Guest guest Posted November 1, 2003 Report Share Posted November 1, 2003 " Also, i'm seeing ads for wheat free stuff that is made from kamut or spelt,but don't those have gluten? What is the difference between being wheat free and gluten free? Isn't a sensitivity/allergy to wheat essentially a response to the gluten? " (Elaine) I'm curious about this too as we can't seem to get sorghum here in Australia. My nephew has a wheat allergy (eczema gets worse when he eats it), but he doesn't react to Spelt. People who have problems digesting wheat seem to be ok with Spelt and the latest rage is kamut. But why can't we get sorghum? I read that sorghum is drought resistant so you'd think it would be a perfect grain for Australia. (just as an aside,fyi, his eczema flares up when he drinks pasteurized milk too but clears up when he drinks raw milk!). Filippa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 1, 2003 Report Share Posted November 1, 2003 At 11:45 PM 10/31/2003, you wrote: >I'm curious about this too as we can't seem to get sorghum here in Australia. My nephew has a wheat allergy (eczema gets worse when he eats it), but he doesn't react to Spelt. People who have problems digesting wheat seem to be ok with Spelt and the latest rage is kamut. But why can't we get sorghum? I read that sorghum is drought resistant so you'd think it would be a perfect grain for Australia. They probably do grow it in Australia, but it is usually sold for animal feed. You can buy " white sorghum " grain very cheaply at some feed and seed stores. Also at Indian groceries, if you have those. Kamut and Spelt are a lot less reactive than Wheat, and a lot of people do better on them. Basically they are a lot lower in gluten and have a different protein mix. However, those are like the grains the Egyptians ate a lot of, and they didn't seem to do well on them, long term. Btw since we are on the subject, here is a good GF list for those who eat packaged products: http://www.henhouse.com/docs/nutrition/Gluten-Free.pdf Also there is an interesting GF set of PDF cookbooks at a reasonable price from Buckwheat Pete. They are about $6 each, and he emails them. I'm ordering the bread one and will try it out, if it works good I'll let you know. He has a very unique method and it's worth the cost of the books. (do a search on " buckwheat pete " ). He uses buckwheat flour, but any non-gluten flour will do, plus tapioca flour (common in oriental food stores). -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.