Tag Archives: gluten free

Doing Frozen Pizza Right

Even with the gluten free diet, I am thankful to still have the option to get frozen pizza every once in awhile. It’s really handy when we travel for the weekend and need a quick fix and just feel like pizza, but not the whole mess of making gluten free dough by hand.

But still, just because it’s frozen cheese pizza, doesn’t mean we cannot add our own touches!

Here I added mozzarella, sliced tomato, salami and fresh basil and oregano from the balcony. Drizzle of olive oil, salt and pepper, and I sent that bad boy to the oven.

Nom nom nom.

I love a good homemade pizza, but I also love a good frozen pizza! Sometimes it’s the perfect, no-cooking option after grocery shopping!

If you do frozen pizza, do you dress it up as well?

Gluten Free Helsinki

So, this post is obviously a lot shorter because we really didn’t see or taste much of Helsinki in just one day. I’ll just combine things here instead. We spent most of the first day in museums because the weather was supposed to perk  up on the Sunday and Monday of our long weekend. Maybe it’s karma or coincidence, but as we were heading home early on Sunday, it ended up raining anyway and was really depressing weather to match our moods.

A bit of sun peaking out on Saturday.

Down by the waterfront. On the way to the very interesting the Mannerheim Museum, which I suggested to Kay because it was nearby the design museum and I wanted to see a Finnish household. Little did I know how important Mannerheim was to Finnish history. We had a lovely tour guide.

We passed by this cool little market at the sea in the morning and they had this booth with all gluten free things. I was planning on coming back on Sunday to try them out because they were a bit busy and almost cleaned out by the time we visited again in the afternoon. Maybe next time I’ll finally try them?

After the Mannerheim museum I was really famished, so we made our way back up the coast. There were tons of little stands with food, but nothing mentioned gluten and I didn’t really find anything that looked safe to eat, so we stopped by Cafe Strindberg because it came up in my search for GF restaurants saying it had “lovely gluten free sandwiches.”

We almost left the cafe because after sitting at an open table next to the bar with tons of waiters running around, they ignored us for a long time before giving us menus. We were actually putting our coats back on when they came with the water and menus, but the service was sooo slow.

We also noticed people next to us drinking champagne at 2 in the afternoon and agreed that this was probably not really the place for us. It was pretty expensive even by Finnish standards. We are used to expensive places in Zurich, but they didn’t really have a gluten free menu and the waitress was pretty unhelpful about explaining what I could order. She just said it was possible and then left for a long time before taking our order and when she arrived, it turned out I could only order like two things on the menu, one of which was a salad.

When the sandwiches actually came, they were pretty tiny (that’s a dessert sized plate up there) and didn’t really satisfy either of us. Coffee and a small sandwich for the both of us cost around €28.

After that we went into Stockmann’s, which had way more gluten free options being a grocery. We also found several types of gluten free beer that we brought back to the hotel. Unfortunately we only tried one kind on Saturday night because we were saving the others for Sunday night and we couldn’t bring them in our carry-on home on Sunday. 🙁

Here below is a gluten free treat from Stockmann’s. Very light and airy! 🙂

For dinner we went to Kaarna Baari & Keittiö, which also wasn’t exactly cheap or quick, but it filled us up and was tasty.

Enjoying the long sun rays from our window spot. Our appetizers came fairly quickly. I ordered the wild duck and a hard cider and it was yum!

For the main, we both ordered the reindeer sirloin, but it took almost an hour to come after we ordered. Kay was getting really impatient because he was so hungry. It tasted great, but we did not order any dessert afterward because of the long wait.

I was looking forward to going to a few more places on my GF list, like the Gluto Street Food option in the mall near our hotel, but we just didn’t have the time in the end.

Helsinki seemed nice, but I’m not sure we’ll go back soon with the memories of how the trip turned out. But we still have our other city trips planned this year like Luxembourg and Porto, so soon we will be back to our weekend traveling.

Gluten Free Athens

Eating gluten-free in Greece was a little more tricky than some other countries, partly because the Greek alphabet is intimidating and makes navigating generally harder, and partly because there is still not that strong of knowledge about celiac disease. Often people do not know what gluten is or what it is found in or there is just not a large enough market to offer gluten free food.

I had my restaurant cards in Greek ready, which definitely came in handy sometimes and I also knew more or less which foods to avoid and to always ask for no bread AND no pita even with salads.

Kay really wanted authentic Greek food, which is always one of our problems with gluten free food abroad. Usually global, non-local restaurants come up in my searches rather than authentic, local gluten free options. It’s easy to make GF Mexican or Thai food anywhere, but it is not easy to make all local cuisines gluten free. The same was true for Greece. I didn’t find any “traditional Greek gluten-free restaurants” and mostly I want to go to establishments that have knowledge of celiacs and gluten, even if it is backwards to go for often non-authentic global food.

The first night we ate at Pure Bliss:

Pure Bliss was more asian fusion, but Kay agreed to go here because most of the nearby restaurants to our place were closed for labor day on the Friday we arrived.

My meal was fine and filling and they even had some dessert options for me as well, which I always take as a bonus in the celiac department. I was also ecstatic to be eating outside in the evening after the horrible weather in Zurich lately.

Had we not booked a food tour for Saturday morning, I would have tried to stop at a local market to bring things back to the flat. There were limited openings on Friday, but it would have been possible. Because we were on the food tour though, I did not have to worry about the hardest meal of the day on Saturday.

After our gianormous food tour was over, which I will write about in a separate post, we stopped for some iced coffee on the way to the Acropolis.

We had eaten sooo much the entire day of the food tour that we were not actually that hungry at dinner time. We ended up going to Makalo and I ordered a salad. There they made sure to check with me about what they put in the salad dressing. My order called for soy sauce in the dressing and I am glad that they knew to ask me about it, because I don’t usually expect soy sauce in salad dressing.

After dinner that night we stopped for some gelato because it was warm and summery and… why not? 🙂

The last morning on Sunday was where we ran into problems. None of the restaurants on my list were open for breakfast and so we walked around looking for a place while we were both hangry. This is never, ever a good time on the trip.

Kay was frustrated because all the places we passed that were open were only offering toast or eggs. Normally I would stick to eggs, but lately they have been giving me terrible stomach pains, which I don’t really want to give myself on a trip abroad, so I was out of luck. As usual, it’s frustrating for Kay because he could eat anywhere that’s serving food.

We finally found a place with the help of my Greek restaurant card that had the kitchen open already and offered things like salads. Surprisingly I ended up choosing a filling mushroom risotto. You end up eating strange things for breakfast with food intolerance!

Kay didn’t feel like going to any more of my non-Greek gluten-free restaurants for dinner, but after our food tour we were feeling a little more confident about what I could find to eat.

We settled on a place for dinner that served us steak, fries and a few sides. Wine too! 😉

The chef also asked here about everything that was OK for me to eat including spices and oil. Below was our decadent Greek salad.

Tzatziki. You can bet we ate that up!

The fries and steak were not totally amazing, but they hit the spot and filled us up plenty. If there is one thing I love about Athens, it is how friendly the people are. They just want to fill you up. It’s a great change compared to the unfriendly waiters in Zurich who make you feel like a burden for dining in their restaurants.

After dinner we went for a frozen Greek yogurt with fresh fruit on top from an ice cream place.

I could eat this all day as well.

So, if you are planning on going to Greece as a celiac, make sure you prepare those restaurant cards, bring some snacks and come prepared to eat lots of delicious dairy and meat!

Healthier Banana Chocolate Chip Pancakes

I had been meaning to try these “healthy” Banana Chocolate Chip Pancakes from Elana’s Pantry for awhile. We had some cashew-based pancakes in Thailand that were delicious and knowing that they are a celiac-friendly option makes them perfect.

The ingredient list is pretty short with only seven ingredients, including the coconut oil you fry them in.

I whipped ours up in my Kenwood Cooking Chef food processor attachment to grind the cashews first before adding the other ingredients.

Bananas and heaps of vanilla? This has to be good!

…annnd the chocolate chips.

Unfortunately for me, I still have not gotten the knack of cooking gluten free pancakes. They set up OK and the mix was a good balance of liquid to dry, but I just couldn’t flip them before they burned!

As hard as I tried, any time I knew they were bubbly and should flip, I couldn’t get my darn spatula under there. The whole pancake would just slide away on the pan, mocking me.

In the end, I was only able to flip them when they were already kind of burning. Man. If that’s not depressing on a Saturday morning, I don’t know what is.

Still, since I doubled the recipe (yeah, we eat a lot!) it made heaps. Too much for us really. I think one recipe would have sufficed.

And even though they are a little burnt, don’t you think they look tasty? They still were… but they definitely need some practice. Although, we are in serious need of some more syrup before new pancakes can be made. Kay is a bit sad because the imported maple syrup is extremely expensive in Switzerland and not the best quality.

Do you have any tips for GF pancakes? Friends are telling me I should reduce the heat a lot more next time. I wonder if it’s also possible that my pan is too oily?

Brazilian Cheese Bread (Pão de Queijo)

After we went to Oslo and ate delicious pāo de queijo at the churrascaria, I thought it was high time that I check out this gluten-free recipe I had pinned awhile ago.

It did not disappoint!

Some of my breads had funny little holes from baking, but for the most part they were really light and airy. Even better than the restaurant ones! My Brazilian man was very happy with them and we happily gobbled up all the trays I made in a very short time.

Brazilian Cheese Bread (Pão de Queijo)

Adapted from: RasaMalaysia adapted from Simply Recipes
Makes 42 | Prep Time: 10 Minutes | Bake Time: 15-20 Minutes

Ingredients:
1 egg, at room temperature
1/3 cup olive oil
2/3 cup milk
170g – 1.5 cups tapioca (cassava) flour (often labeled starch)
120g – 3/4 cups grated cheese… I used Gruyère
1 tsp salt

Instructions:
Preheat oven to 205ºC (400ºF) and grease muffin pans. If your egg is coming out of the refrigerator cold, stick it in a cup of warm water while you put the other ingredients in your food processor first. I like to start with the oil to keep things from sticking to the side. If you finish with the cheese on top of the flour, it will also stop the tapioca from kicking dust up when you mix. Make sure to throw the egg in and blend well.

Pour mix into mini muffin trays around 3/4 full. Bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes. Keep an eye on them and change trays around the 10 minute mark if you are using a small European oven like I am. When they are puffed up and browning, pull them out and let them cool for a bit before you start gobbling them down warm. Yum!

Store extras in tupperware. Tip: If you stick them in the microwave for 10 seconds, they are deliciously warm the next day!

Where to buy tapioca in Switzerland:
You can buy tapioca flour from health food stores like Reformhaus Müller, but the much cheaper alternative is to get it from asian grocery stores. We also use tapioca flour that Kay brings back from Brazil, but he said that it is not always easy to find there either.