First-ever gluten free road show announced by Coeliac Society of Ireland

Full day event will feature expert talks from leading medical practitioners, dieticians, food producers and practical live cooking demonstrations

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5 September 2022

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The Coeliac Society of Ireland has announced that its first ever Gluten Free Road Show will take place on 8 October at the Tullamore Hotel in County Offaly. This will be the first in-person event the society has organised for members of the public in three years.

The roadshow will provide anyone living with coeliac disease or severe gluten intolerances with an opportunity to meet and speak with the experts who will demonstrate how to live a full and healthy life gluten free.

“We are excited to be back with a live and in person event for the first time in three years,” said Gill Brennan, chief executive of the Coeliac Society of Ireland. “The Gluten Free Road Show offers a fantastic opportunity for those individuals, whether diagnosed or just suspect they may be coeliac or gluten intolerant, to talk to medical professionals, have the chance to hear and interact with a dietetic clinician, and to meet the many other experts who will be on hand to offer guidance.

“An added bonus will be our live cooking demonstrations from our in-house food safety and technical food advisor as well as leading celebrity chef Adrian Martin who will share their culinary secrets in how to safely prepare tasty and nutritious meals that which will cater for their medically necessary dietary requirements,” Brennan added.

“Thankfully, the days of not been able to interact and share experiences of being coeliac are over, and the Coeliac Society is once again striving to make Ireland the best country in the world to live gluten free. This show and others we will schedule over the next 12 months will help us to achieve this as we continue to support, empower, educate, and inspire those living a gluten free life.”

Coeliac symptoms, and those of gluten intolerance, can be debilitating and include stomach pains, constipation, weight loss, and migraines. Longer-term issues associated with untreated coeliac disease are more serious and can include anaemia, osteoporosis, and fertility issues. The only treatment is a strict gluten free diet for life.

The inaugural Gluten Free Road Show runs from 11am to 4.30pm on 8 October and will have a limited attendance. For more information on the event and the Coeliac Society of Ireland, visit www.coeliac.ie or follow the society on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

 

 

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