Anonymous wrote:Do they have celiac? If so, I'd jump through hoops to make it gluten free. If not, I'd make regular pasta and bet my life they'd never know the difference. I can't wait for this dumb gluten free fad to go away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they have celiac? If so, I'd jump through hoops to make it gluten free. If not, I'd make regular pasta and bet my life they'd never know the difference. I can't wait for this dumb gluten free fad to go away.
I agree with this.
I can not imagine that gluten free noodles will hold up well in a baked casserole dish.
Anonymous wrote:Do they have celiac? If so, I'd jump through hoops to make it gluten free. If not, I'd make regular pasta and bet my life they'd never know the difference. I can't wait for this dumb gluten free fad to go away.
Anonymous wrote:I have thyroid issues and gluten makes me feel terrible. Please don’t trick anyone. I would be happy to bring a GF dish to share rather than have someone sneak or be tricky because they don’t think a health issue is real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Celiac here! For this recipe, I would recommend the Barilla GF pasta. It's both rice and corn-based and tends to cook the most similarly to regular pasta. Brown rice pasta can get chewy or mushy very easily and I find it works better in traditional boiled pasta dishes. The closest Barilla GF shape is the rotini, which might need more cooking time. I find I need more trial and error with all of my GF ingredients when I use a standard recipe. One thing about Smitten Kitchen - if you CTRL+F through the comments, someone almost always shares their experience with making the recipe gluten free.
Celiac, you wouldn't even eat this dish at someone else's house anyway, right?
The danger of cross contamination is so high. I have never known a true celiac who would cavalierly eat anything at someone else's house or even a restaurant with excellent celiac credentials because the consequences are so dire. My friend even brings her own wine to our house and drinks only from that.
Anonymous wrote:Celiac here! For this recipe, I would recommend the Barilla GF pasta. It's both rice and corn-based and tends to cook the most similarly to regular pasta. Brown rice pasta can get chewy or mushy very easily and I find it works better in traditional boiled pasta dishes. The closest Barilla GF shape is the rotini, which might need more cooking time. I find I need more trial and error with all of my GF ingredients when I use a standard recipe. One thing about Smitten Kitchen - if you CTRL+F through the comments, someone almost always shares their experience with making the recipe gluten free.
Anonymous wrote:Celiac here! For this recipe, I would recommend the Barilla GF pasta. It's both rice and corn-based and tends to cook the most similarly to regular pasta. Brown rice pasta can get chewy or mushy very easily and I find it works better in traditional boiled pasta dishes. The closest Barilla GF shape is the rotini, which might need more cooking time. I find I need more trial and error with all of my GF ingredients when I use a standard recipe. One thing about Smitten Kitchen - if you CTRL+F through the comments, someone almost always shares their experience with making the recipe gluten free.
Anonymous wrote:The best GF pastas are Jovial, Tinkyada, Bionaturae, and Trader Joe’s. People who say GF pasta is bad have likely not had any of these. Follow the cooking instructions on the package, but you’ll definitely want to stick with al dente for baked pasta. And most importantly, ignore the trolls who would lie/mislead regarding this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they have celiac? If so, I'd jump through hoops to make it gluten free. If not, I'd make regular pasta and bet my life they'd never know the difference. I can't wait for this dumb gluten free fad to go away.
Please don't do this.
Gluten free pasta typically works well in baked dishes like ziti and lasagna. If you are pre-boiling it, just don't over-cook it. It tends to fall apart more in general than regular pasta but that's usually ok in baked dishes.
1. They will likely know. GF pasta is bad compared to real pasta.
2. You can just make it with gluten anyway and the GF person can not have it. Or if their sensitivity isn't bad, they can have it anyway
3. You can make a small GF version
4. You can do what this PP says and lie, and depending on the level of sensitivity, they may or not be sick enough to be in the bathroom the rest of the time at your house or the next day, and also feel off for at least several days.
DOES.NOT.HAPPEN!!!
Unless they have celiac disease. Stop the nonsense.