Happy thanksgiving...
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- wmonique2
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Happy thanksgiving...
Happy Thanksgiving my friends!
Hope you have a good one and let's not overdo it -- it isn't worth the price we pay!
Love to all,
Monique
Hope you have a good one and let's not overdo it -- it isn't worth the price we pay!
Love to all,
Monique
Diagnosed 2011 with LC. Currently on Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN)
Happy Thanksgiving to you, too, Monique!
It will help me to remember that this holiday is about gratitude, not about food... we must feast on what nourishes us.
This forum is one of many things for which I'm grateful this year.
Meg
It will help me to remember that this holiday is about gratitude, not about food... we must feast on what nourishes us.
This forum is one of many things for which I'm grateful this year.
Meg
Courage is the price that life exacts for granting peace; the soul that knows it not, knows no release from little things. - Amelia Earhart
Happy Thanksgiving to all the PP! I am thankful for you all.
I'm going to eat the Thanksgiving turkey for the first time in several years. My good friend brings the turkey for our potluck dinner, and this year I found g-f, d-f, s-f turkey at Walmart, and asked her to buy that. (It is Riverside brand, and I called the company to check on the allergens.)
I made two pies today, using Rob's Red Mill g-f pie crust mix--one apple, and one pumpkin using coconut milk. I've done this before, and it turns out well.
Our older son and his family are joining us for dinner, and our younger son and his family are in Thailand, waiting for the birth of their third baby. Maybe he'll be born before tomorrow, and we'll have a birth to be thankful for.
Love to you all,
Martha
I'm going to eat the Thanksgiving turkey for the first time in several years. My good friend brings the turkey for our potluck dinner, and this year I found g-f, d-f, s-f turkey at Walmart, and asked her to buy that. (It is Riverside brand, and I called the company to check on the allergens.)
I made two pies today, using Rob's Red Mill g-f pie crust mix--one apple, and one pumpkin using coconut milk. I've done this before, and it turns out well.
Our older son and his family are joining us for dinner, and our younger son and his family are in Thailand, waiting for the birth of their third baby. Maybe he'll be born before tomorrow, and we'll have a birth to be thankful for.
Love to you all,
Martha
Martha
I also hope everyone here has a great holiday. I made my GF crust today with coconut oil. It turns out so flaky and yummy! It's just a little harder to roll out and work with. One apple and one pumpkin pie ( made with almond milk). Mashed sweet potatoes with coconut milk, shredded brussels sprouts with bacon, turkey, gravy made with cornstarch… and my mother in law is making stuffing for those of us who can eat gluten. I won't be missing much :)
Leah
Leah
Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!
May we all enjoy a safe, healthy, and happy Thanksgiving (with a minimal number of trips to the bathroom ).
Love,
Tex
May we all enjoy a safe, healthy, and happy Thanksgiving (with a minimal number of trips to the bathroom ).
Love,
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Something to go with those pies.
"Whipped cream. One of my happiest discoveries was that you can make the most luscious, airy whipped cream from a can of full-fat coconut milk. The trick is to refrigerate the can overnight, spoon out the top layer of thick coconut that's solidified (you'll want to avoid coconut milk that has added stabilizers or gums; they prevent it from separating), and whip it just as you would heavy cream. It is perfect as a dip for fresh fruits, atop pies, and cobblers, or as a fluffy frosting for cupcakes and cakes."
By Amanda Maguire, Food52 | November 11, 2014:
"Whipped cream. One of my happiest discoveries was that you can make the most luscious, airy whipped cream from a can of full-fat coconut milk. The trick is to refrigerate the can overnight, spoon out the top layer of thick coconut that's solidified (you'll want to avoid coconut milk that has added stabilizers or gums; they prevent it from separating), and whip it just as you would heavy cream. It is perfect as a dip for fresh fruits, atop pies, and cobblers, or as a fluffy frosting for cupcakes and cakes."
By Amanda Maguire, Food52 | November 11, 2014:
DISCLAIMER: I am not a doctor and don't play one on TV.
LDN July 18, 2014
Joan
LDN July 18, 2014
Joan
Happy Thanksgiving to all. I am thankful for this board and this great group of people. I bought a Riverside turkey at Walmart and he is resting in brine now. Will be in the oven shortly.
Plan a allergen free dinner at home just DH and me.
Plan a allergen free dinner at home just DH and me.
Theresa
MC and UC 2014
in remission since June 1, 2014
We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. ~Jim Rohn
MC and UC 2014
in remission since June 1, 2014
We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. ~Jim Rohn
Having found this forum and the people here is definitely one of the things I am MOST THANKFUL for.
I am getting ready to make some pumpkin pies to take to a friend's house. I make a really good wheat flour pie crust- and I am just going to go ahead and make the pies for others to enjoy- and I think I'll make a little crust free pumpkin tart for myself without eggs either- I don't have the cooking supplies or knowhow yet to attempt any GF baking yet. I've never tried cornstarch as a thickener for pumpkin pie- but if its a total flop- I'll be the only one who knows!
Also on today's to-do list is to get the wreath mounted on my barn. I hope I can figure out picture hosting soon.
Have a Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
-Sarah
I am getting ready to make some pumpkin pies to take to a friend's house. I make a really good wheat flour pie crust- and I am just going to go ahead and make the pies for others to enjoy- and I think I'll make a little crust free pumpkin tart for myself without eggs either- I don't have the cooking supplies or knowhow yet to attempt any GF baking yet. I've never tried cornstarch as a thickener for pumpkin pie- but if its a total flop- I'll be the only one who knows!
Also on today's to-do list is to get the wreath mounted on my barn. I hope I can figure out picture hosting soon.
Have a Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
-Sarah
Sarah,
To add an image to a post, if you are starting a new topic, click on the link that says, "Add image to post", located right below the message-composing window (at the left side), and follow the directions that will appear. Basically, in the popup window that opens, click in the narrow "Browse" window, and the system will open an "explorer" window to the files on your computer, and all you have to do is to browse to the image file that you want to upload, and click on it to select it, and then select whether the image contains adult material, or is family safe, and then click on the "Upload it!" button. The system will automatically place the proper code into your message, so that everyone's browser will properly display a thumbnail image. To see the full-size image when reading a post, just click on the thumbnail to see the image.
The "quick reply" message box doesn't display that image upload button below it, so if you are replying to a thread (rather than starting a new thread), just click on the "postreply" button under the last post, and the system will open a message-composing window that displays the image upload link below it.
Tex
To add an image to a post, if you are starting a new topic, click on the link that says, "Add image to post", located right below the message-composing window (at the left side), and follow the directions that will appear. Basically, in the popup window that opens, click in the narrow "Browse" window, and the system will open an "explorer" window to the files on your computer, and all you have to do is to browse to the image file that you want to upload, and click on it to select it, and then select whether the image contains adult material, or is family safe, and then click on the "Upload it!" button. The system will automatically place the proper code into your message, so that everyone's browser will properly display a thumbnail image. To see the full-size image when reading a post, just click on the thumbnail to see the image.
The "quick reply" message box doesn't display that image upload button below it, so if you are replying to a thread (rather than starting a new thread), just click on the "postreply" button under the last post, and the system will open a message-composing window that displays the image upload link below it.
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
well dinner was a complete success. We just finished in time for DH to settle in for football. Turkey, cranberry sauce, giblet gravy (thickened with corn starch), candied yams, rice stuffing (a new thing to me, was really good), pumpkin custard (pie without the crust), peanut butter fudge, nice glass of Spumante.
Thankful to have a DH that says, just fix whatever you can eat and don't worry about me!
Thankful to have a DH that says, just fix whatever you can eat and don't worry about me!
Theresa
MC and UC 2014
in remission since June 1, 2014
We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. ~Jim Rohn
MC and UC 2014
in remission since June 1, 2014
We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. ~Jim Rohn
Here, hopefully, is my barn wreath and practice posting a picture.
Dinner went pretty well with only one mishap with food. I watched while the gravy was being made by a little old 89 year old Italian lady and she was just using corn starch- and I was relieved... And then her granddaughter walked up, grabbed a mysterious product and started shaking it madly into the mix- what was it!? Later I poked in the pantry and saw that it was a specialty gravy flour- so boom- gravy was out. The turkey was moist and delicious without gravy anyway but when I was having seconds my son offered me the gravy and I accepted it without thinking and dumped a ladleful on my plate before I caught my mistake. I pushed as much as I could off with my fork and enjoyed it.
I also had green beans, cooked carrots and mashed sweet potatoes. That was a bit funny too because I've been surviving on sweet potatoes this week and the lady next to me who got the plate first was like "oooh mashed sweet potatoes!!! I can't think of the last time I had these!" And I'm sitting there hoping she doesn't take them all.
Everyone loved my pies and raved about the crust- so even if I can't eat it I can still bake it! My personal pumpkin custard was pretty awful without egg or crust. Now I see why the vegan recepie all had some additional creamy type ingredient... Mine did have the condensed milk but it still tasted a bit like raw pumpkin from the can.
My one regret is that I didn't get to taste the desert the Italian lady had made- a cheesecake type cake with some dark swirly chocolate cake- she called it Italian Love Cake... Not easy to say no to that.
Donna,
I used this recipe:
http://www.cdkitchen.com/recipes/recs/1 ... 7252.shtml
I substituted my frozen seasoning mix for the celery and onions. I seem to be better able to tolerate the frozen onions.
I also used turkey broth instead of water.
I never put stuffing inside the bird so I baked it for about 30 minutes until it was browned.
Just learned yesterday that this is called 'stuffing' if it's inside the bird and 'dressing' if it's not. Guess I made dressing.
I used this recipe:
http://www.cdkitchen.com/recipes/recs/1 ... 7252.shtml
I substituted my frozen seasoning mix for the celery and onions. I seem to be better able to tolerate the frozen onions.
I also used turkey broth instead of water.
I never put stuffing inside the bird so I baked it for about 30 minutes until it was browned.
Just learned yesterday that this is called 'stuffing' if it's inside the bird and 'dressing' if it's not. Guess I made dressing.
Theresa
MC and UC 2014
in remission since June 1, 2014
We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. ~Jim Rohn
MC and UC 2014
in remission since June 1, 2014
We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. ~Jim Rohn