Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 16 total)
Ossie-Sharon 12 years ago

Hi, Donna. Soda bread is fine if the flours are wholemeal.
Whole Foods Market carries the wraps. This is a link to store locations http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/stores/list/uk.

donnasimpson 12 years ago

hi i have discovered soda bread is this ok on this diet or i will be looking in tescos for the bread mentioned earlier. also can anyone help on which wraps to use cannot find swg ones

Judith2 12 years ago

I’m new but have been using UDI gluten free bread, and toasted for my morning breakfast with an egg, it’s delicious. I live in Oregon, USA, and have plenty to choose from. I choose to go gluten free as my daughter recommended that I do.

polly13645 12 years ago

can anyone tell me if there is a brand name bread you can buy without making it yourself for this diet thank you

mandel76 12 years ago

Hi, Thank you for your fast reply. the bread(wholemeal)mentioned in my previous question, has these ingredients: wholemeal flour,wheat flour, gluten, sugar, and vegetable oil. Thank you.

Ps. I live in Malta
.

Ossie-Sharon 12 years ago

Hi, mandel76. There might be some refined flour in there (the “wheat flour”), but overall it is probably not a bad choice. Baking your own bread usually produces the best results, but not everyone has time! Here is a link to links that you might find helpful http://www.greentrademalta.com/links.php.

mandel76 12 years ago

Hi, Sharon
Thank you for your fast reply. I live in Malta. the bread(wholemeal)have wholemeal flour, wheat flour, gluten, sugar, and
vegetable oil. Well, hope that its ok, if not, then I have to bake my own bread. Waiting for your comments. Thanks

Apriumben 12 years ago

Experiment no. 1 – Quite late at night so had to rush this in time to taste before bed…

tip1: a 400g loaf usually wants 1 tsp salt. As this was only 300g ish I decided on 1/2 tsp salt – could have gone slightly higher

tip2: put on favourite TV soap, music or radio program before you start – remote control doesn’t like floury hands!

Used 200g wholemeal flour, 100g raw porridge oats, 1/2 tsp salt, splash of olive oil, 7g dried yeast, small handfull sesame seeds and nigella seeds to try and give flavour missing form having less salt. about 250ml lukewarm water

method: mix dry ingredients in large bowl, add desert spoon olive oil and start slowly adding water whilst squidging the mixture with the other hand – try and keep one hand clean. keep adding water until you have a firm but manageable dough. once it has stuck together enough to take out, you can clean your hand if you want to then (as it should stick to itself from now on, not much to your hands) and knead for 6 – 8 minutes. This is where watching the TV comes in handy.
What I did then was to break off a piece about the size of a small golfball, and put the rest to rise in a covered bowl(an hour would be good, I rushed it at 40 mins). While the rest was rising, I put my hotplate on to heat ( you can use a large heavy frypan etc) and rolled the lump out on a floured surface until it was about 6 – 7″ and quite thin. cook for about 1 min each side on hot plate, pressing down with something flat occasionally to make sure it gets the heat through. Should have brown spots on each side when done where bits have got hotter. cool for a minute and eat. I put hummous on one half, and some stewed apple I was dying to eat on the other side. Both halves tasted lovely. If you leave it too long it will go hard… always best to make the amount you actually want to eat.
Anyway, after rising a bit, I bashed the partially risen mixture in the bowl a couple of times on a flat surface to get rid of any big air bubbles, shaped it and put it into pre-heated HOT oven (say 230 deg centigrade) for 10 minutes to develop the crust, then turned down the heat to about 210 for another 15-20 minutes. Mine didn’t look quite done enough and it is a fairly dense loaf if you don’t leave it long enough to rise, so I left it in another 10 minutes with the oven switched off.
It was too hot really but had a quick taste before bed, should be nice with cottage cheese, humous, or similar without anything else (i.e. no butter or margarine needed).
Going to experiment next with using baking powder instead of yeast for a faster loaf, but have to finish this one first or I’ll end up with a glut of bread – and that’s asking for trouble!

Apriumben 12 years ago

Hi guys,
I’ve been baking my own bread a lot recently, and its been a problem because its too nice and I keep eating it! (Specially with jam or hard cheese)
Now I’ve joined and seen the error of my ways, my challenge is to come up with easy-to-bake bread, rolls and pitta made from whole grain/ whole wheat flours. Binesme’s loaf sounds a good place to start so I’m going to experiment with wholemeal flour mixed with oats …. , might throw in a few seeds for extra flavour. I’ll post back here when I get something which works. Hoping the bread will be tasty enough I don’t need to put bad things on it to enjoy it!

Ossie-Sharon 12 years ago

Hi, Emanuel, and welcome! Wholemeal bread is generally fine. Take a look at the ingredients to make sure only wholemeal flours are used, and that there are no hydrogenated fats added.
In what country are you? Perhaps I can help you find sources of the healthy foods we recommend here.

mandel76 12 years ago

hi, I’m new to trim down club. hi, to everyone my name Emanuel. talking about bread, I could not find such bread in my country, except wholemeal bread. Is this type of bread good for this diet?The bread got only 54 calories per slice. Please, someone let me know. thank you

binesme 12 years ago

the only place that i have found it so fat is Tesco and its not really got a name other than oats, barley and spelt wholegrain loaf, where i have been getting it they charge 1.50 per loaf but they are on special at the moment at 2.00 for two. Zaradoc yes you can get it in the uk that where i am from. hope you find it and enjoy it as much as i do. i even have some of my family eating it now, mind you they probably don’t know it’s better for them lol

Ossie-Sharon 12 years ago

Hi, Zaradoc. Until binesme posts again, the following is a link you may find useful http://www.organico.ie/news/organic-bakery/organico-bakery-price-list. Very reasonable shipping rates, too.

Zaradoc 12 years ago

Can you get this bread in uk? I’m in Northern Ireland and looking a bread to use just starting trim down club
Finding I’m getting information overload and upset that we cannot buy foods in local supermarkets such as Tesco?

Ossie-Sharon 12 years ago

Hi, binesme, and thank YOU for the feedback 🙂 and bread idea. Can you post the name and where you got it so other folks can try it?
Thanks again.

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