Silk Nog
Silk is my favorite brand of alternative milk and coffee creamer. They also make a great tasting soy eggnog that is rich and creamy. You can sprinkle cinnamon, nutmeg or pumpkin pie spice on top for a festive drink.
So Delicious Coconut Milk Holiday Nog
Made with coconut milk, this eggnog is also rich and creamy. It is a little sweeter than Silk because of the coconut and is a great option if you are avoiding soy.
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/gluten-and-dairy-free-appetizers
http://(https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/vegan-cheese-not-dairy-crack/
I reviewed ranch and blue cheese dressing in http://(https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/dairy-free-ranch-and-blue-cheese-dressings/2/). My favorites are:
New Ranch Dressing Reviews
Walden
The dressing is made with vinegar, lemon juice and sour cream flavoring, which it tastes like.
Sir Kensington’s Ranch
The dressing is made with sunflower oil, vinegar, egg yolks, coconut sugar and dill weed. The dressing is super tangy and has a strong dill taste. It would be better on fish as a tartar sauce.
Tessemae Ranch and Cilantro Lime Ranch
Both flavors contain sunflower oil, egg yolks, lemon juice and vinegar. The ranch is tangy and tastes like real ranch dressing and the cilantro lime has a great citrus flavor and is my new favorite ranch dressing. Both are great as salad dressing or dip.
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/gluten-and-dairy-free-mac-n-cheese
McCormick Simply Better Turkey Gravy
Most turkey gravy is made by mixing turkey juices with flour. This gravy comes in a 12 oz. ready to serve carton. It contains cornstarch, potato starch, and rice flour in place of wheat flour. It has a great turkey gravy flavor and texture, being smooth and thick.
Not Reviewed
McCormick Gluten Free Turkey Gravy – this is a packet to be mixed with water. While Simply Better Turkey Gravy is dairy free, this is not, containing buttermilk powder. Both are made by the same company and emphasize the importance of reading product ingredients.
Krusteaz Gluten Free Honey Cornbread and Muffin Mix
Although made with corn, some cornbread mixes are combined with flour. This brand uses white and yellow cornmeal, millet and sorghum. You mix it with vegetable oil and 1 egg. While the recipe calls for 1 cup of milk, I used cashew milk, but you can use any alternative milk. The honey goes well with the strong corn taste and it is gritty like traditional cornbread. I topped it with vegan butter – Earth Balance is my favorite.
Whole Foods 365 Dinner Rolls
Made with tapioca starch, potato starch, buckwheat, rice and cornstarch, the rolls are sold frozen. Once baked, the inside is soft while the outside remains crunchy. They taste great served warm with vegan butter. The rolls can also be used as slider buns.
Gillian’s Gluten Free Home-Style Stuffing
Made with white rice flour and tapioca starch, I found nothing home-style about this stuffing. It is very mushy and bland.
Aleia’s Savory Stuffing
The stuffing lives up to its name and is very savory with a great blend of herbs and spices. It is made with rice flour, potato starch and tapioca flour. The recipe on the box calls for onion, celery, carrot, butter or butter substitute, and chicken or vegetable stock. It came out fluffy like traditional stuffing. I’m glad I can have stuffing at Thanksgiving again. It’s also soy free.
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/snack-cakes-and-donuts/2/
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/whoopie-and-other-pies/
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/daiya-cheezecake/
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/what-do-you-want-a-cookie/
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/dairy-free-ice-cream-whipped-cream-and-cone/2/
https://liveglutenanddairyfree.com/dairy-free-not-non-dairy-coffee-creamers/
I hope this post helps you have a gluten and dairy free Thanksgiving with loved ones. And may the allergy friendly foods become new traditions, alongside turkey and cranberry sauce.
Swanson created the first tv dinner, modeled after Thanksgiving. It consisted of turkey, gravy, cornbread stuffing, whipped potatoes, peas, and carrots. It sold for 98 cents in 1954.
While the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is famous, it wasn’t the first Thanksgiving parade. That honor goes to The Philadelphia Thanksgiving Day Parade, which debuted in 1920.
“If you stand in the meat section at the grocery store long enough, you start to get mad at turkeys. There’s turkey ham, turkey bologna, turkey pastrami. Someone needs to tell the turkey, ‘Man, just be yourself.'” Mitch Hedberg
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