Thanks Tex, Joe, Mary Beth and Polly. You must be right about the beans, Tex. The weekend I decided to try them again, I just waited around for the big explosion, and nothing happened. In fact, my stomach and gut seemed extra calm. Joe, my doctor has a sign in her office that says "The light at the end of the tunnel has been temporarily turned off." I think it's supposed to be funny, but when you have MC it sure feels that way! It is wonderful when you start to see that glimmer again. I'm hoping and praying that your light will soon be glowing again.
Polly, I haven't posted any recipes because I just kind of ad lib on things. I have a cupboard full of spices and for Mexican seasonings I have used cayenne, chili powder, oregano, cumin, salt and pepper according to taste. We usually put these in our salsa along with tomatoes, onion, green onion, green chilies, clilantro, and jalapeno. When I make tamales, I season the meat with Rosarita red enchilada sauce and add seasonings. My family also likes this meat on bread for sandwiches. I have found the Rosarita sauce to be safe with no reactions. My family loves enchiladas and I use this sauce for those also. I use hamburger, corn torillas, onion, and the Rosarita sauce. I put cheese in theirs, and make me a batch without. Rosarita started in Mesa, Arizona where I grew up and I remember where their building was near my aunt's house. Beatrice foods bought them out at some point, so they are now based in California I think. As far as the rice recipes, I don't know if it is actually a recipe. The rice I use for breakfast is completely different from my "dinner" rice. For breakfast, I use sweet rice or glutinous rice (it doesn't have gluten-it's gooey). I get it at a Chinese market. Just before I go to bed, I put 1 cup in the crockpot and add about 6 cups of water. In the morning, it is the perfect consistency. It's like a porridge. You can sweeten it, add fruit, etc. It's a lot like eating oatmeal or cream of wheat. The Chinese have a name for it, but I can't think of it right now. My son likes to add coconut milk to his when he cooks it. When I do my dinner rice, I just use regular white rice and the usual equivalents (2 cups rice-2 cups water), but I add a little more liquid, maybe 1/2 to 1 cup more. I put it all in the crockpot overnight and it comes out perfect the next morning. I'll pay closer attention next time I do it so I can be more accurate on the amounts. If you think it's worth posting in the recipe section, I'll figure out the exact amounts and post it.
For those who aren't sensitive to corn, Masa makes a wonderful breading for fried foods. I've breaded fish in it and I think I actually prefer it to the wheat flour. In fact, my husband was watching a cooking show on the Food Channel recently and whoever the chef was said he had discovered how wonderful Masa is to use for breading. I told him that I was taking credit for that discovery

If I ever get to eat chicken again, it would make great fried chicken. As far as bread, I use a bread machine with a flour mix recipe that I got from the book Gluten-Free Baking Classics for the Bread Machine by Annalise G. Roberts. I mixed up a huge batch and keep it in my 2nd refrigerator in the garage. Like Gloria, I have a grain mill and can grind my own grains and rice. This bread tastes as good as "real" bread to me. My newest adventure is yogurt. I've bought a yogurt maker and sent away for dairy-free yogurt start (expensive, but should go far). I'm going to use coconut milk and see what I come up with. If anyone has done this, I'd appreciate any advice. I haven't checked the recipe section yet, I need to do that. I love hummus, too, Polly. That's on my list to experment with in the near future. All this trial and error takes so much time and when it backfires, there's the recovery time to deal with. I have to wait until the weekends or when I "track-off" a few weeks from my year round school to really experiment so I can keep up at school. Well, I've rambled on again, but hope this will be helpful to others. JoAnn
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. John Wayne