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Food question - this'll make you laugh

emsr2d2

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Hoping to do a short stretch from Negreira to Muxia in May 2015. Still at the planning stage.
Hi all

I already have a thread started on our actual walk but I wanted to ask this separately. I'm walking Santiago-Finisterre-Muxia at the end of June and I'm starting to think about the food side of things.

We're staying at Castelo, A Picota Mazaricos, Cee, Finisterre, Lires and possibly Muxia. I'm vegetarian (lacto-ovo so no meat, fish, seafood, or jamón!) but dairy and eggs are OK - that side doesn't actually concern me too much as I've been to Spain plenty of times and have always found good veggie food.

The complication is that in the last few months I have developed a fairly severe gluten intolerance. I would normally load up on bread at dinner and breakfast but suddenly now, I'm not able to have bread, pasta, croquetas (disaster!) and I'm just wondering if anyone has any experience of either a) finding gluten-free foods or b) whether there's lots of good, vegetarian, filling foods en route!
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Darn that is tough! There are good places to eat in Finnesterre as it seemed to me once you reach Corcubion like any beach resort area the wealth factor kicks in & more services & fancy food places pop up. It will be more of an issue the first 2-3 days you walk. Compared to the Francis route this will seem like it is absolutely quite. I would suggest you find a good market & pack some items just to make sure you have something you can eat. This is a very nice walk but not many places that serve food in the remote parts.
Have a fantastic Camino
Keith
 
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@emsr2d2, if you search on gluten free in this forum, you'll find several posts that might be of help.
Buen Camino
Suzanne
 
Just eat the veggies. Nice meal in finesterri.
 

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you should be able to find oatcakes/ricecakes and oatmeal in Santiago - but maybe not in smaller places.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Sounds like a diet of bananas, beans and tortillas. Spain without pan or medialunas? Torture.
 
A post on a related thread mentioned that bread made with flour from Spain had significantly less gluten in it and was better tolerated by GF sensitive (but not celiacs). I'm hoping this is true because the breads there look fantastic. I'd like to get my hands on some flour to try it out. Does anyone know of a source in the US?
 
Must be true, because I was walking with a friend who loves bread but doesn't do well with it in the US, and she was fine in Spain. And yes, the bread's totally delicious! emsr2d2, you might try a nibble and see how you go...you might be surprised. She was.
 
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Thanks everyone. I plan to have a big stock of gf, veggie snack bars from the UK with me when I arrive and I will get fruit etc on the way. The bread thing is interesting - in France, I can get away with eating the local baguettes but I was in Spain 2 weeks ago and after a day of toast for breakfast, bread with lunch and having had pasta for dinner the night before, I was really ill!

I don't mind living on tortilla española and pimientos al padron!

I'll search the term in the forum and see what else I can find.
 

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