Is going gluten-free the new miracle diet?
Dana Ricci
Gluten became the enemy when people like Jennifer Aniston and Victoria Beckham stopped eating it and Chelsea Clinton handed out gluten-free cake at her wedding. Suddenly, products you ate every day had a big “GLUTEN FREE!” slapped on their packages, and someone somewhere heard that cutting this protein found in wheat, rye and barely out of their diet would make their thighs less jiggly. While you may feel good about ditching Wonder Bread for rice cakes and buying the gluten-free pretzels (for three times the price) instead of good ol’ Snyders, many people who have joined in on one of the top-growing food trends in America are wildly misinformed.
Gluten is truly a menace for those with Celiac Disease, because it damages their intestines, or those who have allergies and intolerances to it. However, avoiding it is more difficult than simply steering clear of the pasta aisle. Try taking a magnifying glass to the ingredients panel of everything. Gluten makes bread light and airy and soups and sauces thicker, so it finds its way into many food items. Special products that normally contain gluten but are made “gluten-free” have to compensate for the lack of this ingredient so they load their products up with extra fat and sugars to avoid having the palpability of chalklike, crumbly bricks. So those gluten free pretzels you bought are actually worse for you than their gluten-stocked twins.
In the end, if cutting out gluten makes you feel better physically, then you may have an intolerance and avoiding it is good for your personal well-being, but not necessarily your pants size.
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