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Food Inspiration
A Glutenine original.
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Sarah A King
London based designer Sarah A King masters typography on fruits.
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Recipe: Chocolate Chip Cookies
Try this gluten free recipe.
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Recipe: Gluten free Brownies
Can you say"Yum!"
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Recipe: Gluten Free Red Velvet Cake
Try this recipe with a classic twist.
Notice:
Written by
Glutenine
at
6:18 PM
Apr 12, 2011
From now all of you will be seeing post written by Glutenine instead of just T.

Better Decisions About Food
Written by
Anonymous
at
10:14 PM
Apr 10, 2011
Christopher Elliott who writes “The Navigator” travel column for The Washington Post and serves as National Geographic Traveler magazine's reader advocate, remembers life as a stress eater.
“I’ve been there,” Elliott said. “Enough so that I’ve had to pack the pants that are a little baggy because two weeks into a business trip I’d fit snuggly into those pants.”
He put on a lot of “sympathy weight” when his wife, Kari was pregnant with their first of three children. “I was drinking a lot because I was stressed out about having a baby,”Elliott said . That meant having a half bottle of wine and half pint of ice cream each night. It led to weighing 230-pounds. It took Elliott, 34 years-old and 6'1 at the time, a full year to drop 55 pounds to reach his ideal weight of 175-pounds. He did it by running five times a week, working up to five miles a day and more importantly, he said, by changing his eating routine.
Elliott, 42, now adheres to a strict eating regiment to maintain his weight. That becomes particularly difficult when traveling for business.“I’ve actually been mocked at meals,” said Elliott, who writes a syndicated travel column for Tribune media services. “I want to be polite, and maybe this comes across as being smug, but the people who are making fun of me for not eating dessert definitely look like they haven’t ever missed a meal.”
Even though there are double standards for men and women, Elliott said, “Men can’t get away with being fat like they used to. There’s nothing endearing about having a beer gut.”
Read More: here
Celiac Disease Not a Risk Factor for Colorectal Cancer
Written by
Anonymous
at
10:10 PM
Apr 7, 2011

Celiac disease has long been linked to an increased risk of gastrointestinal problems including lymphoma and small bowel malignancy. Despite the connections to other GI problems, there has not been a conclusive link between celiac disease and colorectal cancer, the most common form of GI cancer in the world today.
A team of doctors recently investigated the connection in a medical study they published in Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics. The research team included B. Lebwohl, E. Stavsky, A. I. Neugut, and P. H. R. Green.
http://www.thirdage.com/news/celiac-disease-not-risk-factor-colorectal-cancer_2-28-2011
New Treatment for celiac disease
Written by
Anonymous
at
9:58 PM
Apr 1, 2011

Feb. 9, 2011 -- Blocking an inflammatory protein called interleukin-15 (IL-15) may help treat the symptoms of celiac disease and prevent the development of celiac disease in certain at-risk people, according to new research in mice published in Nature. http://www.webmd.com/digestive-disorders/celiac-disease/news/20110208/new-treatment-for-celiac-disease
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