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Рецепт Udi’s – Sample Package…put to good use
by Kate Chan

So now that school is out – I have a bit more time to catch up on my posts. Honestly, I’m so far behind it’s ridiculous. I’m sorry to fall behind and lose touch with a few people via the blog. That’s life with two working parents and little people. :D

Last month, Udi’s sent a sample box of incredible proportions to me. Honestly, I was super surprised and wondering what the best way to taste-test and share out would be. I decided to bring the goodies to work (high school) to share them with my newly diagnosed students and a few old-timers. No, not any adults. Just “old timers” as in now my 15+ year old students who have been gluten intolerant or have had their diagnosis for several years if not since they were babes. I don’t have any pictures because I did not want to compromise the privacy of my students. Instead, i have used the images from either my cell phone (of the box…and it’s blurry- SORRY!) or from the Udi’s website. The reviews are from my students.

I don’t buy so much pre-packaged foods. Not that there are not good choices in the gluten-free world any more but more because my budget does not allow for the expense. However there are a few things that I do enjoy when money allows:

Pasta (Jovial or Schar’s)

Rudi’s tortillas (o.m.gosh good when torched a bit over an open flame…LOL),

Glutino Yogurt Pretzels (also in my Udi’s box)

and now FRESH Udi’s burger buns. They were a hit!

Included in the sample box were the following:

I gave items to the students to take home and try, eat for lunch (I have a gluten-free designated toaster in my classroom) or have at break. Kids tended to just eat the items at their desk (unless it was sandwich/bun related). I tasted several of the items myself (Mighty Bagel, Brownie Bites, Ancient Grain granola bars, toaster pastry, bagel chips and pretzels (both kinds, of course). Yes, I took one for the team. :D Here’s our collective review of the items: (NOTE: all images (but the blurry one) belong to the company Udi’s or Glutino and are used with permission.)

Udi’s breads: cinnamon-raisin, sandwich, hamburger buns and hot dog buns

REVIEW: Students loved the FRESH quality (and I agree!) of the breads. Maybe because we tend to get Udi’s breads here out of the freezer at the markets, this was a different experience. The breads were soft and moist and much to the surprise of most – they didn’t need to be toasted! Some felt the sandwich bread was just “meh” (I’m quoting here…lol). But the hamburger and hot dog buns were big hits. Once student even marched herself down to the cafeteria to see if they would sell her a plain (no bun) burger with cheese. (No luck for her there as all the burgers are already on buns in the cafeteria.) I brought a hot dog bun and burger bun home for a family taste-test. I didn’t think my kids would like it (they peel their buns off just to eat the cheese off the burgers or just the hot dog/brat). However my girls LOVED the buns too. GRADE: A (if fresh); B- (if frozen)

Udi’s bagels: Mighty Bagels and Everything Inside

REVIEW: These were good. (I liked my Mighty Bagel toasted and slathered with peanut butter.) Students thought they were HUGE and more like reshaped bread than the bagels she used to eat (ahhhh…the newbie with only 6 months under her belt of gluten-free has no idea how she has been spared the dense gluten-free chews of years gone by….LOL0. One student checked the calorie count on the side of the bag and freaked out. She ate half a bagel (Everything Inside) and declared it delicious but that it has better flavor when toasted. Another student (not gluten-free) overheard us talking about toasted bagels and informed us that you are not supposed to eat bagels toasted (ha!). We offered taste tests. He caved and agreed. Better toasted. OVERALL GRADE: A-

Udi’s granola: Blueberry Cashew & Cranberry Granola

REVIEW: Two students took these cereals home to gluten free family. Both students said the granola was good but that they weren’t the granola-for-cereal type eaters. However, their gluten free moms LOVED the cereals (one with hemp milk and the other just plain as a trail mix/snack). These are definitely crunchy with some big bites, so I see why she chose to use it as a trail mix/dry snack. Both moms like the fact that they could find whole grain goodness in a gluten free form with great flavor. OVERALL GRADE: A

Udi’s sweets: Brownie Bites & Snickerdoodles

REVIEW: These treats were enjoyed during a break by several kids (gluten free and not). All of the kids said they would not choose to eat another snickerdoodle. They thought the cookies tasted odd and were a bit doughy. The Dark Chocolate Brownie Bites were a hit with some and another miss with others. The semi-doughy and dense brownies were a hit with kids who like their brownies most and dense (and “barely cooked” were the words of one student). Other students felt the brownies were far too undercooked and “pasty” for them. They debated the grade a lot for this one. Since they felt there were other treats out that they fit their “sweet tooth” better, this grade suffered. OVERALL GRADE: C+

Udi’s muffins: Vanilla & Blueberry

REVIEW: I think the kids (mine and the students) would have liked to have eaten just the tops off all the vanilla muffins. The sweet topping just about sent them sailing. The muffins were good – moist (moreso than the frozen variety we can get here) and delicious/flavorful. High school kids said they wish the muffins would come as mini-muffins for easier packing/snacking at school. I think I have to agree. The muffins were huge and we (my girls and I) didn’t finish ours. GRADE: B+

Udi’s granola Bars: Ancient Grain

REVIEW: Okay…. these are good. I like semi-soft, slightly sweet granola bars. The students liked these too but reminded me that they were “healthy”. They are sweet though – 10grams of sugar per bar/serving. Honestly, I could have eaten more than one. I put two of these in my desk drawer for those days when I lose my mind and forget lunch or under plan. Honestly, these might make the purchase on a rotation list for me. I will stash a couple in the car for days when I’m out running around with the kids. (Seems I always plan their meals but forget my own.) GRADE: A

Udi’s pizza crusts

REVIEW: I used these to make cheese pizza for the kids one night. They loved the crust (and hated my choice of cheese: straight mozzarella). I did brush the bottom of the crust with a bit of olive oil and put it on a preheated HOT HOT pan to make the bottom crunch up a bit (like a pizza stone would…. but alas, mine broke ages ago). They are labeled “thin and crispy”. They are thin. But they will need your help to make them crispy. Overall, they were decent, but not sure they would make our precious purchase list. However, if our kids were gluten free and the rest of us were not? It just might. Since I am gluten free – our house is gluten free (minus the stash of kid crackers/one loaf of bread) for all things baked/cooking if from scratch. Since I would end up making one pizza for the whole family, it would be a bit larger than these crusts are. The crusts are perfect for 2-3 little people (with an adult helping….thanks, Dad, for cleaning up the errant cheese pizza slices that were eschewed). GRADE: B+

Glutino: Strawberry Toaster Pastry

REVIEW: Personally, it’s been way more than my years of gluten free living since I’ve eaten a toaster pastry. Even then I think I ate a different brand of breakfast toaster thingy – but the ones I like were filled with egg/sausage and were also slightly sweet. (How does that work? Sweet sausage? Ah, how little the pre-gluten free me really knew about the things in my food!) A couple of students pocketed these toaster goodies for later – and did not toast them to eat them. They said they wish the pastry had more filling as in “I wish it were EXPLODING with strawberry goodness…but it really wasn’t”. Both the “ate them toasted” and “ate them raw” camps thought they were a bit chewy and wanted me to be sure to mention that one should definitely have a beverage on hand. Another student said that she liked “feeling normal” in class when she pulled this out of her bag for a snack. She said often kids ask her what she is eating when it “looks obviously different”. Not a single question when cracking out the toaster pastry = inconspicuousness. This is a golden attribute sometimes – but especially when you are simply eating because you are hungry. And you’re a teenager (or me….LOL). And you really are eating just to eat, not to engage is conversations about digestive ailments. :D GRADE: B+

Glutino: Original Bagel Chips

REVIEW: ”These things are ….. hard! Well…not like ‘hard-hard’ but like “Wow. Crunchy, dried toastette hard!” And yes. My student was right. These little toasted crackers are crunchy and hard. They reminded me a bit of seriously oversized croutons from the salads of my youth. You know, the ones that could float on your pea soup for quite a while before becoming soggy? Yes, these are those. Just bigger. Since I didn’t really bring a bunch of extra goodies to school to have the taste-test, the kids and I thought these might be nice with a tomato-basil bruchetta. Personally, I’m going to try some for an appetizer for a party we are having soon with goat cheese and Thai sweet chili sauce, another topped with a cream cheese and salmon, etc. You get the idea. Nice little crudité bases. They have other flavors – garlic parmesan and cinnamon-sugar. The garlic-parmesan interests me the most. The cinnamon-sugar one reminds me of some vague memory of eating crunchy toast-like things that were dry as a kid. I cannot remember what they were…but I remember the dry crunch with the slightly sweet cinnamon-sugar flavor. (Anyone know what I’m talking about?) KID GRADE: D (Because they would just never imagine themselves cracking these out for snack time.) ADULT GRADE: B+ (Because of the potential there to build on!)

Glutino: yogurt-covered pretzels & regular pretzels

REVIEW: Look out. These guys (the yogurt covered ones) are dangerous for your waistline. I don’t know why – but I love them. Too much, actually. I think I ate a half a bag before I realized it. I went out about bought two bags for students to try. And they didn’t like them as much as I did. I think I had a sugar-high overload and crashed after eating these…but that is what happens when you convince yourself that it is REALLY YOGURT and PRETZEL. Ha! Overall, these guys are a super sweet treat and they will make the list of possibly purchase for us. Especially if I am on the road or packing a lunch. That way I can pack a FEW in my lunchbox. Honest to goodness, if I pack the bag, I *will* eat it. Students with a sweet tooth (self-professed) thought these were great but they also thought they were a bit too sweet. To make up for it, everyone was munching on a combo bite: one yogurt-covered pretzel + one regular pretzel = perfection. I sent the rest of the pretzels in little baggies off with several kids for the day. We mixed them half and half. One student even added his raisin and peanut mix. Another snack-on-the-run. GRADE: B+

One thing was clear, Udi’s and Glutino have truly heard the gluten free market demands: soft breads, versatile treats, nutritious ingredients (those granola bars and cereals!) and good. Simply good food. May might be Celiac awareness month, but the truth is, those of us who live this life are educators about our life and gluten free living everyday. Just this week a friend called telling me that she/her husband/son are going to “go gluten free for a week” to help alleviate his intestinal/digestive trouble. (A week to clear up digestive/intestinal stuff???!!? Don’t worry – she’s hip, she’s reading, she’s asking questions, and we are talking.)

Her first question was “Do you have any brand of Gluten Free Bread that you love?”

Love? Ummm…no. Not really. At least not one that you buy in a store. I told her that she should most likely start by not just trying to replace their gluten-filled menus with gluten-free filled “same” because it (1) won’t be “the same” and (2) it will bust her budget. And then it hit me… you know… the Udi’s bread we ate? That was pretty good and if I were starting out on the gluten free diet again? That’s a great place to start.

THANK YOU Udi’s and Glutino for the sample package. My students and I had fun eating “special food” with other students in the mix. It is great fun to have something special to share with the kids who watch dozens of cookies, bagels, and other snacks be passed about on campus everyday. The rest of the class began asking great questions about the diet and several more talked about parents, uncles/aunts, cousins, friends, etc who are gluten intolerant or have Celiac Disease. Sharing in such a public forum certainly brought about a lot of dialogue and awareness.

Thank you for sharing with us! I am very grateful for the chance to share and gift your goodies to students/families who are starting out, in need of help/advice/food, etc. You (Udi’s and Glutino) have helped some families more than you know with your timely donations.

Happy Gluten Free Life, all -

Kate

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