Selasa, 30 September 2008

Gluten-Free Pumpkin Corn Muffins


Pumpkin Corn Muffin Recipe
Gluten-free corn muffins with a pumpkin twist.

Today's muffin recipe is seasonal favorite- a tender and golden pumpkin corn muffin. It's one of the most popular recipes on Gluten-Free Goddess.

The coyotes were up bright and early this morning, yelping in the cool blue air as my old English tea kettle sputtered and complained. Tea for breakfast is not an efficient way to wake up. It's more of a coaxing than the throttle of a double espresso fueled Americano, but right here, right now, it will have to do. At least this week.

The closest cafe is an hour's drive away. 

When people ask what it is I miss most living out here in the rural desert, my answer is always the same. But the list is growing...


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Senin, 29 September 2008

Celebrating a Birthday and an Anniversary

This weekend was my birthday and the one-year anniversary of My New Roots. To celebrate both, my wonderful mother took me on an organic farm tour in Prince Edward County (yup, she rocks). We spent both days winding around country roads, stopping wherever our hearts desired. We went to Vicki’s Veggies, an idyllic family-run organic farm near Picton. We went apple picking, visited an artisan goat cheese maker, Fifth Town, (which runs a carbon-neutral production and retail facility!), and ate at a “locavore” restaurant, called Harvest.


It was truly a spectacular way to celebrate my birthday and reflect on everything that has happened at My New Roots. My heartfelt thanks to each and every one of you who have read, commented and participated in the My New Roots blog over the past year. I feel so lucky to have such an encouraging community of people supporting me. I had no idea that this project would grow into such a colossal affair, but my passion for it has only continued to grow through your unwavering support.

I have no doubt that the coming year will bring some incredible adventures, discoveries and sharing them at My New Roots is my greatest aspiration. I hope to continue inspiring and educating you about holistic health and above all, empowering you to become the very best version of yourself. Thank you for everything.


All my love,
Sarah B.

Jumat, 26 September 2008

Gluten-Free Dairy-Free Recipe Index

Gluten free dairy free recipes index for all my lactose free and casein free recipes
Gluten-free dairy-free? No problem!

Welcome to Karina's Gluten-Free Dairy-Free Recipe Index. This GFCF recipe collection is a labor of love dedicated to all the beautiful Aspie and autistic angels out there- and the ASD families supporting neurodiversity with their own daily labors of love. I strive to make your day a little more delicious!

And I didn't forget you lovely lactose intolerant folks. This dairy-free, casein-free index is for you, too.

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Moroccan Coconut & Chick Pea Soup

Coconut Chick Pea Soup Recipe - Vegan and Gluten-Free
A delicious gluten-free soup with Moroccan flavors

On a whim I threw together this North African inspired fusion of flavors led by cravings and intuition. We slurped it down and scraped our bowls. Turns out that sweet potatoes, chick peas, roasted green chiles and coconut milk make for one scrumptious soup. I think you'll love it.

Dairy-free never tasted so good.

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Rabu, 24 September 2008

The Whole Foods Market Food Blogger Budget Recipe Challenge


Gluten-Free Goddess blog has made it into the finals for The Whole Foods Market Food Blogger Budget Recipe Challenge. The recipe? A personal (and family) favorite- my Sweet Potato Black Bean Enchiladas. Why am I mentioning this? Because, Dear Reader, if you visit and vote for my vegetarian enchilada recipe, you just might win a $500 Whole Foods Gift Card- and other prizes!

How cool is that?

This audience sweepstakes will run from today through Wednesday, October 8th. Anyone who posts a comment on any of the contest recipes (at the Whole Foods website only) will be automatically entered to win a $500 gift card or other prizes. So please support Gluten-Free Goddess by giving the Sweet Potato Black Bean Enchilada recipe some comment LOVE.

The winning recipe will be selected primarily on audience feedback, and the winning blogger will receive $250 worth of Whole Foods gift cards (I'm giving mine to my two sons, Colin and Alex, if I win). The winning recipe will also be featured on the Whole Foods website.

Starting this Friday, September 26, 2008 the Whole Story blog will feature a daily Q+A with one of the 6 finalists.

And much good luck to my blogging pals: Hannah, Jaden, and Rachel!

Stay tuned-

And thank you for your support!


Senin, 22 September 2008

The 30 Day Yoga Challenge


If I was anything else but tanned this summer, I was lazy. My gym membership ran out, it was "too rainy" to run, and who wants to bust out the squats and lunges during a European vacation? Not me.
So in order to get my body back into some level of physical fitness, I am beginning my 30-Day Yoga Challenge, which means practicing yoga every day for a month…and I want all of you to join me. Now before you start making excuses, I will explain how easy this will be and dare you to find a reason not to. If you have five minutes a day, to dedicate to a very simple series of movements and breathing over the next month, than I guarantee you will feel amazing. You don’t need any special equipment (although a yoga mat would be a good idea), and you don’t need a fancy yoga studio to do it (a dock on the river at sunset would also be a good idea) (sorry, that was mean).

Even if you have never done yoga before in your life, you will be able to participate in the yoga challenge. Yoga is a system comprised of three practices, the most important being the breath, so if you can breathe, you can do yoga. The physical and mediation practices of yoga are also important, but I think that just committing to a month-long practice of breathing and simple stretches will be enough for me. I am also trying to curb my tendancy to bite off more than i can realistically chew.

The 30-Day Yoga Challenge will begin October 1st, so you have just over a week to psych yourself into participating. Get your friends and family involved too, as it is good to have some support. The practice postures will be a series called the “Sun Salutation”, or “Surya Namaskar”, which is a series of 12 postures performed in a single, graceful flow. The Sun Salutation builds strength and increases flexibility (however, I should mention that this series does NOT include the posture pictured above, I was just showing off). Different styles of yoga perform the Sun Salutation with their own variations. However, the flow I will be presenting covers core steps used in most styles. If you are already familiar with the Sun Salutation, that is great. Let this be an opportunity to see what a difference it makes to practice daily, and feel free to add your own postures, as you like! Even if you cannot practice everyday this month, set small goals for yourself and take it day by day.


Here are some of the many benefits of practicing yoga:

Increasing Flexibility – yoga has positions that act upon the various joints of the body including those joints that are never really on the ‘radar screen’ let alone exercised.

Increasing lubrication of the joints, ligaments and tendons
– likewise, the well-researched yoga positions exercise the different tendons and ligaments of the body.
Surprisingly it has been found that the body which may have been quite rigid starts experiencing a remarkable flexibility in even those parts which have not been consciously work upon. Why? It is here that the remarkable research behind yoga positions proves its mettle. Seemingly unrelated “non strenuous” yoga positions act upon certain parts of the body in an interrelated manner. When done together, they work in harmony to create a situation where flexibility is attained relatively easily.

Massaging of ALL Organs of the Body
– Yoga is perhaps the only form of activity which massages all the internal glands and organs of the body in a thorough manner, including those – such as the prostate - that hardly get externally stimulated during our entire lifetime. Yoga acts in a wholesome manner on the various body parts. This stimulation and massage of the organs in turn benefits us by keeping away disease and providing a forewarning at the first possible instance of a likely onset of disease or disorder.

Complete Detoxification – By gently stretching muscles and joints as well as massaging the various organs, yoga ensures the optimum blood supply to various parts of the body. This helps in the flushing out of toxins from every nook and cranny as well as providing nourishment up to the last point. This leads to benefits such as delayed ageing, energy and a remarkable zest for life.

Excellent toning of the muscles
– Muscles that have become flaccid, weak or slothy are stimulated repeatedly to shed excess flab and flaccidity.

Still not convinced? Well, only the practice itself will be able to show you the immeasurable benefits of yoga. So, challenge yourself. Join me in the pursuit of reuniting with the body, the breath and the flow of it all.

If you are interested in joining the 30-Day Yoga Challenge, write me an email at:
sarahlbritton@gmail.com and I will post your first name on the “participant board” in October. Good for you!

Namaste.

XPLite Professional 1.9.0.334 MultiLang




Uninstall Windows components (more infos) without installation.

Download Portable XPLite on Share1t (1.1 MB)


Extract and run XPLitePortable.

Language fixed by launcher according Windows localisation: English, German, Dutch, Spanish, French, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Swedish.

Settings of installed XPLite should be preserved.

Kamis, 18 September 2008

Blue Corn Muffins with Green Chiles


Harvest time in New Mexico is just an excuse to declare a fiesta and eat roasted green chiles and corn until the cows come home. Or you turn blue. I'm not kidding. I can't keep up. I love me my Green Chile as much as the next Gringa, but. Breakfast, lunch and dinner? Hola. Maybe I lack the gene. I'm starting to crave lettuce. Celery sticks. I'm dreaming of multi-colored cherry tomatoes. Something crisp and raw and fresh.

You know, bunny food.

And speaking of blue, higher-in-protein blue corn just happens to be a New Mexican specialty. (There's even a Blue Corn Cafe in Santa Fe, and rumor has it- if you call ahead they'll accomodate a gluten-free request). When you bake with blue cornmeal it it isn't exactly blue, I find. More like dark green. But maybe it's just me. We all see colors differently you know.

No two people see the exact same shade of blue. Kinda like politics. And life.


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Senin, 15 September 2008

A Gluten-Free Pasta with Ragù You Can Mangia

Spaghetti with Ragu Sauce Recipe
Gluten-free pasta with homemade red sauce.


Before I share my new ragù pasta sauce recipe, I have a note about the blog. Gluten-Free Goddess now has a FAQ page. (Thank you, David Lebovitz for the reader-friendly blogging tip.) What took me so long? Who knows, Babycakes? I sure don't. I could blame it on my preoccupation with Mad Men. Or hot flashes. Or the simple fact that living out here in the rural sand swept hills of Northern New Mexico is making me crazy. Not shooting caribou from a helicopter crazy, but. 

Crazy enough.

At any rate, now that I've come to my senses (I'm sure it's only temporary) you, Dear Reader, will find a platter of helpful links and answers to the most frequent questions asked here at the brand spankin' new Gluten-Free Goddess FAQ page. If I've overlooked anything obvious or important, I'm sure you'll let me know- won't you?

On to ragù! Up until quite recently I had never attempted a meat ragù. My red gravy of choice was always a simple vegetarian marinara sauce with plenty of garlic and basil- vegan by default (and choice). It's a recipe that I've been simmering on my stove or in my slow cooker for years. Decades, in fact. Way better than the jarred stuff. But lately I've become an omnivore. (to heal my broken hip) and I'm appreciating the virtues of grass fed Black Angus beef.

So I made a meat ragù. And here's the recipe.

Continue reading

Minggu, 14 September 2008

I Like it Raw


Yes, that’s right. I like it raw, alive...uncooked. I'm talking about my food, and more specifically, that little date square. Since it's a raw food, all the nutrients contained in the dates, oats, maple syrup, and orange, that would have otherwise been lost thought he cooking process, still remain. In fact, this dessert is so nutrient-dense, that you could wholeheartedly eat it for breakfast. I bet your triple-decker chocolate cake can’t claim that.

Raw foods are foods that are eaten in their whole, natural state and are have not been cooked (heated above 118F). There are groups of people who eat only raw foods or mostly raw foods, much like how vegetarians don’t eat meat. These “raw foodists” believe that eating mostly raw foods has immeasurable health benefits such as clear headedness, fewer illnesses, clear skin, more energy, and less need for medication. Many celebrities have popularized this way of eating, since it is an excellent method for controlling one’s weight.

The science and rationale behind raw foods is relatively simple: All natural, unprocessed and uncooked foods contain substances called enzymes. Enzymes play a vital role digesting your food since they carry out the breakdown of the food particles that can then be easily converted into the essential energy needed by all parts of our body. Enzymes are either present in the food you eat, or they are produced by your own digestive system as needed, when you eat foods lacking in enzymes. Digestion is a very energy-intense process. If you are not obtaining enzymes from your food, your body has to draw them out of your organs, creating that post-meal feeling of lethargy we're all too familiar with. Just think about what happens at Thanksgiving. That meal hasn’t seen a raw carrot in years!
If you constantly eat cooked, enzyme-less food, it is also believed that your body will not be able to absorb and assimilate the nutrients, leading to malnourishment and inevitably, disease. Sounds a little dooms-day, doesn’t it?

What I do know for sure is that heating foods above any “naturally occurring” temperature changes the chemical structure of the food, in turn destroying many of the vital nutrients our bodies need for optimal health and healing. Especially if you are shelling out extra cash for organics, doesn’t it make sense to preserve just a few of those precious vitamins and minerals? I think so.

Many people ask me about raw foods, what it means to eat raw, and whether or not I’m into the lifestyle. Personally, I think that adopting an exclusively raw food diet is totally dependent on a few factors, such as your state of health, current habits, emotional state, your constitution, surrounding environment (hot, cold, wet, dry), and season of the year. Since I live in Canada and it is cold and damp for months on end, I tend to strive towards a diet that balances those elements, by eating warm, dry foods. In the summer, when the weather warms up and fresh, local foods abound, I feel that my body is able to handle the cooling affects of raw foods.

But that’s just me.

Adopting a raw lifestyle is just that - it is a lifestyle. There are few “impromptu” meals, since you can’t just run to the corner store and pick up a quick fix. In order to get protein, raw foodists rely on sprouted grains, nuts and seeds, which we know takes 3-4 days of germination. Dehydrating is also popular, as this process takes the moisture out of foods, without cooking it, so one can enjoy “bread” and “crackers”. But on the upside, you are doing the environment a real favour by not using any electricity to prepare your meals and by supporting organic agricultural practices, clean up is fast and easy, you can pretty much forego the vitamin supplements. Oh yeah, you also feel and look incredible.
I truly admire the growing number of individuals that make commitment to take on such a beautiful challenge.

This week was my mother’s birthday and her favorite dessert is squares. I have never been a fan of them myself, but had a feeling that this recipe from Enlightened Eating by Caroline Dupont, was worth the risk. Surprisingly, the date squares were super easy to make and incredibly delicious. The orange zest makes the dates sing and the nut crust is rich and satisfying. I can’t believe it’s raw, let alone healthy! This dessert is a great example of how easy it is to incorporate some raw foods into your diet without hassle or the feeling like you’re making some sort of sacrifice.


Raw Date Squares
Ingredients:
Filling
2 cups chopped, pitted dates
2 Tbsp. water
Juice of 1 large, unwaxed orange (1/2 to 3/4 cup)
Zest of 1 large, unwaxed orange

Quick oats for sprinkling (optional)

Crust: 2 cups pecans or walnuts (I used 1 cup of each)
1 cup raw oats ground in a coffee grinder or oat flour
2 tsp. ground cinnamon
4 Tbsp pure maple syrup

1. Soak dates in water and orange juice for 30 to 60 minutes, depending on quickly they soften.
2. Coarsely grind nuts in a food processor. Add ground oats or oat flour and pulse to mix.
3. Add cinnamon first, then maple syrup one tablespoon at a time until the mixture holds together.
4. Lightly oil a 9-inch square pan or round cake pan with coconut or olive oil
5. Press a little over half of the nut mixture into the bottom of the pan, reserving the rest for later.
6. Puree the date and orange juice mixture until it reaches a desired consistency. I left a few larger pieces of dates for texture, but you can blend them to a perfectly smooth texture too.
7. Crumble the remaining half of the crust mixture over the dates; press lightly with your hands of a spoon. Sprinkle some quick oats on top for garnish (this is optional, but looks nice).
8. Refrigerate leftovers.


There is so much information regarding raw and living foods that I certainly could not cover it all in this quick article. However, if you are interested in delving deeper into the raw world, have a look at this link below, which will lead you to many other informative websites and book recommendations. Good luck!
http://www.rawbc.org/raw_links.html#recipes

Jumat, 12 September 2008

Chocolate Chip Espresso Cookies- Vegan & Gluten-Free

Espresso laced chocolate chip cookies- gluten-free + vegan.

You knew it was only a matter of time before I'd post another cookie recipe. I love baking cookies- it's painfully obvious. (What the bleep else are you going to do in the desert, stuck out in the middle of sand and pinon with no neighbors to speak of- if you don't count the coyotes and stink bugs, that is?)

That's right. You start thinking about gluten-free flours and raw agave nectar and semi-sweet chocolate chips. You conjure cookie dough in your mind's eye- a richly flavored hearty dough made with buckwheat, millet and quinoa flours. You add a generous dusting of cinnamon. Some strong and hot espresso. Bourbon vanilla.

You taste the dough on your fingers.

This is gonna work, you say out loud. So you write it all down on a slip of paper. You slide a baking sheet into the waiting oven. The kitchen starts to smell like the bakery in Stranger Than Fiction. Warm and spicy and sweet all at once. (What, you don't have Smellavision?)

Your husband walks through the pink stained wooden door. He smiles.

Here, you say, breaking apart a tender, melting biscuit and lifting it to his lips.

Have a cookie.



Continue reading

Selasa, 09 September 2008

Seaweed of the Month Club: Part I


Wait! I know what you’re thinking…Seaweed of the Month Club? Are you joking? No, I am not. Please just humour me with the next 2 minutes of your life so that I can state the case for the delicious delicacies of the sea. I am proposing to introduce all of you to the wonders of sea vegetables, one at a time, in hopes that you will also fall in love with what the ocean has to offer in the way of foliage.

Seaweed, or as I prefer, sea vegetables, deserve some major attention, seeing as they collectively have all fifty-six minerals and trace minerals deemed necessary for the human body. They are loaded with calcium, iron, protein and dietary fiber; they are low in calories and naturally fat-free. Sea vegetables also contain the illusive vitamin B12, which is rare in plant foods, and therefore a great choice for vegetarians!

I am sure that most of you have eaten sea vegetables before. After all, it is one of the major ingredients in sushi. That black “stuff” the rice is wrapped with is a sea vegetable, called nori.
Some of you braver souls may have even tried the “seaweed salad” that Japanese restaurants often serve, made of wakame. Seaweed really isn’t that scary, just different from what we’re used to. It is consumed mainly in Japan and China, where it has been a staple food for thousands of years, but over here in North America, we seem a little timid to adopt such an unfamiliar fodder.

Well, I am officially putting an end to that. Over the next few months, I will show you many ways to incorporate the wide variety of sea vegetables into your diet. Aren’t you lucky?

Arame is a good place to start since it is one of the milder tasting sea vegetables on the market. It is a dark, almost back seaweed, with stringy texture. Before it is packaged, it must be cooked for seven hours, and then dried in the sun. To use, simply re-hydrate by soaking it in room temperature water for 15-20 minutes until it is soft and has doubled in volume. Arame is very high in calcium, iron, potassium, vitamin A and the B vitamins.
I like to add arame to my salads, soups, and stir-fry’s. It adds a lot of nutrients, without an overpowering flavour.

I learned how to make this salad at a cooking class last year, and it quickly became a dinner staple in my house. You will undoubtedly be surprised at how tasty raw sweet potato is, and the toasted sesame seeds add a delicious, familiar flavour. I like to serve this with a grain on the side, such as quinoa or brown rice. It is also great on picnics, as you can prepare the salad ahead of time. This allows the flavours to meld together, and the acid in the lemon juice helps to break down some of the starch in the sweet potato, making it softer.


Raw Sweet Potato Salad with Arame

Ingredients:
1/4 cup arame seaweed
1/3 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
2 cups sweet potato, cut into matchsticks
1 cup shredded daikon radish (optional)
1 cup tart apple, cut into matchsticks
1/2 cup sliced celery
1-2 Tbsp grated ginger
1/4 cup toasted sesame seeds
1-2 Tbsp agave nectar
3 Tbsp. Tamari
3 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil or cold pressed sesame oil

Directions:
1. Rinse and soak arame in 3/4 cup filtered water for 15-20 until soft
2. Squeeze lemon juice
3. Shred or grate the sweet potato, daikon and apple into a large salad bowl
4. Slice celery in thin, diagonal strips and add
5. Grate ginger
6. Toast sesame seeds in a dry skillet until they begin to pop – careful, the burn quickly!
7. Blend agave, tamari, oil and ginger
8. Toss all ingredients together and enjoy!

Stayed tuned next month when I introduce you all to the next sea vegetable on our list…Dulse! I can feel your excitement already.

Roasted Corn Chowder with Chicken, Lime + Cilantro

View toward Abiquiu, New Mexico.

A young rattlesnake curled on a flat warm stone by the laundry room door yesterday. So easy to miss, I almost walked right by him as I carried a basket of rolled clean socks and sleeve-tucked tee shirts. He was next to invisible, pristine and silent, his distinctive pattern dovetailed into pinon-filtered sunlight.

It was pure animal instinct to turn my gaze left and spot him. One sharpened second out of my usual preoccupied saunter. I backed away and sprinted (with a moment of rare agility) into the casita to fetch Steve.

I think you should see this! I blurted, interrupting his work at the laptop. My husband didn't hesitate. He's found the Save key before I can deposit my dryer warmed cargo on the bed. He knows the desert gives up unexpected gifts. He doesn't want to miss a trick.

We stared in tandem at the tiny threat for three minutes until the youngster uncurled and nosed himself back into the rock embankment.

Continue reading

Sabtu, 06 September 2008

Gluten-Free Quinoa, Rice, and Side Dish Recipes

The best quinoa recipes as well as rice side dishes and gluten free salads

My favorite gluten-free side dish recipes include quinoa (a high protein faux grain that is gluten-free and vegan; here is an easy way to cook quinoa), baked rice, risotto, cornbread stuffing, roasted vegetables, and calabasitas. Reader favorites include Horseradish Spiked Red Potato Salad and Lime Quinoa Salad with Mint.


Acorn Squash with Green Chiles
An Easy Savory Winter Vegetable Ragout
Art School Rice with Curried Apple and Carrots
Asparagus Leek Risotto

Baked Brown Rice Risotto
Baked Grape Tomatoes with Cornbread Crumbs
Balsamic Roasted Veggie Smothered Baked Potatoes

Calabasitas- Zucchini, Corn, Green Chiles, Lime and Black Beans
Champagne Vinegar Potato Salad- serve warm or cold
Cider Roasted Vegetables
Cinnamon Applesauce
Cool as a Cucumber Salad
Crispy Potato Sticks with Roasted Tomato Salsa

Curried Apple Cornbread Stuffing
Curried Brown Rice with Carrots and Raisins
Dijon Roasted Vegetables

Easy Guacamole with Lime
Greenwiches and Lettuce Cups
Grilled Veggie Skewers and Dirty Rice

Heirloom Potato Salad
Horseradish Spiked Red Potato Salad- serve warm or cold
Hummus Tahini with Spiced Oil

Jalapeño and Lime Hummus
Joey's Kicked Up Rockin' Guac with Tomatillos
Kale Salad with Quinoa, Tangerines and Roasted Almonds
Karina's Kicked Up Colcannon
Karina's Potato Latkes

Maple Roasted Acorn Squash
Nachos Fabuloso
New Mexico Green Chile

Peanut Coleslaw with lime and cilantro
Pesto Zucchini Tomato Gratin
Pinon Brown Rice Bake with Feta
Pomegranate Glazed Green Beans and Portobellos

Quinoa salad with roasted beets and orange


Quinoa: How to Cook It- the easy way
Quinoa Mushroom Pilaf
Quinoa with Roasted Brussels Sprouts, Leeks and Slivered Almonds

Quinoa Salad with Blueberries, Strawberries, and Watermelon
Quinoa Salad with Lime and Mint
Quinoa Salad with Kale, Tangerines and Roasted Almonds 
Quinoa Salad with Pears, Baby Spinach + Chick Peas in Maple Vinaigrette
Quinoa Salad with Roasted Beets, Chick Peas + Orange 
Quinoa Salad with Spinach and Tomatoes
Quinoa Salad with Yellow Tomatoes, Kalamata Olives, Basil + Mint

Quinoa Stuffed Cabbage Rolls with Sweet Potato
Quinoa Stuffed Portobello Mushrooms
Quinoa Taco Salad
Quinoa Tossed with Summer Vegetables

Ratatouille on Polenta with Baby Greens
Red Quinoa with Butternut Squash, Cranberries + Pecans
Rice Pilaf and Variations
Roasted Acorn Squash Risotto
Roasted Blue, Red and Gold Potato Wedges

Roasted Red Pepper Hummus
Roasted Sicilian Potatoes
Roasted Vegetables on Broiled Polenta
Roasted Vegetables with Two Sauces
Roasted Yellow Tomato Salsa

Ruby Applesauce with Cranberries
Snappy Crunchy Coleslaw- no mayo
Spaghetti Squash New Mexican with Black Beans and Lime
Spanish Rice Bake 

Sweet Potato Latkes
Sweet Potato Shoestring Fries
Two Potato Salad with Sweet Potatoes and No Mayo
Warm Coleslaw with Chili-Lime Dressing
Zucchini Gratin


Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Recipes for Soups, Stews, Chili and Roasts

Gluten free soup and stew recipes including Crock Pot recipes for slow cooking chili and curries


Here is my collection of gluten-free slow cooker recipes for the Crockpot. I love using a slow cooker year round. In the winter it warms the house with comforting spices and inviting aromas and in the summer it helps keep the kitchen cool- not to mention, it does all the work and frees up the day. Reader favorites include African Bean & Sweet Potato Soup, New Mexican Stew with Ground Turkey and Beef in Pomegranate Sauce.

Slow Cooker Soup and Stew Recipes

African Bean and Sweet Potato Soup
African Coconut Chick Pea Soup

Vegetarian Mulligatawny with Coconut Milk


Slow Cooker Chili Recipes

Santa Fe Chicken Chili
Two Artists Chili


Slow Cooker Roast and Meat Recipes

Beef and Potatoes au Chocolat
Beef in Pomegranate Sauce
Pork Roast in Brown Sugar Apricot Mushroom Sauce



Gluten-Free Dinner Recipes and Comfort Food

Gluten free dinner recipes and main dishes
Gluten-free main dishes, comfort food, and dinner ideas.

My collection of gluten-free dinner recipes- favorite main dish recipes from my humble Brown Sugar Turkey Meatloaf to slow-cooked Beef in Pomegranate Sauce. For an easy company-worthy entree, try my Agave Lime Salmon recipe.

Vegetarian or vegan? I didn't forget you, Babycakes. Vegetarian and vegan dinner recipe favorites are listed below for a green change of pace. The most popular gluten-free vegetarian recipe? My Sweet Potato and Black Bean Enchiladas.

Make tonight delicious!


Gluten free baked chicken with Italian peppers
Baked chicken Mediterranean with sweet peppers.



Chicken, Turkey and Pork Recipes

Alex's Favorite Baked Chicken Mediterranean
Balsamic Roasted Pepper Chicken
Brown Sugar Turkey Meatloaf

Chicken and Artichoke Enchilada Bake with Green Chiles (New Mexican Style)
Chicken and Spinach Rice Bake with Mozzarella
Chicken Tropicale with Peppers and Pineapple
Curried Apple Chicken Stir-Fry with Rice

Easy Baked Chicken Chili Rice Casserole
Garlic Chicken Lasagna
Jazzed Up Turkey Tetrazzini
Lime Chicken Tacos

Maple Apple Sausage
New Mexican Stew with Ground Turkey
Peanut Broccoli Chicken Stir-Fry
Pineapple Salsa Chicken Enchiladas

Pork Roast in Apricot Mushroom Sauce
Roasted Corn Chowder with Chicken & Cilantro
Rustic Chicken Soup for the Soul

Santa Fe Chicken Chili
Sour Cream Chicken Enchiladas
Stuffed Cabbage with Roasted Sweet Potato, Quinoa and Sausage
Stuffed Peppers with Ground Turkey

Turkey and Sweet Potato Enchiladas
Turkey Meatballs and Asian Style Stir-fry Noodles
Turkey Nachos

White Bean Chicken Chili with Sweet Potatoes and Lime



Gluten free Mediterranean beef and eggplant with mint
Mediterranean eggplant with beef, tomatoes and mint


Beef and Buffalo Recipes

A Meat Ragù You Can Mangia- Hearty Meat Sauce for Pasta
Beef and Mushroom Rice Bake with Cranberries
Beef and Mushroom Stuffed Acorn Squash

Beef and Potatoes au Chocolat
Beef in Pomegranate Sauce
Big Easy Soup with Beans and Andouille Sausage
Buffalo Sausage Stew

Buffalo Sausage Stuffed Peppers
Dijon Roasted Vegetables & Sausage
Irish Cottage Pie

Cranberry Buffalo Roast Stew
Good Karma Meatloaf Pie topped with Dill Mashed Potatoes
Karina's Beef Stew

Maple Meatloaf
Mediterranean Eggplant with Crumbled Beef, Tomato & Mint
Melted Peppers and Dags (yes, dags) on Rice

Roasted Hatch Chile Stew with Beef, Sweet Potatoes and Corn
Spaghetti and Meatballs
Sweet Potato Shepherd's Pie- A Rancher's Version with Black Angus Beef


Gluten free salmon with agave and lime
Easy agave and lime salmon

Seafood

Agave Lime Salmon
Baked Cod with Roasted Sweet and Sour Vegetables
Easy Garlic Shrimp Pizza

Garlicky Shrimp and Spinach Bake with Mozzarella
Mediterranean Fish in Foil Packets with Rice

Pineapple Salmon Brown Rice Bake with Sour Cream and Green Chiles
Salmon and Spinach Goat Cheese Strata
Shrimp Fried Rice and Veggies

Tequilla Lime Salmon
Tuna and Artichoke Pasta with Pine Nuts


Gluten free vegetarian enchiladas
Vegetarian enchiladas, Greek style with spinach, feta and chick peas


Vegetarian Comfort Food

A Veggie Lover's Shepherd's Pie
African Coconut and Chick Pea Soup
An Easy Savory Winter Vegetable Ragout
Artichoke and Jalapeño Savory Pie with Jalapenos

Baked Brown Rice Risotto
Baked Frittata with Gold Potatoes and Sour Cream
Baked Mac & Cheese - Dairy-Free
Balsamic Roasted Veggie Smothered Baked Potato

Cider Roasted Vegetables
Crock Pot Curry
Enchiladas Griegos for Two with Spinach and Feta

Gluten-Free Pizza!

Kicked Up Baked Mac n Cheese
Karina's Kicked Up Colcannon
Karina's Latkes with Homemade Applesauce

Maple Roasted Acorn Squash Stuffed with Cornbread Curried Apple Stuffing
Mediterranean Pasta Frittata with Goat Cheese

Pesto Zucchini Tomato Gratin
Purple Potato Quiche
Quinoa Mushroom Pilaf

Red Quinoa with Butternut Squash and Cranberries
Roasted Acorn Squash Risotto
Roasted Brussels Sprouts Medley with Butter Beans and Rice
Roasted Corn Chowder with Cilantro
Roasted Green Chile Bake with Cream Cheese

Roasted Vegetable Cheddar Quiche
Roasted Vegetable Lasagna
Roasted Vegetable Noodle Kugel
Roasted Vegetables and Brown Rice
Roasted Vegetables in a Nest
Roasted Vegetables on Broiled Polenta

Savory Vegetable Kugel
Savory Vegetable Pancakes
Scalloped Potatoes- Dairy-Free
Sexy Spring Pasta- with roasted asparagus
Spaghetti Squash New Mexican with Black Beans and Lime
Spinach and Cheddar Quesadilla

Stuffed Cabbage with Roasted Sweet Potato and Quinoa
Sweet Potato Black Bean Enchiladas
Sweet Potato Latkes with Ruby Applesauce

Two Artists Chili
Vegetarian Puttanesca
Vegetarian Shepherd's Pie


Gluten-Free Bread and Tea Bread Recipes

Gluten-free whole grain bread.


Gluten-free bread is the Holy Grail of a newly diagnosed celiac. After years of experimenting with gluten-free flours (and tossing too many loaves to count into the garbage) I share with you my hard won favorite recipes for gluten-free bread- both savory and sweet.

My favorite flour mix for baking tender gluten-free bread includes sorghum flour, millet flour and potato starch (not potato flour!). See this essential post: Gluten-Free Bread Machine Tips for helpful hints, problem solving, and a lively readers' discussion (in comments) on making your bread machine baking a success. The bread machine I use is a Breadman; lately I use the Super Rapid cycle with a dark crust setting.


Karina's Multi-grain Sandwich Bread recipe
 

Gluten-Free Bread Recipes

Delicious Gluten-Free Bread

Easy Baguettes with Pamela's Bread Mix
Easy Buttermilk Flatbread
First Loaf in My Gluten-Free Bread Machine 

Gluten-Free Dinner Rolls
Gluten-Free Focaccia w/Garlic, Herbs + Tomato
Gluten-Free Multi-Grain Sandwich Bread
Gluten-Free Pizza Crust + Flatbread
Gluten-Free Ryeless "Rye" Bread
Gypsy Soda Bread

Make Mine a Gluten-Free Cheese Sandwich
Olive Bread- whole grain goodness
Pueblo Bread- with green chiles

Savory Scones with Olives and Rosemary
Skillet Cornbread with Green Chiles
Sweet Potato Cornbread
Spotted Dog- Irish Soda Bread with Raisins

Vanilla Cornbread
Whole Grain Gluten-Free Bread
Yeasted Quinoa-Cornbread



Karina's Zucchini Bread- a readers' favorite


Tea Bread and Tea Treats

Banana Chocolate Chip Bread
Banana Nut Bread

Carrot Bread with Chai Spices
Chocolate Gingerbread
Cinnamon Raisin Scones
Cranberry Bread 

English Muffins
Irish Soda Bread- original
Irish Soda Bread Recipe with Millet
Orange Scented Soda Bread

Pumpkin Chai Bread with Cranberries
Pumpkin Pie Bread 
Pumpkin Scones

Quinoa Breakfast Cake
Spotted Dog Soda Bread
Sweet Potato Cornbread
Zucchini Bread



Karina's gluten-free pizza crust. Add your favorite toppings.


Pizza, Waffles, Wraps

Best Gluten-Free Pizza Crust Recipe
Gluten-Free Pizza Flatbread with Roasted Vegetables
Lydia's Gluten-Free Pizza Crust Recipe
Millet Buckwheat Wraps 
Savory Gluten-Free Waffles for Sandwiches + Breadcrumbs



Karina's whole grain olive bread. So good.


Gluten-Free Bread Machine Tips



Gluten-Free Appetizers and Easy Snack Recipes

Gluten free crackers and appetizer and snack recipes by Gluten Free Goddess
Tease your appetite with these gluten-free appetizers.

Gluten-Free Appetizers and Easy Snack Recipes

Here are my favorite gluten-free appetizer and snack recipes on Gluten-Free Goddess. From wheat-free nutty crackers to vegan dairy-free pesto, from kicked-up hummus with jalapeños to Italian style baked grape tomatoes in olive oil and basil cornbread crumbs, you'll find our family's most requested appetizers.

Who's hungry?


Baked Grape Tomatoes with Basil and Cornbread Crumbs
Basil Pesto
Buttermilk Flatbread

Cashew Hummus
Best guacamole recipeCilantro Pesto de Esteban
Crispy Potato Sticks with Roasted Tomato Salsa
Crunchy White + Sweet Potato Chips

Easy Guacamole with Lime
Easy Green Chile Quesadilla

Fried Zucchini Chips with Lime-Mint Dip
Gluten-Free Crackers with Olive Oil and Sea Salt
Greenwiches Lettuce Cups and Wraps

Hot Artichoke Dip Recipe
How To Make Cashew Cream - and a Curry Ranch Dip
Hummus Tahini with Spiced Oil

Jalapeño Lime Hummus
Joey's Kicked Up Rockin' Guac

Kale Chips- Easy + Crispy
Nachos Fabuloso
Parmesan Rice Crisps
Image of roasted red pepper hummusPecan Crackers

Quick and Easy Garlic Shrimp Pizzas

Roasted Eggplant Tapenade
Roasted Red Pepper Hummus
Roasted Tomato Salsa
Roasted Yellow Tomato Salsa
Roasted Vegetable Salsa

Savory Grain Free Crackers
Spinach + Cheddar Quesadilla

Three Ways To Dress a Naked Salad (Gluten-Free Dressings)
Winter Pesto


Karina