Pre-food allergies, almost all of my favorite recipes came
from magazines. For years I have been collecting recipes from Cooking Light and
Real Simple- making notes on the ones I liked and keeping them in a spiral
notebook. But as the food allergens piled on, most of favorite recipes just
didn’t quite work anymore. There are some replacements that are easy to make- a recipe
calls for a couple of cloves of garlic? Ok. No problem. I’ll leave those out. Trying
to make a frittata without eggs? Well, that’s going to take a miracle.
And, searching randomly online for vegan recipes- you just
never know what you are going to get. I
haven’t had very much luck with recipes from random blogs from people with no
official qualifications (Pot? Yes, hi, it’s me, Kettle.)
So, instead of sadly flipping through my favorite recipes
that I can no longer have, or blindly trying recipes online, I went on the
lookout for cookbooks that I could use. Cookbooks that presumably have had
somebody other than the author test the recipes and they turned out okay. And
cookbooks that have recipes that are already okay for my kid’s food allergies. Go
Dairy Free by Alisa Fleming was one of the first ones (and one of the best ones!) I’ve
gotten. It’s got hundreds of recipes from breakfast to sides to meals to
desserts. Best of all, it’s not a healthy vegan book trying to sell you on a
lifestyle where you don’t need cheese. It is perfectly aware that cheese IS
delicious and unfortunately there are just times when you CAN’T PHYSICALLY eat
it. Before the recipes it’s got chapters on just how to start living a dairy
free life which I found very helpful. Some the advice?
- Get an ice cream maker. Yep, did that. Feel great about it.
- The longer you go without cheese, the better the alternatives taste. Seriously. That’s true. Also true for pretty much everything else- the longer I go without eating peanut butter, the better that sun butter tastes.
- Which kinds of restaurants to avoid (I see you Italian and all your cheesy, creamy, deliciousness) and things to do to try to make sure the restaurants you do go to are safe if you are allergic to milk
Okay so are the recipes good?
Yes! I have made all of my birthday cakes from this book for
the past year. The first attempt stuck to the pan a lot and wasn’t the
prettiest. One of the icing recipes never fluffed up but you know what? They’ve
all been delicious. There are these avocado filled enchiladas that when eating them
I never once thought “You know what this needs? Cheese.” Talk about magic. The
wholesome pillowy pancakes my son eats at least 8 at a time and then has to lay
down because he ate too much. Waffles? Yes. Cookies? Yes. Pasta? Yes. Pizza?
Ehh…. The one recipe I have made from this book that my wife said maybe let’s
not make this again was a pizza with a “cheese sauce” on it. It was weird. We
still ate it though!
Is it good for people with food allergies?
Well, obviously it’s good for people who are allergic to
dairy milk. But it also has a handy index with what allergens are in each
recipe and it has easy swaps on most recipes if you are vegan or avoiding
certain foods. A lot of the cheese alternatives use nuts so I can’t say if the
cashew cheese wheel or the pine nut parma sprinkles are good… but the tofu
ricotta made a delicious lasagna.
All in all, if you are forced to go dairy free, then this is
the book for you.
Incredibly helpful, as usual!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the honest review. I have many clients that struggle with dairy-free cooking. Looking forward to checking it out!
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