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The Gluten-Free Gourmet Cooks Comfort Foods: More than 200 Recipes for Creating Old Favorites with New Flours Kindle Edition
Bette Hagman is the premier creator of recipes for those intolerant to gluten and those allergic to wheat. In this addition to the Gluten-free Gourmet series, Hagman turns her hand to old favorites such as macaroni and cheese, chicken pot pie, and lasagna that were once off-limits to anyone who is gluten intolerant. At the core of this book are more than two hundred all-new recipes for the mouth-watering comfort foods enjoyed by people everywhere.
The nutritional information and dietary exchanges that accompany each recipe will make these hearty and delicious foods fit easily into any diet. Hagman also provides an introduction to new flours available to the gluten-free cook and offers a list of sources for gluten-free baking products you can order by mail. With The Gluten-free Gourmet Cooks Comfort Foods, everyone can enjoy satisfying meals and snacks without gluten or wheat.
“Biscuits, meat loafs, shepherd’s pies and casseroles hearken back to home cookery of earlier decades. But they make use of a wide variety of grains, including amaranth, millet, teff and quinoa . . . For those feeling nostalgic—or simply ready to enjoy a nice gluten-free Lemon Pudding Cake—Hagman offers the goods.” —Publishers Weekly
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
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From Booklist
Sufferers of celiac disease used to find it hard to pursue a gluten-free regimen. Thanks to a growing awareness of this disorder and of food allergies, nutritionists and chefs have come together to generate a balanced diet with plenty of flavors and extensive variety to assuage the celiac's appetite. Hagman's Gluten-Free Gourmet series of cookbooks has added another volume: The Gluten-Free Gourmet Cooks Comfort Foods. Her latest recipe collection begins with a review of the various grains that lack gluten and the flours that can be produced by milling them. Mixtures of rice, potato, tapioca, and cornstarch--plus flour from exotic beans--provide texture, flavor, and nutrition to foods without resorting to forbidden wheat. This allows celiacs to relish formerly taboo comfort foods such as "macaroni" and cheese, chicken-fried steak, lasagna, rye bread, biscuits, pie, and a host of other heretofore inaccessible foods. Mark Knoblauch
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"With this new book on comfort foods, Bette is closing the gap between celiac and non-celiac cuisine."
—Alessio Fasano, M.D., from the Foreword
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
A History of Celiac DiseaseThe story of celiac disease is both old and new. It was first mentioned over two centuries before Christ but it took two more millenniums before anyone tried to do something about curbing the effects. After that slow start, the disease began snowballing with recognition, control, easier diagnosis, and research. It is hoped that somewhere in the next ten years there may also be a "cure" or a simpler method of control than the lifelong diet free of gluten in wheat, rye, and barley. The sad part is that, although scientists have proved that one in one hundred fifty people may have celiac disease, only one out of ten has been diagnosed so far. The others are living with this condition, unaware that they could have a far healthier life.This disease--the autoimmune reaction to gluten in our food leading to malnutrition--may have its roots in the agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago when man stopped chasing prey for his only food to settle down to raise seeds as well. Who knows what intolerances developed in the people unused to grains in their diet? But the first known writing of the suspected disease was in the third century.250 A.D.: Artaeus of Cappadocia first wrote of the symptoms but it wasn't until 1856 that his work was translated into English.1880: Samuel Gee, M.D., in an article in the medical magazine St. Bartholomew's Hospital Reports, Vol. 24, identified food as the probable cause of the debilitating symptoms of the malady later to be called celiac disease. He suggested cow's milk be removed from the diet and that other foods be introduced in small portions. He alsowas astute enough to recognize that the symptoms probably arose from some foods but didn't specify which ones. He suggested patients remove from their diet foods that caused symptoms.1924: Scientists felt that celiacs should be on a rice and banana diet. It worked, because it removed all grains, meats, vegetables, and milk from the patient. As the children improved (only children were thought to have the disease), they were introduced to other foods. The improvement suggested to the doctors that they were "cured." We know now that the doctors were wrong.1946-1950: During World War II celiacs in Holland were unable to get wheat for their bread and surprised their doctors by their return to good health. W K. Diecke wrote his doctoral thesis on the subject, identifying wheat as a source of the symptoms. It was the first definitive suggestion that a certain grain contained toxicity to those with celiac disease.1958: Introduction of the Rubin Tube. Up until this time diagnosis for celiac disease had to be made from a description of the symptoms--diarrhea, vomiting (in infants), malnutrition, and protruding stomach. Although barium X rays were used to diagnose some internal ailments, they failed to show celiac disease. There was no way of actually viewing the upper intestine without surgery until Dr. Cyrus B. Rubin and his associates at a Seattle hospital created the first crude tube with rotating blades to take a biopsy of the damaged area when swallowed by the patient. This tube has been improved over the years from the original tests with the patient awake and conscious; now the endoscopy is practically painless with the patient medicated and asleep throughout the examination. At this time it was known that children had celiac sprue but few recognized the fact that the adult disease, nontropical sprue, was the same. The Rubin Tube showed that, in biopsy, they were identical. Doctors still stuck to the separate names while patients were beginning to suspect that they were the same. Adults suffered much longer before being diagnosed, often being told it was "all in their heads" or to "just take a stomach settler and they would feel better."1973--1974: Start of celiac support groups. Until this time, each diagnosed patient felt alone while the doctors had little knowledge and no time to help him/her cope with the diagnosis of a "rare" disease that had no cure except a strict diet. In fact, the disease was so little known that few people had heard of it, and dieticians were of no help because they had received little information about it.Five support organizations started at about the same time, each begun because the founder found a fellow sufferer and realized she was not alone and that others outthere must need help, too. On the east coast of the United States, the American Celiac Society was started by Annita Garrow for research; in Seattle, the Gluten Intolerance Group was founded by Elaine Hartsook for research, support, and diet instruction. A few years later, in the Midwest, the Midwestern Celiac Sprue Association (later to be called CSA/USA) was begun by Pat Garst for support and diet instruction. At the same time, in Canada, Kay Ernst, the mother of a celiac child, joined with another to begin what became the Canadian National Association. Later, the organizations in the United States were joined by the Celiac Disease Foundation in Los Angeles, organized by Elaine Monarch. These groups are all still active and several have joined together to provide support and educate the public.These groups, working alone or with others, have been responsible for better labeling laws. We can now tell by the new ingredients list if a product contains gluten or milk products, although they may be hidden under the term "modified food starch" or some other terms for gluten, while milk may hide under such terms as "whey" or "casein." The groups, whether alone or in conjunction with others, are constantly working to improve the wording of labels.1978: The toxic part of the grain found! Although doctors were aware that certain grains were responsible for the disease, it wasn't until Donald Kasarda, Ph.D., identified the particular proteins in gluten that caused the toxic reactions from the grains of wheat, rye, barley, and, possibly, oats.1992: The first all-celiac cruise. Mary Alice Warren of Florida arranged a Caribbean cruise with all gluten-free meals for celiacs across the nation and Canada. She had chefs and helpers in a separate gluten-free kitchen prepare all meals. Between stops, the celiacs were treated to seminars on eating, cooking, and living gluten-free. She also arranged for cruises in 1993 and 1994.1998: Blood testing could show celiac disease. This was the beginning of the discovery by scientists that several different sereological studies could discern celiac disease, but physicians continued to rely on the physical symptoms and the endoscopy for diagnosing patients.1998-2001: Alessio Fasano, M.D., working in Maryland at the Center for Celiac Research, realized that the number of celiacs reported in the United States was far lower than the numbers reported in Europe and wanted to know why. Was it our way of living? Our heritage? Or the fact that doctors here were not diagnosing the illness?He started a nationwide project of blood testing using the help and facilities of various celiac organizations nationwide at their meetings, conventions, and othergatherings. He discovered that the ratio, which formerly was thought to be 1 in 3,000, was actually closer to 1 in 150! Celiacs were not being diagnosed in the United States. He started an active campaign for celiac awareness with the Walk.2002: First International Walk for Celiac Disease. This walk was to raise awareness of the disease around the world and was so successful that others followed.In conclusion, take heart, the activities surrounding celiac disease--support awareness and research--have never been more active. You are not alone now. There are many out there with the disease and many more working to make it easier and easier to live, whether it be on the diet for life or eventually finding some type of medicine that may curb the toxicity of the proteins.Today's celiacs are fortunate to find themselves the focus of so much research that it can be mind-boggling. Some medical scientists are attempting to find a simple pill that can be taken to offset the toxic effects of gluten. Others are attempting to create a wheat that will not contain any toxic particle. And across the nation even suppliers are aware that wheat, as well as other products, can cause extreme illness and are now considering labeling foods that contain allergens. There are dreams of a better future for all of us.But until some of these dreams come true, we will have to settle for making or buying products we can tolerate and sticking to the diet. It's difficult for one person to keep up with all the scientific work, but the large celiac organizations have conferences that invite the top doctors to bring insight on the latest discoveries as well as keep us aware that this disease, unresolved, can lead to more chance of having another or several of the autoimmune diseases.To join a support group near you and become part of a larger organization, write or call one of the following:
American Celiac Society Dietary Support Coalition, P.O. Box 23455, New Orleans, LA 70183-0445; phone (504) 737-3293; e-mail: AmerCeliacSoc@netscape.net.
Canadian Celiac Association, 5170 Dixie Road, Suite 204, Mississauga L4W 1E3, Ontario, Canada; phone (905) 507-6208, fax (905) 507-4673, toll free (800) 363-7296.
Celiac Disease Foundation, 13251 Ventura Blvd., Suite 1, Studio City, CA 91604-1838; phone (818) 990-2354, fax (818) 990-2397, e-mail: cdf@celiac.org. Web site: www.celiac.org.
Celiac Sprue Association/United States of America (CSA/USA), P.O. Box 31700, Omaha, NE 68131-0700; phone (402) 558-0600.Gluten Intolerance Group (GIG), 15110 10th Avenue, SW, Suite A, Seattle, WA 98166; phone (206) 246-6652, fax (206) 246-6531, e-mail: info@gluten.net. Web site: www.gluten.net.REFERENCESAnnette C. Bentley, "Evolving Celiac Organizations in the United States." Paper delivered at CSA/USA convention in Omaha, Neb., October 2001.Alessio Fasano, M.D., "Celiac Disease: the Past, the Present, the Future." Paper delivered at Canadian/Celiac Conference, Ottawa, Canada, May 16, 2001, and at the Gluten Intolerance Group national convention, Winston-Salem, N.C., 2001.Stefano Guandalini, M.D., and Michelle Melin-Rogovin, "The History of Celiac Disease and of Its Diagnostic Practices." Paper delivered at Living Free national convention, Philadelphia, Pa., 2001.Copyright © 2004 by Bette Hagman
Product details
- ASIN : B0074LF1NE
- Publisher : Henry Holt and Co.; Reprint edition (January 1, 2005)
- Publication date : January 1, 2005
- Language : English
- File size : 2.6 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 340 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 0805078088
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,101,460 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #286 in Wheat-Free Diet Cookbooks
- #637 in Gluten Free Cooking
- #726 in Low Fat Diets (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Bette Hagman a.k.a. the Gluten-free Gourmet, is also the author of More from the Gluten-free Gourmet, The Gluten-free Gourmet Bakes Bread and The Gluten-free Gourmet Cook Fast and Healthy. Diagnosed as a celiac more than twenty years ago, she has devoted her time to creating recipes for gluten-free flours. A writer and lecturer, she lives in Seattle.
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Customers find this cookbook excellent for gluten-free cooking, particularly for those new to celiac disease. The book provides practical advice on blending different flours and offers regular recipes without unusual ingredients, making it easy to use and understand.
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Customers love the recipes in this cookbook, describing them as wonderful and delicious, with one customer specifically praising the fantastic salmon quiche.
"...The bread was delicious and seemed completely "normal"...." Read more
"This cookbook is excellent, well put together and full of simple recipes for busy people and contains ingredients that are easy to find...." Read more
"...BUT there some really good parts of the book like flour blends for different uses and descriptions of uncommon flours...." Read more
"...and starches to make your own baking mixes, this book provides MANY great recipes for using those mixes...." Read more
Customers find this cookbook excellent for gluten-free cooking, particularly for those new to celiac disease.
"...that don't normally contain gluten but being in the book it is gluten free, for example "deviled ham and cheese spread", "Amandas artichoke dip", "..." Read more
"Bette takes the guess work out of gluten free recipes. She has done all the experimenting for us!..." Read more
"This book certainly contains gluten free recipes, but many of the recipes are gluten-free recipes to being with, such as "Crockpot Chili", "Fruited..." Read more
"...-to dish to make for company, as everyone loves it and we can all eat gluten-free together!" Read more
Customers appreciate the cookbook's detailed information, particularly its elaborate ingredient lists and practical advice on blending various flours. One customer notes that it provides directions for making several types of gluten-free baking mixes.
"...of meals, but interestingly enough, many are regular recipes without unusual ingredients (flours)...." Read more
"...The "Wheat Belly" book is also excellent, with totally different flours, but already, I am getting tired of the same tastes in all of the..." Read more
"...way of the definition how to cook are very simple and definitive, explanatory. The book is brand new and condition" Read more
"...BUT there some really good parts of the book like flour blends for different uses and descriptions of uncommon flours...." Read more
Customers find the cookbook easy to use and understand.
"...We gently rolled the dough, which was super easy to make, and fast, then cut biscuits with a heart shaped cookie cutter...." Read more
"the way ingredients and the way of the definition how to cook are very simple and definitive, explanatory. The book is brand new and condition" Read more
"...It explained in simple terms several health reasons a person might need to use these recipes to better their health...." Read more
"...that gluten-free cooks use. Also gives info bits on how to use and inter-mix the different ingredients for different effects..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2010I have had a chance to try a few things from this book for my son with wheat and egg allergy. Life certainly got easier since he outgrew the soy and milk allergies last year....before that, it was VERY hard to bake anything tasty. On with the review!
I made the Amaranth or Quinoa Waffles on page 130 with both flours. (I made Amaranth waffles and then Quinoa waffles. I did not mean that I combined the flours. The recipe can be made either way). I doubled the recipe for each and my son (age 6) devoured them. The leftovers I froze and pop what I need into the toaster oven as needed.
Tonight we made the Featherlight Biscuits on page 226. The were simply AWESOME hot from the oven, slathered with butter and honey! I'm not a biscuit fan at all, but the entire family loved them. I had to cut the children off so that there would be some left for the sibling who cannot have wheat. We gently rolled the dough, which was super easy to make, and fast, then cut biscuits with a heart shaped cookie cutter. One reason it seemed so fast to make the dough is that there are no eggs in the recipe (which can become tedious when using egg replacer). We were delighted with the results. There's nothing worse than using one's expensive alternate flours in a recipe that fails.
Some time ago I made the Crunchy Broccoli Salad on page 121. I substituted turkey bacon and egg-free mayonnaise. My husband, who hates mayonnaise, liked it so much, that I made it again for company who then asked for the recipe.
The author includes a large variety of meals, but interestingly enough, many are regular recipes without unusual ingredients (flours). My desire, in purchasing GF cookbooks, is to acquire good recipes that make use of alternative flours for baking. I have also made a GF Macaroni and cheese with corn pasta which was enjoyed by all, as well. I'm so sorry, it may have come from this cookbook, or another GF book I purchased at the same time. I just can't recall.
I'm glad I bought this book and would recommend it to others who cannot have wheat. Maybe I'll even try some "regular" recipes as well.
10/29/10
I made the Banana Bread Deluxe on page 219. Instead of 1 c. of Teff flour, I substituted 1/2 c. coconut flour, 1/4 c. quinoa flour, and 1/4 c. amaranth flour. The bread was delicious and seemed completely "normal". The batter was fluffy and light as I spooned it into the baking pans instead of a solid, dense, rubbery mass as many wheat-free recipes seem to be. As I test more recipes, I'll review them. Someone who eats wheat would never notice that it was made with unusual flours.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2014This cookbook is excellent, well put together and full of simple recipes for busy people and contains ingredients that are easy to find. Most newer cookbooks are full of ingredients that can only be found in big city's specialty stores but this is not one of those. Going gluten free is not easy on those of us that have to, but Bette Hagman has made it so much easier with this well planned and thought out book. I am looking forward to trying her pizza crust but am awaiting my order from Amazon so that I will have everything I need. This is the one that I wish I had found first! The "Wheat Belly" book is also excellent, with totally different flours, but already, I am getting tired of the same tastes in all of the baked goods. This book is much closer to the "normal" tastes that I've been used to for 60 years. My plan is to bounce back & forth between the two cookbooks and get the best of both worlds. In the meantime, I am down 15 lbs, no more eczema, no more heart burn, an energy level that I haven't had in 20 years and the brain fog has lifted.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2023the way ingredients and the way of the definition how to cook are very simple and definitive, explanatory. The book is brand new and condition
- Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2022I was hoping to get a book full of recipes that normally contain gluten. This book has a bunch of recipes that don't normally contain gluten but being in the book it is gluten free, for example "deviled ham and cheese spread", "Amandas artichoke dip", "Layered salsa dip", "deviled eggs", "nondairy stuffed celery" and the list goes on.
BUT there some really good parts of the book like flour blends for different uses and descriptions of uncommon flours. I have not wandered into the alternative flours much so I can't review those recipes, but all in all it seems like an informative book.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2007Bette takes the guess work out of gluten free recipes. She has done all the experimenting for us! If you are willing to buy several different kinds of flours and starches to make your own baking mixes, this book provides MANY great recipes for using those mixes. I have tried many of the muffin, quick bread, and waffle recipes, and have not been disappointed yet. The baked goods don't stay fresh for long (maybe a day or two at the most), so I put everything in the freezer. It works out very well! I also have Gluten Free Gourmet Bakes Bread, but I like Comfort Foods better. She uses more of the "newer" flours (like Teff), which I have found really lend a lot to wheat free baked goods.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2008This book certainly contains gluten free recipes, but many of the recipes are gluten-free recipes to being with, such as "Crockpot Chili", "Fruited Dressing for Pork", "Deviled Eggs", and "Chicken Waldorf Salad".
I already have hoards of recipes that don't call for gluten-containing ingredients. This book is a collection of recipes you can make complete meals from, whether they contain gluten ingredients or not. I expected that it would be a 100% compilation of gluten containing foods you could cook using gluten-free substitutes.
The good points I gave to this book are that it gives you directions for making several types of gluten-free baking mixes to use in the recipes that normally call for flour. And those recipes don't contain any of that awful tasting soy flour.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2011I love Bette Hagman's books, and this one is my absolute favorite. it takes some time to prep the flour mixes (unless you just buy something similar), and also to make the biscuit mix, but it's well worth it to keep on hand, because the chicken pot pies are SO good!! way better than any "regular" ones I'd ever had. this is my go-to dish to make for company, as everyone loves it and we can all eat gluten-free together!
Top reviews from other countries
- Nanaimo GirlReviewed in Canada on February 13, 2009
5.0 out of 5 stars Gluten-free flours do work...if you know what to do with them!
Being diagnosed as a Celiac (or having to cook for one!) inevitably means you'll be thrown head-first into the deep and mysterious world of gluten-free flours. Quite possibly, you'll find yourself examining packages of things labelled as "Flour" that you've never heard of...I know I was. What to do with them is another matter...! When you're really craving a homemade chicken pot pie - turn to Bette Hagman, and she'll soothe your frazzled tastebuds and reassure you that you can make pastry that's worth eating and doesn't taste like drywall!! Bette's "Gluten-Free Comfort Food" book addresses many of the old favourite that you thought you'd never eat again. Just be prepared to buy lots of different bins for the many flours you'll accumulate!
- kmlReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 26, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Birthday present
This was a birthday present, and very well received . . . . . . . . . . .
- Carrie-Anne MoncrieffReviewed in Canada on September 25, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Just an awesome book, I use it very regularly
Just an awesome book, I use it very regularly. I use most of the pre-mix recipes. I did change to more garbanzo bean flour. I recommend highly.
- wise owlReviewed in Canada on July 12, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Gluten Free
Nice range of recipes. Easy to follow instructions. If you have to eat gluten free, it's good to know you can still make the old favourites, and enjoy them!
- Judith A. ChurchReviewed in Canada on June 12, 2021
3.0 out of 5 stars Need to know why this??
Very nice cookbook, has what I need in it, but disappointed there weren't any pictures. However, to my shock, when I opened the first page there was a price sticker on it showing Bryan's bookstore, price $5.00. So what the heck is that all about?? If this book was just picked up at a store, and then sent to me, I want a $22.00 credit put on my account!
Judith A. ChurchNeed to know why this??
Reviewed in Canada on June 12, 2021
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