My sons can be picky eaters and some of the glutin free things they refused to eat (the bread for example).
Do any of you have experience with this diet? Did you see any benefits? How did you get your kids to eat some of the foods if they didn't like it?
My son is still basically on the "all-beige" diet, I've just subbed everything.
As far as the bread goes, you might need to try several brands to find one they'll eat. If they'll do bread machine bread, the Bob's Red Mill mix is almost indistinguishable, in my opinion it's the one that comes the closest to being regular bread of all we've tried. We sometimes buy the little loaves of Ener-G at the health food store.
Rice pasta, rice bread. Rice or soy cheese. Potato chips and corn chips there are acceptable mainstream brands. Rice milk (almond milk is really tasty but he's allergic to nuts). Rice cereals. I am amazed at what they do with rice.
Some of the kids can't tolerate corn or soy either. So then you're really like "what's left to eat?"
Our biggest hurdles: Milk. He doesn't like rice milk so pretty much he's quit drinking it altogether. Which is not a big deal since he wouldn't have been getting any of the calcium or other vitamins anyway. That's part of the reason he gets supplements. Soy milk would work but I think we have a soy problem too, so I don't give it to him very often.
Cheese. He was resistive at first. But. What I did (and I've read of other parents doing this) is that I just didn't buy any cheese for a week or so. ("Whoops Mommy forgot to buy cheese! I'll get some next time.") Then when I did buy the rice stuff, he was so happy to get cheese and his taste buds had forgotten a bit, he ate it no problem. That's how I did it, and it did work. Did the same thing with the bread.
One thing I noticed is that my son likes things to look the same as the old food. So for example, the cheese. He wasn't overly enthusiastic, but then I found sliced "American cheese" in the individual wrappers. They "look" like regular Kraft slices. They taste
awful but they looked right, so he ate them. Or they sell bags of shredded cheese. It "looks" the same as the real stuff. If I'm not careful now, he'll made melted cheese sandwiches (using the microwave) when I'm not watching and eat the whole package of cheese and most of the little loaf of bread-- which uh, is about $8 worth of food.
The cereal and chips, I just switched out to different brands. EnviroKids makes good "kid's" cereals that look like mainstream brands. And my son didn't care if he got Stax or Doritos, so long as he had some chips to eat.
The pasta he'll eat the DeBoles that they sell at Wal-Mart, but IIRC ecki's daughter only eats the Tinkinyada. You'd have to do some experimenting. Some of them are closer to "real" than others.
edited to add: if you go to gfcfdiet.com, to the bottom to the "directory", there is a massive list of food there. Cruise thru it, there are really tons of options.