Become a Member

Get access to more than 30 brands, premium video, exclusive content, events, mapping, and more.

Already have an account? Sign In

Become a Member

Get access to more than 30 brands, premium video, exclusive content, events, mapping, and more.

Already have an account? Sign In

Brands

Recipes

Nutty for Nuts

Learn how to incorporate more nuts into your gluten-free diet for better flavor, variety, and nutrition.

Get full access to Outside Learn, our online education hub featuring in-depth nutrition, fitness and adventure courses, and more than 2,000 instructional videos when you sign up for Outside+..

Savory Pecan Flat
Bread Rounds
Makes 15 flat bread rounds

This nut-based baked good serves nicely as a snack, an hors d’oeuvre topped with olive tapenade, or an accompaniment to soup or salad. The recipe can be doubled for a larger batch.

1½ cups blanched almond flour

¾ tsp. Herbamare herb seasoning salt

½ tsp. gluten-free onion powder

¼ tsp. ground thyme

½ cup very finely chopped pecans

1 large egg

1 Tbs. organic extra virgin olive oil

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Stir together almond flour, seasoning salt, onion powder, thyme, and pecans in large mixing bowl.
  2. Whisk egg in smaller bowl, until frothy. Add oil, and whisk again. Pour egg-oil mixture into dry ingredients, and stir until dough is well blended.
  3. Line 14- by 10-inch stainless steel baking sheet with parchment paper. Drop heaping tablespoons of dough on parchment paper, allowing at least 1½ inches between each mound.
  4. Place another piece of parchment paper over dough. Roll over parchment paper-covered dough with rolling pin until each mound is roughly 1/8-inch thick.
  5. Remove top piece of parchment paper. Smooth edges of each round with hands. Bake in oven 10 minutes.
  6. Flip each flat bread over with spatula, allow to cool, and serve or store

PER SERVING: 103 CAL; 3 G PROT; 9 G TOTAL FAT (1 G SAT FAT); 3 G CARB; 14 MG CHOL; 120 MG SOD; 2 G FIBER; 1 G SUGARS

Looking for a way to make your diet richer in nutrients and flavor? Try using more of nature’s nutritional powerhouses – nuts and seeds. These tiny morsels pack huge nutritional punches. This month, we’ll focus on nuts. Look for my column on seeds in the September issue of Better Nutrition.

Research shows that eating nuts regularly confers many health benefits, including reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and macular degeneration. Nuts are also rich in fiber, vitamin E, and various minerals, such as heart-healthy potassium and magnesium. Yet people often avoid nuts because they think they’re fattening. Studies suggest otherwise: people actually lose weight better on nut-rich diets, and those who eat nuts are leaner than those who don’t.

If you find yourself bingeing on nuts, you may have an allergy-addiction-a strange phenomenon in which people crave and continue to eat the very food to which they are allergic. Nuts are a common food allergen, so be sure to avoid any to which you are sensitive. If you’re sensitive to one type, try others. Here are some tips to help you incorporate more nuts in your diet:

  • Eat nuts as snacks. A source of fat, protein, carbs, and fiber, nuts can help stabilize lagging blood sugar levels between meals. Carry almonds or Brazil nuts in your pocket, purse, or briefcase to nosh on when you need them. Or serve macadamia nuts, peanuts (which, technically are not nuts, but legumes), or pistachios at parties. Choose raw or dry roasted without any other ingredients. If you’re carbohydrate-sensitive, beware of cashews: they’re the highest-carb nut next to chestnuts.
  • Use nuts as toppers or ingredients. Small amounts of nuts on top of or mixed into vegetable dishes, salads, or stir-fries can give regular fare some gourmet flavor. Think green beans amandine, Waldorf salad (with walnuts, apples, and celery), stuffing with pecans or walnuts, or Chinese stir-fries with cashews.
  • Spread nut butter around. Almond butter and peanut butter are the two most common types, but cashew butter and cashew-macadamia butter are available too. Some companies, such as Artisana and Futters Nut Butters, make pecan and walnut butters. Spread them on gluten-free bread or crackers, apple slices, or celery sticks.
  • Bake with nut flour. If you are sensitive to grains or simply want a substitute for rice flour from time to time, almond flour, hazelnut flour, and coconut flour-all available from Bob’s Red Mill-are three alternatives.

Allergaroo Gluten-Free Meals for Kids

DID YOU KNOW?
Brazil nut kernels usually break when removed from the shell, but they will come out whole if you freeze the nuts for 24 hours before cracking.

If you’re weary of reading labels and scouring shelves for gluten-free fare your kids will eat, you’ll love Allergaroo meals for kids from Allergy Friendly Foods LLC. Developed by a mom who had trouble finding appropriate foods for her child with food allergies, these meals are free of the eight most common food allergens-gluten, milk, soy, peanuts, tree nuts, eggs, fish, and shellfish. Simply pop a pouch of Spaghetti, Chili Mac, or Spyglass Noodles in the microwave for 1 minute, and you’ve got a convenient, great-tasting, gluten-free meal your child will love.