, ice chandeliers, fountains and elaborate sculptures became more common. The quality sagged off in the U.S. for a while, and now it is coming full circle, and more elaborate sculptures are once again becoming common.

TENDERFOODIE:  Why the resurgence?  

RANDY:  People are looking for unique and different things today. Until recent years, it wasn’t just elaborate sculptures that took time; simple products did as well. For instance we used to hand produce little sorbet dishes made of ice, and each would cost at least $35. New technology allows us to make them more quickly and at much less cost. We were the first to use computerized equipment in the U.S. We started using it in Grand Rapids, MI, three months ahead of Las Vegas!

TENDERFOODIE:  Seriously?  How did this happen?

RANDY:  We’ve been in the business for a long time and have many personal relationships in the ice business. We knew the guy who was making the equipment in Canada, and had first dibs.



TENDERFOODIE:  What other products come from this equipment?

RANDY: We can make large bins of ice that hold ice cream for parties, dishes, drink dispensers, and parts for drink luges where the party guest can interact with the sculpture. That is our niche: Interactive ice sculpture that is both functional and beautiful.

TENDERFOODIE:  I saw a video of the ice desk that you did, and oh that grand piano that actually plays, and the pool table! What other interactive sculptures do you do?

RANDY:  The desk was for a Food Network executive. That was really fun. One of the most outrageous projects was a 30-foot long mousetrap game that included a double, fully functional Ferris wheel, and a cannon that lights up and fires. It is based upon the concept of Rube Goldberg, an artist that did drawings of very elaborate ways of doing the simplest things. We did the Mousetrap game for a show called “Recreation Nation” on the Discovery Channel.

TENDERFOODIE: I saw your mousetrap sculpture on YouTube. Truly amazing. Is this your favorite project?

 

RANDY:  The double Ferris wheel is nearest and dearest to my heart. It actually made it into Ripley’s Believe It Or Not.  But other than that, the next project is always my favorite, whatever the next project might be. We recently did a 32-foot ice dessert bar and a live performance. We created an ice motorcycle with live pyrotechnics coming from the tail pipe right on stage. We are doing a lot more live performance shows as well. We love doing them.

TENDERFOODIE:  You are a chef, and artist, and you must be an engineer of sorts to do what you do. How did you go from chef to an ice sculptor wielding a chain saw?

RANDY: Well, I also studied architecture, and we are known for our power tools. In fact we often choose the chainsaw or drill, even if a chisel is easier! But I did start out as a chef. I went to culinary school and worked as a private chef for Jay Van Andel for quite some time. I was the chef at Cygnus and for Peter Island Resort. My culinary training helps make for great relationships with chefs. I know how to design for any food without being taught. If the chef wants a caviar station, then I know we also need to accommodate blini, and how to design any sculpture so that it works for whatever food creation the chef can dream up.

TENDERFOODIE: What does an ice sculptor do in the summer?

RANDY: One of the biggest things we do in summer is sell our scrap ice, because it melts so much more slowly than regular cubed ice. Fishermen and tailgaters drop off their coolers on Monday, and pick them up on Friday for the weekend.  As we do weddings and graduation sculptures, we throw the extra into their coolers. We are also doing sculpture for Kid Rock backstage.

TENDERFOODIE:  Tell me, ice & cold are rather counter-intuitive symbols of romance. Why do you think it has come to be so closely connected with celebrations and love?

RANDY:  There is a simple elegance to ice. It is artistic. Art and romance have always gone together.  Ice sculpture is created for one, single event. It’s just for you. Ice swans, for instance, are typical sculptures for weddings because they mate for life.  Ice is sensuous. It has clarity and a slickness. Like a diamond, the light gives the sculpture a life of its own.  Like life itself, the ice sculpture transforms the entire time it exists. That’s why people love it and that’s why I love working with it.

 See more about Randy and his team...

 

About Elisabeth

Owner of Blue Pearl Strategies, Elisabeth is also The Tender Foodie. She started this blog and The Tender Palate, to help those food allergies and sensitivities.

Monday
Jun172013

Recipe: Chocolate Squash Muffins (grain-free, egg-free, dairy-free, soy-free)

Grain/Gluten-free, Dairy-free, Soy-free, Egg-free

Copyright & Photos: Elisabeth Veltman, The Tender Foodie


If food were fashion (and we know that it is) then squash is the new black. Squash makes very moist, healthy, and yummy muffins. Loaded with antioxidants, magnesium, B Vitamins, and iron; you can serve these muffs for breakfast or have them hanging around as snacks. I think you might like paleo muffins even better than regular 'old wheat muffins. I do!

Inactive prep time: 1 hour
Prep time: 15 min.
Cook time: 35-45 min.
Makes 12 muffins

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Ingredients


1 cup mashed butternut squash or acorn squash (roasted and peeled), or mashed pumpkin flesh (my favorite to use is Tropical Traditions Organic Pumpkin in a box).

1 small banana (or half of a large one)

4 TBS ground flax mixed with 8 TBS filtered water & left for 5 minutes to gel (this is your egg replacer)
 
½ cup almond butter (can also use a nut-free sunflower butter)

¾ cup honey

¼ cup coconut oil, melted (if your almond butter is very oily, you may need to leave this out, if the almond butter is very dry, leave it in.)

½ cup dairy-free raw cacao powder (make sure it is dairy- & gluten- free if you have guest w/ these allergies). I use Navitas Raw Cacao Powder.

½ cup coconut flour (exactly - sift out the lumps before you measure)

½ TBS of gluten-free cinnamon (McCormick brand) - Learn more about spices

1-teaspoon gluten-free, aluminum-free baking powder

1-teaspoon baking soda

1-teaspoon gluten-free vanilla extract

1-teaspoon gluten-free chocolate extract

¼ teaspoon of sea salt

Optional: add 1 cup of Enjoy Life mini chocolate chips for extra sweetness.



Instructions

1.    Vent the squash (poke several holes with a knife), the roast the squash whole at 425 degrees for about 1 hour or until a knife easily pierces through the center.  Cool.  Cut In half and use a spoon to scoop out the seeds.  Then scrape out the flesh into a measuring cup.
2.    Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
3.    Grease a 12 muffin tin with coconut oil, or use paper muffin cups
4.    In a food processor (this works better for paleo than a blender) combine the squash, banana, almond butter, flax seed mixture, honey, and coconut oil. Add the vanilla and chocolate extracts. Blend well.
5.    In a separate bowl, whisk the coconut flour, raw cacao powder, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, and sea salt, then add it to the wet ingredients and blend well.
6.    Scoop into the muffin cups filling to the top.
7.    Bake for 35 minutes.  A toothpick will come out moist with a little crumble.

Let muffins cool, and then remove from tin and nom.


*Please note: coconut is a drupe, not a nut, but some people are allergic to coconut (and the oils), so please double check with your nut-allergic guest to be sure that they can eat coconut.



ABOUT ELISABETH

Writer, owner of Blue Pearl Strategies, and lover of all culinary delights, Elisabeth started The Tender Palate & Tender Foodie, for people with food allergies, sensitivities and intolerance. She believes that everyone should live deliciously and have a healthy seat at the table.

Wednesday
Jun122013

Leaky Gut? Take the GAPS Diet Challenge!

 

Learn About GAPS

 Many inflammatory conditions, including food sensitivities, and even some food allergies, can be caused or exacerbated by a "leaky gut". The GAPS Diet is a gut-healing protocol that can be very powerful for some people. It isn't easy, however, unless you have the right support. The Tender Palate has compiled a group of experts to help you through the most difficult stages of the diet in a cost effective and informative way.

Learn more about GAPS

Read Holistic Nutritionist Brooke Kaufman's Story

Read Elisabeth's Story

Listen to the first webcast: Is the GAPS DIet for You?


Sign Up for the GAPS Diet Challenge!


The Challenge Program Outline

You can begin anytime between June 14 and June 21 and receive virtual nutritionist support through July 5.

Cost for entire challenge: $75

Here's what the full plan includes:

1. DAILY EMAILED TIPS & INSPIRATION: to keep you creative and learning in small bites.

2. FREE MEAL PLANS W/ FOOD ALLERGY ADAPTATIONS: We'll supply you with meal plans "curated" by nutritionist Brooke Kaufman.

3. PERSONAL NUTRITIONIST SUPPORT: Everyone has unique circumstances. Nutritionist Brooke Kaufman will provide each participant with answers to 2-3 email questions per week.

4. DISCOUNT ON CUSTOM MEAL PLANS: If you need more support, all participants will receive a $10 discount on 1 week of custom meal plans with nutritionist Brooke Kaufman.

5. TEACHING & SUPPORT WEBCASTS W/ Q&A: The GAPS Diet provides a great opportunity to learn about your body & the diet. The more you learn, the more fascinated you will become with how healing works, and the more successful you will be with GAPS. After each webcast there will be time for questions from the experts, as well as support from Brooke, Elisabeth, the guests, and the group.

LIST OF WEBCASTS INCLUDED (you can also register separately, outside of the Challenge):

#1: Listen Online Now (free): Is the GAPS Diet for YOU?


#2: The Gut / Brain Connection with GAPS Certified Practitioner Toni Fairman
*June 14, 2013; 12:00 pm EDT.... 9:00 am PDT
- Challenge Participants: Included
- Purchase separately: $15

#3: The ART of SUPPLEMENTATION & DETOXIFICATION
*June 21, 2013 12:00 pm EDT (9:00 am PDT)
- Challenge Participants: Included
- Purchase separately: $15

#4: MEDITATION – Dealing with Change & the Emotional Issues of Eating
....w/ Carol Hendershot, Mindfulness Based Meditation Instructor
*June 28, 2013 12:00 pm EDT (9:00 am PDT)
- Challenge Participants: Included
- Purchase separately: $15


 Are you ready to begin?

Wednesday
Jun122013

Leaky Gut & A Tender Foodie Story.

Elisabeth Veltman, The Tender Foodie

My Story - The Short Version

Holistic Nutritionist Brooke Kaufman and I were speaking on the phone one day, and I shared with her some of my own food allergy struggles. I don't open up about that very often. Even though global understanding and eradication of food allergies are passions of mine, and even though I HAVE to talk about them to both do my job and stay personally safe, and even though I counsel people regularly to embrace their allergies and not be embarrased by them . . . I'm embarrassed by mine.   Most people are incredibly kind and understanding, but a few have not been. So I hesitated when I chatted with Brooke and said, "I'm a strong chick, but my gut is weak. I need to do something about it, and do it now, or I"m afraid that my health will once again spiral out of control."

So I"m telling you part of my story, chapter 27 or so, of this epic gumshoe tale where trenchcoated, sillouetted figures appear and disappear in the billowing smoke, revealing themselves either as red herrings or hardboiled facts. OK. I'm telling you this part of the story, because it might help some of you.  I hope it does.

 

Like a 1940's Film Noir - Chapter 27

I had been on a fairly even keel for a while, had a pretty set diet, and felt OK, not great, fairly stable.  Like many of you, I had a list of allergies and sensitivities ranging from very severe to seemingly mild. I was instructed by doctor and allergen testing company alike to rotate those foods that tested low, and then remove the more highly allergenic foods on the list. I hadn't touched the top allergens in years, so I removed the new / low ones believing that they would eventually go away. That often happens, some delayed reactions can go away if you avoid the food for a while. I did this, and then one day, my beloved blueberries and strawberries made my lips swell, my spine inflame, my hands and joints swell and my heart palpitate. It felt like a cloak and dagger event, where something I trusted and loved betrayed me. These two berries were on the rotation list.  The instructions were, "Don't eat more than every 4 days", which I abided by diligently, until summer came. My beloved berries became the "berries fatale" in a 1940's detective-style film noir.

At the moment of the reaction, I cut out every bloody thing on my list of allergens. Read every label for my entire list of allergens, even things sweetened wtih fruit juices. This helped. But sure enough, when I did eat parsley by mistake, for instance, the same symptoms returned. Plus a lovely knife through my head, and the feeling that cold, steel fingers wrapped around the back of my neck and into my throat. I have had constant pain in my right side and lower back from inflammation in the gut for a number of years.  And no one could tell me what to do about it. Even smart people. And I worked with some great detectives.

Going Grain-less - Not Without Surprises

But after cutting my entire allergen list from my diet, I simply didn't feel quite right and decided to cut out grains and seeds, as well.  Some grains, and grain-like seeds like Quinoa, have a similar enough protein structure to gluten that some folks' immune systems might mistake it for gluten. I went all Paleo (grain-free) and started consuming Tapioca in the form of this incredibly delicious bread. Tapioca is also a replacement for soy lecithin in chocolate.  Much to my chagrin, tapioca can also cross react with / as gluten. I found this out as an allergy to it started building. It started as a runny nose every time I ate it, then I felt exhausted, bloated, and watched as this lovely fat began building around my mid-section, and my pain became worse and worse. Then I had to run from a yoga class because I started sweating profusely and it felt like I was about to hurl an alien being henceforth from my stomach. I wasn't sure which food was causing this discomfort at first, then went into a bit of denial. I mean, tapicoa is yummy, and it just couldn't be that!. I ignored the clues. Then one night about 2 hours after I had worked on a recipe for a lamb pizza w/ tapioca flour, consumed it, and had eaten some tapioca-based chocolate, I woke up with heart palpitations so severe that I nearly called 911. I've had heart palpitations many times before but had never, ever had them this badly. I started down the stairs to drive myself to the hospital. My face was hot and terribly swollen, as were my hands. I decided to sit by the phone for a bit and wait to see if my heart and breathing calmed down. I didn't call because I didn't want to (YOU should call). I was also afraid they would use epinephrine on me. I have a severe reaction to epinephrine - go figure, it makes my heart palpitate quite badly. Finally, the reaction calmed enough so I could breathe again, and I got a few hours of sleep. I didn't have any Benedryl in the house.  Now I do. And believe me, I'm also researching other means of rescue besides an Epi-pen and will pass this on when and if I find it.

 

Grainless Had Unexpected Benefits, Too

 

Going grainless has given me an unexpected benefit: I no longer need thyroid medication. At least not right now!  Hallelujah. There could be other factors that have contributed to this small miracle, but it seems that others have let go of their thryroid meds as well after going Paleo. I don't plan to keep grains out of my life forever, because I do feel like my particular body  needs them. We are all unique, after all. I will reintroduce them carefully, however, and start with fermented grains as the GAPS Full Diet suggests (after finishing the intro gut-healing phase).  Right now, I feel like grain-less is the right move to be able to heal my gut.

 

The Last Egg

As I adjusted to the Paleo Diet, I found myself consuming many more chicken eggs than normal.  Guess what, my intuition started warning me to lay off the eggs (pun intended). I noticed a similar kind of build up that I experienced with tapioca, so I took them out of my diet as well, and felt better.  Then one night I decided to try them again and woke up with a swollen face, hands and all of those other symptoms.  The reaction was not as bad as the tapioca reaction, but a repeat performance of THAT was not a desireable situation. Plus I took Benedryl immediately which helped. But chicken eggs are now out. New swear words are in.


Could This Spiral Out of Control?

So I spoke to Brooke, the Holistic Nutritionist, because I fear that this vicious cycle will spiral even more out of control. This was simply not an option. Constant testing is very pricey, can be inaccurate, and simply not desireable - even though there are new tests out there now which I intend to explore further for us all. I had been taking lots of medical grade supplements to heal the gut, prescribed by my wonderful doctor, but nothing was working. I had been researching different diets and had heard some amazing things about the GAPS Diet.

So I've decided to try it, and invite you to try it with me!

 

Nutritionists Who Know Their Stuff Are Awesome

In my conversation with Brooke, she said that she had healed her gut by doing the Intro portion  - the gut -healing phases - of the diet a few years ago. As we talked, I decided to do the GAPS Intro, and then get retested for allergies later.  I asked her if she would help me, because this diet is not easy. If you have the right information, it isn't that hard, but without it, it seemed overwhelming.

Brooke is not only a Holistic Nutritionist who makes great recipes, she was a vegetarian in a great deal of distress at one point in her life (read her story here). The GAPS diet helped her heal and as she says, "it changed my entire paradigm about food and diet."

I've been on the diet for four days now, and already my right side and lower back pain have already greatly subsided.  The Intro Diet is meant to "heal and seal" the gut lining so good bacteria/ flora can thrive and have the strength in numbers to elbow out the bad stuff. Bad bacteria and any parasite overgrowth are also starved of their food - they love starch, sugar, and fiber. A leaky gut (aka, the entire digestive tube) attracts these nasty little buggers, and allows unbroken-down food proteins past the intestinal wall, and this is what puts the immune system on high alert for multiple foods, creating more sensitivities and even allergies. A healed and sealed gut reverses both of these problems.

I plan to go through the entire 6 week intro phase to heal my gut with Brooke's support. Many of the foods on the diet I'm allergic to, so she is helping me find alternatives. She will support all who participate in the Challenge, through 3 of these stages. That's 21 days, the ideal time that experts say it take to make a change! 

I look forward to the rest of this healing journey.

 

Join Me!

If you are ready to join me in this challenge, Brooke and I have developed a program that gives you the maximum support for a very reasonable cost.  If you feel the GAPS Diet is for you, join us next week! 

 

 

Page 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... 34 Next 5 Entries »