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How to Cook for Food Allergies
Are food allergies more common these days or are we just
more aware?
It’s evident that there are a lot of people who have adverse reactions
to common
ingredients but everyone wants to eat delicious food. How to Cook for
Food Allergies will be welcomed by millions who want to provide safe
food for the whole family with dishes that everyone can enjoy.
Lucinda Bruce-Gardyne is a chef and co-author of award-winning Leith’s
Techniques Bible. She has not only taught but has run her own catering
business. She has three children, two of whom have food allergies.
Lucinda is well-placed to give advice born of first-hand experience.
If problem foods were ingredients such as truffles, larks tongues in
aspic and fillet of aardvark then this book would never have been
written. It’s common foods that cause the difficulties. Eggs, soya,
nuts, gluten and dairy are the main culprits. If you want to have a
varied and interesting diet then you need to know how to substitute
these foods for ones that will not present symptoms. Lucinda gives you
all the advice you’ll need to make those substitutions.
How to Cook for Food Allergies has three parts, the first being Living
with Food Allergies. It’s probably the most important element of the
book as it deals with how to avoid problem foods, eating out and
travelling, and eating a balanced diet on a restricted diet.
The second part of How to Cook for Food Allergies tells us how to
substitute ingredients, and each of those common problem foods has a
chapter. Read this and you’ll start to see the light at the end of the
culinary tunnel. Lucinda offers us the prospect of real food that
doesn’t taste like a compromise.
The third part introduces the recipes and you’ll linger over these
because they are good, flavourful dishes that are easy to prepare and
will be appreciated by the whole family. Gone are the days of cooking
two different meals to accommodate allergy sufferers as well as those
lucky folk who can eat everything down to the pattern on the plate.
Moroccan Chicken, Apricot, Olive and Saffron Tagine is aromatic and
exotic but free of dairy, gluten, eggs, nuts and soya. Lasagne al Forno
will become a favourite if you use gluten-free pasta. There are lots of
allergy-aware products in supermarkets today. Gluten-Free White Bread
uses potato flour, cornflour, tapioca flour and rice flour instead of
the conventional strong wheat bread flour. The same recipe can be used
to make pizza.
How to Cook for Food Allergies is a practical cookbook that will be a
god-send for anyone who either suffers from food allergies or cooks for
someone with a food intolerance. It’s well-researched but not over
technical. It’s sure to become a best-seller.
How to Cook for Food Allergies
Author: Lucinda Bruce-Gardyne
Published by: Rodale, Pan Macmillan
Price: £12.99
ISBN 978-1-905744-28-2
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