Have you heard of The Whole Foods Allergy Cookbook?
By Willowlady
@Willowlady (10657)
United States
February 1, 2007 9:38am CST
The Whole Foods Allergy Cookbook: 200 Gourmet & Homestyle Recipes for the Food Allergic Family
ISBN: 1890612456 pages: 257
The First Cookbook to Eliminate ALL Eight Allergens Responsible for Ninety Percent of Food Allergies
200 gourmet and homestyle recipes your whole family will absolutely love!
All recipes are free of the top eight allergens: dairy, eggs, wheat, soy, peanuts, tree nuts, fish or shellfish!Baked goods are all vegan.
Shopping Guide for hard-to-find items.
Food Allergy Information Resource Guide.
Pineapple Banana Granola* Sweet Potato Cranberry Muffins* Curried Pumpkin Soup* Frisee with Figs, Pear, and Crispy Bacon* Quinoa Tabouli* Polenta Radiatore with Prosciutto, Shitake Mushrooms and Spinach* Grilled Chicken Breast with Mango Salsa* Creamy Avocado Dressing* And Many More!
A lifelong enthusiastic cook, Pascal had to change how she thought about food completely when her four-month-old son was diagnosed with severe food allergies. This book is the result, containing more than 200 recipes that are free of the eight most common allergenic ingredients: dairy, egg, wheat, soy, peanut, tree nut, fish, and shellfish. Anyone following a vegan diet will also find this a valuable resource for baked goods since all of the breads, cookies, and cakes are dairy- and egg-free. It is not a specifically vegetarian cookbook, though, as it contains recipes for comfort foods like Chicken Potpie and Lamb Stew. There are recipes for every occasion, whether it's for Chocolate Layer Cake or Homemade Granola Bars. Most important, the author understands how real families shop, cook, and eat and offers suggestions on how to adapt to the food-allergic lifestyle. Of particular value are the lists of foods to keep on hand, what to buy at the grocery store, and a list of great mail and Internet resources. Highly recommended for public libraries.-Wendy Bethel, Southwest Public Libs., Grove City, OH
Recipe Excerpt:ROLLED MAPLE SUGAR COOKIES
Rolled cookies are a tasty treat that’s fun to make with kids (or anyone, for that matter).
Use cookie cutters to cut out any shapes you like, and decorate accordingly.
MAKES ABOUT 2 DOZEN COOKIES
1/2 cup vegetable shortening (read all labels carefully; Spectrum makes the only brand I could find without dairy or soy, and it has the added bonus of being free of trans-fats)
3/4 cup maple sugar
11/2 tsp. Ener-G Egg Replacer, mixed with
2 Tbsp. enriched rice or oat milk
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
1 Tbsp. rice or oat milk
3/4 cup oat flour
3/4 cup barley flour
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. baking powder
raisins, maple sugar mixed with cinnamon,
dairy-free chocolate or carob chips*, coconut for decoration (optional) *Dairy-free Chocolate or Carob Chips—some brands contain soy lecithin, which can be eaten by most soy-allergic individuals, but double check with your allergist
Cream shortening with maple sugar (note that maple sugar doesn’t really cream, it blends). Beat in egg replacer and vanilla extract. Add 1 Tbsp. rice/oat milk. Combine oat flour, barley flour, salt, and baking powder. Add to bowl and combine thoroughly (it will be a bit stiff, but that’s okay—use hands to combine if necessary). Mold into a ball, wrap in aluminum foil, and refrigerate for at least 1 hour.When ready to bake, preheat oven to 375 degrees.
Remove dough from fridge. If it still seems too dry, sprinkle a few drops of water on it and work them in. Roll out dough with a floured rolling pin to 1/4-inch thickness, and use cookie cutters to cut out shapes. Decorate with raisins, maple sugar mixed with cinnamon, dairy-free chocolate chips, coconut, or whatever else you fancy. Arrange on a lightly greased cookie tray, and bake about 8 minutes. Let cool on tray before removing with a spatula or they’ll break. How many you make depends on what shape and size cookie cutters you are using.
Note: For basic maple sugar cookies, reduce both oat and barley flour by 2 Tbsp. each and skip the 1 hour of chilling.
Just drop by teaspoons onto a lightly greased cookie sheet and bake about 8 minutes.
3 people like this
6 responses
@villageanne (8553)
• United States
1 Feb 07
The recipes eliminate the foods that most poeple are allergic to.
1 person likes this
@Willowlady (10657)
• United States
2 Feb 07
Helps to not trigger the allergic response.
Thanks for both your responses!!
@dhouston (417)
• United States
2 Feb 07
Interesting. My only food allergy is tomatoes. I'd love to find a cookbook with tomato-free Italian and Mexican recipes that are not necessarily vegetarian and certainly not vegan. Bring on the red meat! That's a whole food, too, when from pastured animals. I can do without the recipes for sweets. I have a salt tooth, not a sweet tooth,
1 person likes this
@Willowlady (10657)
• United States
2 Feb 07
You and me both on the red meat! My tooth runs sweet, however, I do have a penchant for salty food, vegetables are the bomb!! Remember alot of people that develop the allergies cannot have birthday cake and the such so that is the example recipe and the motivation of this cookbook. Thanks so much for responding.
@rainbow (6761)
•
1 Feb 07
That sounds really good - and useful. I'm sure a lot of mums would appreciate this. I know I would welcome anything that elimanted all possible irritants and still tasted good. A lot of kids problems are caused by/irritated by allergies and we often never get to the bottom of what affects them.
I will look on amazon for this when I get paid from mylot.
Thank-you so much for sharing!
1 person likes this
@Willowlady (10657)
• United States
2 Feb 07
You are quite welcome, I think it might cost you about 19 dollars. Amazon can have some deals though. Good luck with this. Thanks so much for responding.
@margieanneart (26423)
• United States
2 Feb 07
That sounds very interesting, thank you. How much does that book run? Do you know if Ebay sells it? Thanks for sharing with us.
1 person likes this
@Willowlady (10657)
• United States
2 Feb 07
Found three of them for fifteen dollars and under on Ebay. Good luck getting a copy if you go for one. Thanks much for responding!!
On Amazon it could run about nineteen dollars.
@jennybianca (12912)
• Australia
2 Feb 07
Sounds YUMMY! These recipes would suit some people I know who need the low allergy diet, including gluten free.
I wonder if it is available in Australia yet?
Not all the recipes would suit my husband, as he needs be low saliclate, apparently a fairly common allergy, but a lot of people don't realise they have it. So most fruits & salads are no good.
My 13 year old daughter is vegan/ vegetarian, so this book would be good for her.
Me, I am supposed to be on a low csrb diet to loose weight.
1 person likes this
@Willowlady (10657)
• United States
2 Feb 07
If the book can be ordered on the net, it should be available to Australia! Am glad it is of interest to you. Good luck with your low carbohydrate eating plan. Thanks for responding.
@villageanne (8553)
• United States
1 Feb 07
No, I had not heard of this cookbook. It looks great. We try to stay away from MSG and preservatives in our diet. MSG is a bad one for anyone to use. Thanks for the recipe. I will try to check out the cookbook.
1 person likes this








