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The Gluten-free Cookbook for Kids
The Gluten-free Cookbook for Kids
Nov 15, 2024 12:37 AM

Author:Adriana Rabinovich

The Gluten-free Cookbook for Kids

Having to follow a gluten-free diet can be a daunting prospect for children and young adults - they feel isolated at a time when their friends are enjoying everything from bread, pizza and pasta, to crisps, cakes and biscuits. Yet with supermarkets now stocking many gluten-free ingredients, you can make versatile, healthy and enticing gluten-free meals that will appeal to all the family. Based on recipes created for the author's own daughter, The Gluten-free Cookbook for Kids includes: Over 100 recipes from crispy chicken nuggets and quick pizza to birthday cupcakes and peanut butter cookies; Top Ten kids' favourite dishes; A list of store cupboard essentials; Creative ideas for special treats, healthy snacks and lunchboxes; Top tips for eating out, travelling and school trips.

The Gluten-free Cookbook for Kids will solve many of your mealtime dilemmas and help your child to learn what they can and can't eat. An essential guide for any gluten-free family.

Reviews

An important step forward in helping people prepare and serve safe and nutritious food. With easy to follow recipes

—— Giorgio Locatelli

Plenty of simple recipes, packed lunch ideas and practical tips for looking after a child with coeliac disease

—— Coeliac UK

A very useful book, simple to read and and with valuable advice

—— Dr Muftah Eltumi, Consultan Paediatric Gastroenterologist

A classic of the genre

—— Irish Independent

Miss Lawson is the Thinking Person’s Cook. She tells stories, she explains why things must be the way she says they must be... enlightenment and sensual pleasure

—— Jeanette Winterson , The Times

A gloriously sensual wander through the possibilities of food. The recipes read more like seduction than instruction

—— Independent

I love Nigella Lawson’s writing and I love her recipes

—— Delia Smith

Her prose is as nourishing as her recipes

—— Salman Rushdie , Observer

Nigella Lawson is one of the best and most influential of British food writers

—— Ruth Rogers, co-author of The River Café Cookbook

The domestic bible for the millennium generation

—— Spectator

Nigella Lawson is, whisks down, Britain's funniest and sexiest food writer, a raconteur who is delicious whether detailing every step on the way towards a heavenly roast chicken and root vegetable couscous or explaining why 'cooking is not just about joining the dots'

—— Vogue

I’m inspired by Nigella Lawson’s How to Eat… It’s about a lifestyle and an attitude

—— Kathryn Parsons, tech entrepreneur , Harper's Bazaar

[Nigella] brings you into her life and tells you how she thinks about food, how meals come together in her head...and how she cooks for family and friends... A breakthrough

—— New York Times

How to Eat is suffused with the idea that eating a good meal – together, with another, or on your own – is healing and renewing, no matter how simple the meal, no matter how difficult the circumstances

—— Diana Henry , Sunday Telegraph

Two decades on, the task of trusting our own palates to tell us what to eat has become more complicated than ever… There has never been a better time to return to the sanity of this book and its call to come to our senses in the kitchen

—— Bee Wilsom , Guardian

Only one [cookbook] among my collection could be described as a true friend

—— Ellen E Jones , Evening Standard

This is a book to reach for when hastily organising a last-minute dinner with friends; contemplating a store-cupboard meal for one; trying to tempt a fussy toddler; or when planning a leisurely weekend lunch, when you have nothing to do but stir a pot… Nigella's back catalogue has steered us through many a social situation

—— SheerLuxe

The recipes are stories as much as instructions… while there are ingredients lists, the words run on like a well-ordered stream of consciousness

—— UK Press Syndication

This is a book to be read cover to cover, like a novel. Buy yourself two copies: one for reading and one for use in the kitchen

—— Constance Craig Smith , Daily Mail, **Books of the Year**

A brilliant book… If you haven’t discovered Nigella’s very first cookbook yet, there is something missing from your bookshelf. I’m so evangelical about this book that if I find any of my friends don’t own it, I generally buy them a copy at the next available opportunity.

—— April Harris

It’s the first cookbook I ever properly read, and I loved it on three levels: for the quality of the writing, for the way it encourages you not to follow a recipe slavishly but to be bold, experiment and explore variations as you cook – and for the way Nigella captures the magic that happens when people sit down and eat together

—— Karen Barnes , Delicious

I’m inspired by Nigella Lawson’s How to Eat… It’s about a lifestyle and an attitude

—— Kathryn Parsons , Harper's Bazaar

This is a book I constantly return to, as reference in the kitchen or just to read for the sheer pleasure of Nigella’s writing. There are so many people telling us how to eat these days that this book, ironically, feels like a non-dictatorial return to common sense

—— Yotam Ottolenghi , Waitrose Weekend

Far from the Tree is a landmark, revolutionary book… Andrew Solomon plumbs his topic thoroughly, humanely, and in a compulsively readable style that makes the book as entertaining as it is illuminating.

—— Jennifer Egan

One of the most extraordinary books I have read in recent times – brave, compassionate and astonishingly humane. Solomon approaches one of the oldest questions – how much are we defined by nature versus nurture? – and crafts from it a gripping narrative. Through his stories, told with such masterful delicacy and lucidity, we learn how different we all are, and how achingly similar. I could not put this book down.

—— Siddhartha Mukherjee

A passionate and affecting work that will shake up your preconceptions and leave you in a better place. It’s a book everyone should read… there’s no one who wouldn’t be a more imaginative and understanding parent – or human being – for having done so… breathtaking reading.

—— Julie Myerson , New York Times

Andrew Solomon reminds us that nothing is more powerful in a child’s development than the love of a parent. This remarkable new book introduces us to mothers and fathers – many in circumstances the rest of us can hardly imagine – who are making their children feel special, no matter what challenges come their way.

—— President Bill Clinton

"Parenting," writes Andrew Solomon in Far from the Tree, "is no sport for perfectionists." It's an irony of the book, 10 years in the making and his first since The Noonday Demon, that by militating against perfectionism, he only leaves the reader in greater awe of the art of the achievable. The book starts out as a study of parents raising "difficult" children, and ends up as an affirmation of what it is to be human.

—— Emma Brockes , Guardian

The first thing you should know about Andrew Solomon’s new book, Far From the Tree, is that it’s a monumental work. This is a masterpiece of non-fiction, the culmination of a decade’s worth of research and writing, and it should be required reading for psychologists, teachers, and above all, parents. Far From the Tree is a stunning work of scholarship and compassion.

—— USA Today

Knotty, gargantuan and lionhearted… Mr. Solomon’s first chapter, entitled 'Son', is as masterly a piece of writing as I’ve come across all year. It combines his own story with a taut and elegant précis of this book’s arguments. It is required reading.

—— Dwight Garner , New York Times

Far-reaching, original, fascinating - Andrew Solomon's investigation of many of the most intense challenges that parenthood can bring challenges us all to reexamine how we understand human difference. Perhaps the greatest gift of this monumental book, full of facts and full of feelings, is that it constantly makes one think, and think again.

—— Philip Gourevitch

An informative and moving book that raises profound issues regarding the nature of love, the value of human life and the future of humanity.

—— Kirkus (starred review)

Solomon is a storyteller of great intimacy and ease… [He] creates something of enduring warmth and beauty: a quilt, a choir.

—— Kate Tuttle , Boston Globe

Andrew Solomon provides us with an unrivalled educational experience about identity groups in our society, an experience that is filled with insight, empathy and intelligence. Reading Far from the Tree is a mind-opening experience.

—— Eric Kandel, author of The Age of Insight and winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine

Solomon is in many ways the perfect writer for the subject – nuanced, thorough, humane, and a gifted stylist.

—— Nathan Heller , New Yorker

Far From the Tree is a book of extraordinary ambition… From a writer known primarily as a historian of sadness, this sweeping tribute to the joys of parental love can be startling and ecstatic.

—— San Francisco Chronicle

A ground-breaking book

—— The Economist

Brought to life by its intimate domestic voices, many of them people who ended up falling in love with children they never knew they wanted

—— Economist

A life-changing book

—— Irish Examiner

Nobody could read this extraordinary, moving book and not feel enlightened, but above all enlarged, by it.

—— Sam Leith , Spectator

I'd suggest this be made compulsory reading for an couple considering having a baby... This is a remarkable work: moving but never bathetic, challenging in parts but always worth the effort. I'd call it extraordinary - if only Solomon would let me.

—— Rosamund Urwin , Evening Standard

A book brimming with poignancy

—— Dominic Lawson , Sunday Times

A fascinating examination of the accommodation of difference

—— Emma Brockes , Guardian

You don't so much read Far from the Tree as cohabit with it; its stories take up residence in your head and heart, messily unpack themselves and refuse to leave

—— Tim Adams , Observer

A generous, humane and — in complex and unexpected ways — compassionate book about what it means to be a parent

—— Julie Myerson , Scotsman

The book is about people and their experiences and it is rich with their strategies, smiles and sadnesses

—— David Aaronovitch , The TImes

Solomon writes movingly of the resources of support and empathy that he found among communities of the deaf, dwarfs, transgender children and people with Down’s syndrome

—— Jane Shilling

A catalogue of astonishing tenacity and unexpected joy that inevitably expands both our sympathies and sense of wonder at the immense variety of human experiences

—— Laurence Scott , Financial Times

This is a remarkable work: moving but never bathetic, challenging in parts, but always worth the effort

—— Rosamund Urwin , Evening Standard

Nobody could read this extraordinary, moving book and not feel enlightened, but above all enlarged by it

—— Sam Leith , Spectator

Far From the Tree is the most important book I’ve ever read. It is a masterpiece of research; giving an impressive insight into human relationships and our tolerance of those who are different. If everyone read this book the world would be a better place

—— Farm Lane Books

A monumental and generous-hearted book, balanced between the universal and the particular, and gorgeously observed

—— Deborah Cohen , Literary Review

Solomon’s compassionate study of these dozen loves that are, and are not, like each other, illuminates not so much the heroism of difficult kinds of love as the adaptability of every kind

—— Siobhan Garrigan , The Tablet

A triumphant celebration of the power of parental love

—— Maggie Fergusson , Intelligent Life

Forces] the reader to meditate on a number of wrenching, often heart-breaking aspects of existence. And to mediate as well on questions of stigma and prejudice, callousness and cruelty, the widespread and extraordinary intolerance of human diversity, and the horrors that those attitudes and behaviours heap on the heads of those whose lives are already extraordinarily difficult, and on the head of those who love and care for them

—— Andrew Scull , Times Literary Supplement
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