Should you be reading gluten free labels, plus the ingredient label when shopping? I worry about losing my gluten-free, ingredient-reading mojo if I only look for the gluten-free label! Should you ONLY buy foods that have the GF label? We look into these questions and offer some insight.
From research to support groups to books and apps, if you’re looking for some new gluten free resources, check out this list.
Our gluten free experience at the Miami airport was great during our most recent flight! Here is what we found!
With nearly 24 million people living with autoimmune (AI) disease, it is amazing to note that about 75% of those cases are in women! Celiac disease is considered an autoimmune disease that affects more women than men. Why do more women get and AI disease? Plus, what should we be looking for?
The gluten free food is packed for our mission trip. Will we have enough? How will the meals go in Haiti? What if Emma gets sick? So many questions and in just a few days we’ll find out the answers, as prep-mode ends and the journey is just hours from beginning..
In the last few days this has been on my mind. How do our kids handle it when they go away to college and have to be gluten free? No Mom. No Dad. Now’s the time where the rubber meets the road and our kid has to make it happen!
I knew I had to write about this when I read two very opposite stories on Thursday:
University of Wisconsin’s Badger Herald in Madison, Wisc. reported Thursday on how the school’s gluten-free options are improving because of the increase in gluten-free students.
Early diagnosis is key to keeping health complications related to celiac disease at bay.
The bottom line here is the earlier you get your diagnosis the better off you’ll be both immediately healthwise (you might not feel so crummy) and hopefully preventing further complications like another autoimmune disorder, osteoporosis, infertility or cancer in the future.
In my family alone, if I am just with my parents and my brother — the nuclear family I grew up with — half of them celiac disease! In my own family 1 in 4 has celiac. I am the carrier, but don’t have celiac. I am
That initial celiac diagnosis can be a shocker. But it also is a life-changer— for the good — and here is why.
When you are told you have a disease and you’ll have it the rest of your life it impacts you, some differently than others.
Lots of news this week affecting the gluten free and celiac world, here is a quick look at a few of the stories.
Magazine comes to life at the Gluten-Free Living Conference — Attend this for great information and lifestyle scoop!