
The Food and Drug Administration has announced that it is reopening the comment period for the proposed rule on the gluten-free labeling of foods.
Read More:FDA Seeking Comments on Still Unregulated ‘Gluten-Free’ Labeling
FDA Seeking Comments on Still Unregulated ‘Gluten-Free’ LabelingAugust 13th, 2011 - Jill Ettinger
The Food and Drug Administration has announced that it is reopening the comment period for the proposed rule on the gluten-free labeling of foods. Read More:FDA Seeking Comments on Still Unregulated ‘Gluten-Free’ LabelingOfficial Gluten-Free Certification Program Now UnderwayJune 17th, 2011 - Jill Ettinger
As the number of gluten and wheat sensitive individuals continues to rise, a science-based certification program is now available to safely promote certified gluten-free foods. Read More:Official Gluten-Free Certification Program Now UnderwaySouthwestern Gluten-Free Cornbread DressingDecember 23rd, 2009 - Barbara Feiner
As promised in my last post, we’re taking Dana Jacobi’s Gluten-Free Cornbread recipe and using it to make her gluten-free holiday dressing. “This dressing reheats so well, and its robust Southwestern flavor mellows so nicely, that I often make it a day ahead,” says Jacobi, author of The Essential Best Foods Cookbook: 225 Irresistible Recipes Featuring the Healthiest and Most Delicious Foods and a contributor to the New American Plate Cookbook: Recipes for a Healthy Weight and a Healthy Life. “And no one will guess it has a gluten-free secret.” Southwestern Gluten-Free Cornbread DressingMakes 12 servings
Cornbread Prep
For the Dressing
Per serving: 300 calories, 13 g total fat (5 saturated fat), 40 g carbohydrate, 10 g protein, 4 g dietary fiber, 540 mg sodium. Recipe and photo courtesy of the American Institute for Cancer Research Read More:Southwestern Gluten-Free Cornbread DressingGluten-Free CornbreadDecember 22nd, 2009 - Barbara Feiner
Approximately 3.5% of the American population suffers from celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder that affects the small intestine. Celiac patients are unable to digest gluten, a protein found in wheat, spelt, rye, barley and oats. Visit your local natural and organic food store, and you’re likely to find a section or entire aisle devoted to gluten-free foods. Some of the available products may surprise you, as gluten can be “an invisible ingredient” in foods like chicken broth, mayonnaise and pie fillings, says Dana Jacobi, author of The Essential Best Foods Cookbook: 225 Irresistible Recipes Featuring the Healthiest and Most Delicious Foods and a contributor to the New American Plate Cookbook: Recipes for a Healthy Weight and a Healthy Life. With clever substitutions, and without sacrificing taste, celiac sufferers can create dishes that everyone will enjoy. Jacobi’s cornbread recipe, for example, starts with a gluten-free mix. In my next post, we’ll use this cornbread recipe to make a gluten-free holiday stuffing. Tune in tomorrow! Gluten-Free Cornbread
Recipe courtesy of the American Institute for Cancer Research. Photo: Read More:Gluten-Free Cornbread |