Coeliac Friendly Malta

Mar
10

Malta is a small European country situated right in the middle of the Mediterranean and not too far from Sicily. Because of it’s location the weather is pretty much always lovely and so it was the perfect place to run our first half marathon. Growing up in the UK, I always envisioned Malta as a very touristy destination. It certainly is but if you can travel there outside of the busy tourist season (we were there at the end of February) the weather is still nice and you can explore it without the bussle of so many tourists. Malta is a pretty country with an interesting history and the old capital Mdina is definitely worth a visit. We chose to stay in Sliema, a lovely city on the northeast coast of the country and where our half marathon finished.

I was very impressed by the gluten free options that many restaurants and cafes in Malta, and specifically the town of Sliema, had to offer. I was very happily surprised to find that many of the eateries in Sliema not only had gluten free options clearly stated on their menus but a whole variety of gluten free things to choose from!!!

Mint's menu board

Mint's menu board

As I was in Malta to run my first half-marathon I was worried about being glutenated and not being able to run at my best but on wandering around Sliema on our first afternoon in town, menus and signs saying ‘Gluten Free Options Available’ and ‘We serve gluten free food’  filled me with excitement. I started to feel much happier about eating out in the days before the race. We decided to cook dinner on the evening before the race at home just to be 100% safe but most other meals we ate in local restaurants/cafes.

LME_20100226_0189

GF section of local supermarket

Maltease supermarkets and even a few small convenience stores stocked gluten free foods, similar to those found in the UK. A couple of Medium sized supermarkets we visited in Sliema had gluten free sections with cereals, breads, pastas, cakes, biscuits and various other treats. Yoghurt has been one of my saviours since becoming gluten free and at home I like to eat Muller Light with rice cakes for dipping (surprisingly yummy!). Since I can’t be certain which yoghurts in other countries are safe I tend to go for natural stuff but the ones I found in Malta looked as though they had added ingredients that I wasn’t sure of and I couldn’t understand what I was reading enough to risk it. Luckily I found they stocked my Muller Light! 1.09 Euros for one tub…crazy but at least I knew they were safe!

There are lots of small convenience and fruit stores as well as a large number of fruit and vegetable vans all over Malta so finding fresh fruit is very simple!

Gluten Free eatery Highlights (all of which can be found on Tower Road, Sliema):

Mint – This small cafe has a fantastic selection of both savoury and sweet gluten free dishes. We went here for lunch on our first day in Sliema and returned after the half-marathon to fill out hungry tummies. Every day the cafe has 4 or 5 savoury dishes on offer and they are

Mint's tuna and potato pie

Mint's tuna and potato pie

delicious. I tried their tuna and potato pie with creamy bechamel sauce and their potato and chorizo gratin. Both dishes came with a salad and dressing which, as I was getting ready to ask, the waitress confirmed was gluten free. Dessert wise, they again had 5 or 6 different gluten free options, which all looked amazing..there was choco-coconut brownies,

Chorizo and potato gratin

Chorizo and potato gratin

cookies and flourless cake. I tried their dried fruit, chocolate and coconut brownie which was ridiculously good! Savouries ranged from 4-7 euros and desserts were 1.50-3 euros. Good value for money and a great selection for coeliacs!

Kara’s Cafe – A busy cafe with both indoor and outdoor seating, which sells various snacks, sandwiches, drinks, desserts, smoothies, yogurt and alcohol. There weren’t a whole lot of gluten free options on the menu but a variety of their sandwiches (toast with jam, ham and cheese, egg mayo, chicken and tomato, salmon, prawn mayo and the club house) can be made gluten free at an extra cost of 1.15 euros. Their fruit smoothies are pretty good too. They do 5 different mixes at 4 euros each. 100% fruit so 100% gluten free!

The Kitchen – A restaurant serving some interesting, unique dishes, quite a few of which are gluten free (these are marked by stars on the menu). I had carmelised risotto with cheese and brazil nut powder. Pretty tasty but a little expensive. If you’re willing to spend a wee bit more for a nice meal then you will find some good gluten free choices here.

Frescos – I didn’t eat at Fresco’s as they had stopped serving when we were hungry but their menu has a few gluten free options which sounded good.  Their menu also states that they can prepare their pasta dishes gluten free – this gluten free pasta, which they say is prepared seperately, is 1 euro extra and takes 20 minutes.

The long weekend we spent in Malta was a gluten free success! Any Coeliacs travelling to Malta, and specifically Sliema, need not worry about a lack of safe places to eat. Although we did all of our eating in the pretty town of Sliema, we visited some other towns that also had gluten free options on their menus. Sliema however was the most Coeliac friendly.

John and I at the end of our first half-marathon

John and I at the end of our first half-marathon

Our first half-marathon was fantastic and we finished in 2 hours 9 minutes. It was a beautiful run across Malta 🙂

Europe Travel Adventures 11 Comments

Ice Cream, Gluten Free?

Mar
03

Is Ice Cream gluten free?

I know that milk, cream, sugar and fruit are gluten free and these (I think) are normally the ingredients of ice cream so does this mean that all ice cream (other than flavours like cookie dough and cookies and cream obviously) are gluten free?

What glutenous ingredients could ice cream be hiding?

I love nibbling on delicious creamy ice cream when I’m travelling to a hot country but since being diagnosed as Coeliac I’ve been avoiding doing this 🙁

Does anyone have any tips on how to choose safe ice cream or can it never be safe if I can’t read the ingredients?

UPDATE: (From a more experienced me two years later). Some ice cream is gluten free but some is not so you must be careful when choosing what to buy. The main ingredients which make up ice cream (milk, cream and sugar) are naturally gluten free but be careful about the emulsifiers, colourings and flavourings which some companies add to their ice cream. These are ingredients to be wary of so you should always check with the company before assuming it is safe. Another additional concern is cross contamination. A company’s vanilla ice cream may be gluten free but if it’s manufactured on the same line as their cookie dough ice cream then it may not be safe for celiacs.

If you’re in the US, Blue Bunny ice cream is gluten free and if you love garlic, head to Gilroy, CA for some interesting ice cream.

In the UK, Thorntons do great ice cream which is gluten free.

If you’re headed to Argentina and you want ice cream, both Freddo and Munchi’s do gluten free ice cream.

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Have I Been Glutenated?

Feb
11

Since starting my gluten free diet last August I haven’t really felt as though I’ve made many mistakes as I’ve been feeling so much better. This week however, I’ve been feeling lethargic and irritable and my visits to the toilet remind me of how things were before I was diagnosed 🙁

I’ve been having these symptoms for 5 days now but other than this I’m feeling fine and all of the other horrible symptoms like being bloated are nowhere to be seen. This leaves me wondering whether or not I have been glutenated! Does anyone have advice on how I might be feeling if I did eat gluten by mistake? Can having only 1 or 2 symptoms suggest glutenation? Also, I’m being so careful that I’m almost certain I haven’t eaten anything unsafe! Could dried dates from Holland and Barrattt really contain gluten? Any advice would be greatly appreciated!!

UPDATE (from a more experienced me 2 years later) I almost certainly did eat something gluten containing which gave me these symptoms. I don’t need to suffer from the whole range of celiac symptoms like I did prior to my diagnosis to know that I’ve accidentally consumed a little bit of gluten. I much more recently wrote this post on Is it obvious when you eat gluten?. I got some interesting feedback from this article. It appears that to many celiacs it is not so obvious when they eat gluten.

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Gluten Free….5 months on

Jan
27

I’ve now been living gluten free (or at least trying to) for five months. Throughout these five months I’ve gone through quite a few different emotions, both good and bad, in my discovery of the changes I must make to my life… Relief, loss, excitement, health, acceptance, more loss and so this continues…

Continue reading Gluten Free….5 months on

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Gluten Free Running In Malta

Jan
27

Next month I’m heading to Malta to run my first half-marathon. Staying gluten free is hard enough when travelling to a new place but I’m going to need all of my energy for this race and glutenation could stop me from finishing in my best time. I’ve been doing lots of training so I want to run the best 22K that I can! We’re spending 4 days in Malta (the 3rd of which is the race) so hopefully I’ll be able to find lots of places to eat gluten free. I’ve got my fingers crossed on finding somewhere to get a big bowl of gluten free carbs the night before my race! As a runner, eating carbs is important for gaining the energy needed for running but unfortunately many of the carb filled meals I was eating the night before a race before being diagnosed had been full of gluten (which now explains why I always felt so bloated whilst running and didn’t feel the energy the meal should have been giving me!)

Coeliacmalta.org lists a number of restaurants in different areas around the country which have ‘indicated to the Coeliac Association of Malta that they can cater for gluten free diets and that their staff are sufficiently knowledgeable on the necessary procedures.’ There appears to be a good selection to try and they list 4 in the town of Sliema where my race ends so I’m certain to be starving for something gluten free when I get there! If there are any Coeliacs out there who have visited Malta and had either a good or bad experience with finding somewhere to eat then please share your stories here. 🙂

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Haribo Gluten Free

Jan
17

Haribo is probably my favourite snack food. I find it really addictive! I’ve always been a huge fan of gummy/jelly/foamy sweeties since my gran bought me bags of pic n mix every Sunday when I was a kid and I love all the colourful, fun shapes that Haribo has to offer. When I was first diagnosed I was over the moon excited when I discovered that most Haribo is gluten free (certainly in the UK at least). A few of their selections contain liquorice which isn’t gluten free but this seems to be the minority.

Continue reading Haribo Gluten Free

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Cafe Andaluz

Jan
17

Cafe Andaluz is a Spanish Tapas restaurant, of which there are two in Glasgow. One is in the centre of the city on St Vincent Place and the other is in the city’s west end on Cresswell Lane. The West End location is where I ate a couple of night ago. My boyfriend and I began dating 4 years ago on the 14th of January 2006 so we decided to celebrate our anniversary with some gluten free Spanish food.

The restaurant has a nice warm vibe, attentive staff and some interesting art and lighting which to me had a bit of a Moroccan feel. Their menu has a good selection of things to choose from and they do various Tapas Vegetarianas, Carnes and Mariscos y Pescados (Vegetarian, meat and fish and seafood) They also have 3 paellas (which serve 2 people) and various sides and desserts. Their drinks menu is fairly varied and they have a good selection of white, rose and red wines. The menu indicates which dishes are gluten free with ‘GF’ and whilst none of the sides or desserts are gluten free, there is a good and varied selection of tapas and paella which are.

John and I ordered a nice bottle of Chardonnay and to start, one tapas to share, the ‘Carne de Res Picante’ which is spicy beef on a bed of rocket and manchego cheese with chorizo dressing. Not particularly picante but Muy delicioso!! We then went for the Paella Valenciana. (2 of their 3 paellas are gluten free) This was rice with chicken, pork, seafood and shellfish flavoured with saffron. Again, really delicious and full of various tasty meat and seafood.

The paella was very filling and in our case enough for the two of us as we had shared a tapas before. We enjoyed a really good night here and would probably go back since it’s nice to see ‘GF’ on a menu rather than have to ask lots of questions. I was stuffed for the rest of the night but not painful gluten stuffed.  Unfortunately John ended up with food poisoning, which we think must have been from the seafood. I felt fine after sharing the same dish but sometimes all it takes is one dodgy prawn! It’s a shame this happened after having such a good meal here but I would still recommend this restaurant to any gluten free travellers passing through Glasgow. As long as you are not on a budget, as Cafe Andaluz is fairly priced but definitely not cheap, you can choose from a bunch of gluten free options. If you like Spanish tapas, there are a whole bunch of other similar tapas style places in Glasgow too.

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Gluten Free Christmas Day

Jan
06

Roast beef & sweet potato

Christmas 2009 was my first gluten free Christmas. Dinner was at my mum’s house with her husband, my brother and his wife and my boyfriend John. As my mum was in charge of preparing dinner she decided that everything would be gluten free. There was no point, she felt, in risking contamination and almost everything could be prepared gluten free anyway. I didn’t like the idea that anyone may be missing out on their favourite Christmas dinner treats because they wouldn’t be suitable for me but I soon realised that no one had any objections at all to staying 100 percent gluten free and were happy to eat whatever I could eat…safely.

On looking around a variety of different supermarkets on the lead up to Christmas it looked as though almost everything contained gluten. Anything prepacked at least. Most of the turkeys were basted with in many cases something glutenous or in others something which could be and lots of turkeys were stuffed with various flavours of stuffing that I would definitely not be able to eat. Luckily I don’t tend to be someone who buys prepacked foods anyway (especially when it comes to veg) and would much prefer something fresh to prepare myself rather than something already cut up and covered in glutenous sauce or gravy so it was fairly easy to stay away from these things. There were however, all those Christmassy nibbles that the festive season tends to bring. Things like mini sausages wrapped in bacon, breaded mozarella sticks and sausage rolls grinned their wheaty grins at me from the shelves and freezers of supermarkets and there was no way I could eat these.

For any Coeliacs out there who do love these kinds of festive nibbles, for most there will be either a gluten free alternative or something similar,which can be made gluten free by missing out certain ingredients and using others instead. In the case of mini sausages wrapped in bacon for example, most prepacked varieties I found did contain gluten but there are sausages and bacon out there that is safe for us so you just need to do a bit of research and prepare these things yourself if you really want them….personally I can quite easily live without them.

Candy sushi

My first gluten free Christmas dinner was home made tomato and lentil soup made with Bouillon stock,  roast beef, cooked only in it’s own gluten free juices with roasted sweet potato, carrots and parsnips. We had M&S gluten free Christmas cake for dessert. I had also made lots of rice krispie and marshmallow, sushi shaped treats for snacking on with Kallo puffed rice cereal,  Haribo marshmallows, Sainsbury’s fish shaped sweets and Humzingers fruit treats for sushi decoration. There was also lots of lots of tasty vino 🙂

My first gluten free Christmas wasn’t a difficult one. We kept things simple. Everything was delicious and 100% safe for Coeliacs!

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I wish I could eat….

Dec
29

So far I feel as though I’m doing pretty well with my new gluten free life but there are still a few delicious gluten filled delights that I miss…This is a place for me to shout and scream and get it all out without freaking out the sales assistants in the cereal aisle of Tesco! If anyone has similar bittersweet memories of their favourite tasty treats before Coeliacdom then please share them here…

Frosties, Ricicles, Shreddies, Cheerios, Grape Nuts and lots more cereals There are plenty of delicious gluten free cereal to choose from!

Interesting foreign foods when I’m not sure what they really are and what’s in them

A taste of whatever my dining buddy is munching on

Free samples being given out in supermarkets

Those delicious wee blue and pink bobbly licorice allsorts

Kinder Bueno…I never got to try the new white chocolate one!

Bier Halle thin base Pizza

The Butterfly and Pig’s spicy bean burger

Cafe Hula’s spanish tortilla

A nice big plate of Haggis, neeps and tatties) I’ve eaten gluten free haggis and it was fantastic!

 

Glasgow Lifestyle 5 Comments

Terry’s Chocolate Orange Gluten Free?

Dec
29

I was given a Terry’s chocolate Orange at work today…something I completely forget about until the festive season comes around and they seem to be everywhere! Are these delicious Christmassy chocolate delights gluten free? On the back of the box is the Terry’s Chocolate Orange Careline so I thought I’d give them a call to find out. A pleasant sounding man answered my call…

Continue reading Terry’s Chocolate Orange Gluten Free?

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