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Danielle Walker's Against All Grain Celebrations: A Year of Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, and Paleo Recipes for Every Occasion [A Cookbook] Hardcover – Illustrated, Sept. 27 2016
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When people adopt a new diet for health or personal reasons, they worry most about the parties, holidays, and events with strong food traditions, fearing their fond memories will be lost along with the newly eliminated food groups. After suffering for years with a debilitating autoimmune disease and missing many of these special occasions herself, Danielle Walker has revived the joy that cooking for holidays can bring in Danielle Walker's Against All Grain Celebrations, a collection of recipes and menus for twelve special occasions throughout the year.
Featuring a variety of birthday cakes, finger foods to serve at a baby or bridal shower, and re-creations of backyard barbecue standards like peach cobbler and corn bread, Danielle includes all of the classics. There’s a full Thanksgiving spread--complete with turkey and stuffing, creamy green bean casserole, and pies--and menus for Christmas dinner; a New Year's Eve cocktail party and Easter brunch are covered, along with suggestions for beverages and cocktails and the all-important desserts. Recipes can be mixed and matched among the various occasions, and many of the dishes are simple enough for everyday cooking. Stunning full-color photographs of every dish make browsing the pages as delightful as cooking the recipes, and beautiful party images provide approachable and creative entertaining ideas.
Making recipes using unfamiliar ingredients can cause anxiety, and while trying a new menu on a regular weeknight leaves some room for error, the meal simply cannot fail when you have a table full of guests celebrating a special occasion. Danielle has transformed her most cherished family traditions into trustworthy recipes you can feel confident serving, whether you’re hosting a special guest with food allergies, or cooking for a crowd of regular grain-eaters.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTen Speed Press
- Publication dateSept. 27 2016
- Dimensions20.4 x 2.74 x 25.37 cm
- ISBN-101607749424
- ISBN-13978-1607749424
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Review
—Daphne Oz, TV host and best-selling author
"Danielle Walker is nothing short of inspiring. Rather than allow autoimmune disease and food limitations to sideline her, she instead tackled them head-on, creating an approach to food that's not only sustainable for her and her family, but also mouthwateringly delicious! Her new collection of special occasion recipes is a treasure trove for anyone---food sensitive or otherwise---who enjoys beautiful food."
—Ree Drummond, #1 New York Times best-selling author of The Pioneer Woman Cooks
“Danielle is a master of her craft and this book is no exception. This is grain-free entertaining at its best and, most importantly, has the whole family in mind so no one is left out of an important celebration.”
—Lisa Leake, #1 New York Times best-selling author of 100 Days of Real Food
“Danielle Walker understands the incredible power that food has to help and to heal. Her inviting, vibrant recipes welcome everyone to the table with generosity and deliciousness. That's something we can all celebrate!”
—Mark Hyman, MD, New York Times best-selling author of Eat Fat, Get Thin
“All of us form memories around food. So when we have to change our diet, it’s easy to fear that we’ll lose our ability to connect and take part in traditions. Danielle Walker understands this so well, and with 125 mouthwatering recipes, she proves that no matter what we eat (or don’t eat), we never have to give up the joy of celebrating with food.”
—Andie Mitchell, New York Times best-selling author of It Was Me All Along and Eating in the Middle
"In 125 recipes, Walker show cooks how to prepare holiday favorites while meeting paleo-style requirements, transforming them into something as treasured as any traditional dish."
—Publishers Weekly
"Gluten- and dairy-free eaters, this is the fall cookbook for you. Walker shows you how to create delicious, comfort food classics—like Thanksgiving stuffing and vanilla birthday cupcakes—without using grains, dairy or gluten."
—People
"Danielle Walker has a grain-free, whole-foods based approach to cooking, and her Whole30 recipes have been longtime favorites of our community. In her new cookbook Celebrations, Danielle provides grain-free, allergy-friendly recipes for celebrating life's milestones and special moments. This cookbook is the perfect compliment to support your food freedom in your life after Whole30, as you enjoy time spent around the table with family and friends."
- Melissa Hartwig, New York Times best-selling author
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Many of my fondest memories are tied to holidays. Most of those memories are woven into the food we enjoy during those special times of the year. I remember being taught how to prepare a Thanksgiving turkey for the first time (accidentally baking it with the bag of giblets inside the cavity!) and baking dozens of cookies from old family recipes with my sister and my mom to hand out to friends during Christmastime. I look forward to reuniting with family and friends at holiday gatherings and congregating around the table to enjoy wonderful food and conversation. I especially love time spent in the kitchen with everyone busily preparing their favorite holiday dishes and later laughing over a glass of wine while cleaning up the mess from the celebration.
When you are forced to alter your diet drastically for the sake of your health, you may understandably fear that your fond memories and traditions will be lost along with the newly eliminated food groups. You may worry that you won’t be able to attend significant gatherings with your family or host a baby shower for a friend without feeling ostracized or, worse, hungry! There is also a deep sense of loss when you can no longer experience the joy that comes from lovingly preparing and serving food to the people you care about. Those fears were once very real to me and left me feeling hopeless. But I have since made it my mission, with my blog and with my books, to break the misconception that you have to live a life of deprivation and alienation when you adopt a new dietary lifestyle.
My initial switch to a grain-free and Paleo diet came after spending many years battling for my life. I devoted months to seeing different specialists in an attempt to find out what was causing my symptoms and was told everything from “You’re a hypochondriac” to “You might have colon cancer.” After dozens of tests and many different doctors, I was ultimately diagnosed at the young age of twenty-two with ulcerative colitis, an incurable autoimmune disease that wrongfully attacks an otherwise healthy colon. I was devastated, and very lost. I was also newly married and had fairy-tale aspirations of having a beautiful family and of following in my mother’s and grandmother’s footsteps by hosting big parties year-round.
All of my doctors told me the same thing about my condition: diet did not cause it, diet cannot prevent it, and diet cannot cure it. So I accepted the myriad prescriptions and went on my way, only to have my symptoms worsen with burgeoning side effects. I spent years in and out of hospitals, incapacitated and on very high doses of medications. I was unable to be a mom to my infant son, and I took medical leave from my job. My sickness ruled my life until I discovered that dietary changes could, in fact, make my symptoms subside. I adopted a Paleo diet, which is based on the types of foods presumed to have been eaten by early humans, before the agricultural revolution changed the way much of what we consume is grown and processed. It consists chiefly of grass-fed or pasture-raised proteins, fish, vegetables, fruit, seeds, nuts, and healthy fats, and it excludes dairy, legumes, grain products, and processed food. Many people who follow this lifestyle see improved blood lipids, weight loss, and a reduction or elimination of the symptoms associated with autoimmune diseases. (For an in-depth account of my health journey and the different stages I went through to find the Paleo diet, read my blog at againstallgrain.com/my-journey or take a look at my first two cookbooks, Against All Grain and Meals Made Simple.)
After overhauling my diet, I spent quite some time avoiding parties and was apprehensive about hosting my own for fear that my guests would not enjoy the type of food I had to prepare. I was embarrassed to be a dinner guest with special requests and would often eat before leaving the house, or wait to eat until late at night when we returned home.
I will always remember my first Thanksgiving just weeks after switching to a Paleo diet. I longingly looked at other diners’ plates full of stuffing, mashed potatoes, and gravy; my plate had only turkey, salad, and a deflated, runny mashed cauliflower that I had brought for myself. Watching everyone enjoy all of the traditional pies and desserts after the meal was even more torturous. I debated between breaking my new “rules” or foregoing the special dishes I looked forward to year after year to preserve my health. I wondered if eating those foods, just this once, would affect me, but remembered from past experiences that it was not worth the risk.
It was after that disappointing dinner that I set out to re-create all of my favorite celebratory dishes in an attempt to give myself and my readers the gift of food traditions and to banish deprivation during holidays and special occasions. I forced myself to remember what had brought me joy before my diagnosis, and consciously committed to going against the grain in order to revive that joy.
I hosted my own Thanksgiving dinner the following year and proudly served all of my newly created recipes. My family and friends loved how fresh the food tasted. They even admitted that they felt better after the meal than in years past and didn’t have the standard post-turkey fatigue. The next year, and every year after that, my guests arrived at my home for Thanksgiving bearing dishes cooked from my recipes. Although none of them had an autoimmune condition like I did, their love for me made them want to accommodate my diet. Beyond that, they continued to make my recipes for special events throughout the year and served them in place of the standard American classics.
Try a recipe:
Green Bean Casserole with Crispy Shallots
SERVES 10 TO 12
1 cup (about 150g) whole raw cashews
2 tablespoons ghee or extra-virgin olive oil
8 ounces cremini mushrooms, halved
1 shallot, peeled and chopped
1 clove garlic, crushed
2 tablespoons sherry (optional)
1 cup water
1 3⁄4 cups chicken stock
1 1⁄2 teaspoons fine sea salt
1⁄2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves
2 pounds haricots verts (thin green beans), ends trimmed
topping
1⁄2 cup palm shortening, bacon fat, or ghee, for frying
2 shallots, peeled and thinly sliced into rings
Place the cashews in a bowl and cover them with boiling water. Soak for 1 hour.
Meanwhile, heat the ghee in a skillet over medium heat. Add the mushrooms, shallot, and garlic and sauté for 10 minutes, or until the mushrooms and shallot have softened. Pour in the sherry and simmer for 5 minutes to reduce the liquid.
Drain and rinse the cashews, transfer them to a blender, add the water, and blend until very smooth.
Add the mushroom mix, half of the stock, and the salt, pepper, and thyme to the blender and pulse a few times until the mushrooms are bite size. Pour the mixture into a bowl and stir in the remaining stock. Set aside to cool for 15 minutes.
Preheat the oven to 350°F.
Combine the mushroom mixture with the haricots verts and spoon into a casserole dish. Bake, covered, for 30 minutes, until the beans are tender and the sauce is bubbling. Uncover and bake for 15 minutes more.
Meanwhile, to make the topping, heat the palm shortening in a small, deep saucepan over medium-high heat. Working in batches, panfry the shallots for about 5 minutes, until golden brown. Drain and cool in a single layer on a plate lined with paper towels.
Top the casserole with the crispy shallots and serve warm.
Product details
- Publisher : Ten Speed Press; Illustrated edition (Sept. 27 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1607749424
- ISBN-13 : 978-1607749424
- Item weight : 1.38 kg
- Dimensions : 20.4 x 2.74 x 25.37 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: #148,625 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #89 in Gluten-Free Diets
- #129 in Allergies (Books)
- #231 in Etiquette Guides (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Danielle Walker is a New York Times bestselling author (Against All Grain, Meals Made Simple, Celebrations, Eat What You Love, Food Saved Me, and Healthy in a Hurry) health advocate, and self-trained chef.
After being diagnosed with an autoimmune disease at age 22 and suffering for many years, Danielle found health through dietary and lifestyle changes. Inspired by her own health journey, Danielle has been a pioneer in advocating for a grain and gluten free lifestyle for 15 years, having earned a spot on the coveted Forbes 30 under 30 list in 2015 and four New York Times Bestsellers.
Her delicious recipes have satiated the palates of autoimmune sufferers, kids with food allergies, healthy eaters and foodies alike. From nostalgic comfort foods to healthy holiday swaps and quick and easy meals for kids, Danielle has thousands of recipes, kitchen, food and parenting hacks that make life easier and healthier.
Danielle regularly shares her health journey, recipes and expert tips on the TODAY Show, The Doctors, E! News, Access Hollywood, Home & Family, and many other nationally syndicated shows. Her work has been featured in People, O Magazine, USA Today, Shape, Women’s Health, Parents, Well + Good, and more.
For more information follow @DanielleWalker and visit her website daniellewalker. com
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The best way to spend your holidays!
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From this cookbook specifically, so far I've made the Christmas Fudge, Cranberry Sauce, Maple Pumpkin Pie, and the Berry Tart with Vanilla Bean Custard. In every case, I've fed them to my family (including my picky little boy) and to visitors, who all eat a more standard diet; in all cases, everyone raved about the food!
Thanks again to Danielle for working so hard on creating beautiful cookbooks which cater to those of us who have to avoid a lot of traditional ingredients!
So far I have made the blender bread on page 323, wow, it is absolutely delicious!
I have many more recipes picked out for the holidays!
I really like how the book is organized by celebrations and the luscious photographs, also Danielle has included so many helpful tips. I have all of Danielle's books and I love each one!
Top reviews from other countries
Ich schreibe diese Rezension, um darauf aufmerksam zu machen. Sollten Sie also noch auf der Suche nach einem wirklich guten Paleo-Brot sein, könnte das blender bread auch Ihr Herz gewinnen!
Nun ein weiterer Tip:
Meine Kinder konnten das Brot, so wie es aus dem Ofen kommt nicht richtig schmieren (es ist dann ziemlich weich) und fanden es auch zu eiig (immerhin 8 Eier sind drin). Also habe ich das gesamte Brot in dünne Scheiben geschnitten. Das geht ziemlich gut, wenn das Brot ganz abgekühlt ist. Die Scheiben habe ich auf dem Gitter ausgebreitet und unter dem Grill auf MAX etwa 4-5 Minuten gegrillt, die Scheiben dann umgedreht und nochmal etwa 3-4 Minuten getoastet.
Dann werden sie härter, wie normales getoastetes Brot und gar nicht mehr eiig. Seitdem gibt es (natürlich nur ab und zu) kein anderes Paleobrot mehr bei uns. Wir hatten vorher bestimmt 5-6 Rezepte ausprobiert.
Übrigens: wir verwenden statt der angegebenen Mandelmilch lieber Kokosmilch. Die haben wir nämlich immer da (und Mandelmilch fast nie). Sie lassen sich gut austauschen, ich mache aber trotzdem etwas Wasser (ca. 3 El) extra dazu.
Kauft Euch das Buch, diese Frau ist wirklich talentiert!!
Another thing I liked is that I hadn't realized simply how many holidays and causes for celebration there were in general! For some reason, in my mind, I thought the book would focus more on providing many options of dishes for the 'main' holidays, as in Thanksgiving and Christmas. However this book covers events that I hadn't even thought of like game day and basic Autumn dinner party. Initially I didn't like this arrangement as much, I thought I would've preferred a larger variety of options per holiday and fewer events. (There are lots of options per holiday, it's more that they're planned out for you as a full menu per meal. So that you don't have to really stress about figuring out how to make a balanced menu per event.) However now that I really get how this book can grow with me for life, I dig it. I also really think this book would be phenomenal then for anyone just starting out on a new diet or lifestyle like this. It will get you through anything you need for a year of events.
The only note I'd make is that if you don't happen to follow the basic Christian holiday system and/or are expecting celebratory foods from other cultures holiday systems, you won't find them here. While I don't personally find this to be a problem. I could see this being a deal breaker for some. However I also don't perceive that the author was intending to be closed minded here. It's more that when you read her book, she shares in a way that you are a part of her family and their traditions. She shares these traditions in a very sincere way. So I think for her to branch into cultures (that I presume) she doesn't follow intimately would've created a very contrived and disingenuous book and recipes.
So far I've made the blender bread a few times, stuffing, green bean casserole and apple pie...basically Thanksgiving!. I love the mushroom cream base for the green beans so much that I think I might try to turn it into a cream of mushroom soup this winter. The apple pie dough felt a bit different than I expected to work with. It wasn't hard to work with as I could still make a lattice top. But it just felt odd...it tasted great though! I only mention it because I wonder if it's versatile enough if you wanted manipulate it into something beyond basic sheet formations that are well supported....but still...almond flour pie crust! The only trouble I had was with the blender bread and then subsequently when I went to use it in the stuffing. I have a KA Diamond Blender that chews through the nuts and such in the dough well. But the second I add the coconut flour to the mix the blender gets a bit clogged and fussy. When I add the extra water as indicated, the bread turns out really wet one baked. It was so wet that I had to dehydrate it significantly before using it for stuffing. The stuffing recipe calls to dehydrate it with a bit of butter. But there's no way the butter would've taken to the bread cubes as it was so wet. So I don't know if this is really a recipe issue, as it could be the combination of blender capability with the brand of coconut flour I used. With the second loaf of bread I threw into my food processor once it got fussy in the blender (but after I added the water) and the processing went much more smoothly after that. So I might try using my food processor in the future or maybe a combo of the machines.
All in all I'm really glad to have found this book and Danielle Walkers work. The way she sets up cooking is very familiar to me since before I made any dietary changes. So I'm sure that anyone with a basic sense of wisdom in the kitchen cooking will be able to jump into this book without much trouble. I couldn't have asked for a better book that I didn't even realize I needed so badly!
Edited:
I forgot I made the Bacon Carbonara for my husbands birthday and it was delicious. And the then the pancakes, OMG the pancakes! I've never been a big pancake eater in my life. But these are amazing, I love them. I've been contemplating using them as bread on a monte cristo sandwich because I think they'd be excellent as such!

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