Gluten-free gingerbread muffins | Fria
Gluten-free
Free-range eggs
Lactose-free
Milk protein-free

Gluten-free gingerbread muffins

Pepparkaksmuffins

You’re guaranteed to bring home the Christmas spirit with Fria’s gluten-free gingerbread muffins. Lovely and soft with a full-on gingerbread flavour.

Weight: 240 g

4 muffins

Ready baked

Deep frozen

Our soft, gluten-free gingerbread muffins are a staple around Christmas time. The gingerbread muffins have that homemade feel and as good as they are on their own, why not get creative and use them as the basis for some Christmas-style cake pops?

We freeze our gluten-free gingerbread muffins immediately after baking. This means they stay fresher for longer and can easily be taken out of the freezer and thawed when you want to offer guests a tasty treat.

Sugar, egg, rapeseed oil, gluten free wheat starch, spices (cinnamon, cardamom, ginger, cloves), psyllium husk, rice flour, baking powder (sodium pyrophosphate, sodium bicarbonate), corn starch, potato starch, maltodextrin (corn), thickeners (cellulose gum, guar gum, xanthan gum), emulsifier (mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids [veg.]), salt, flavourings.

Please note that the information on the packaging always applies.

Our product has been tested and certified low FODMAP by FODMAP Friendly. It is therefore suitable for people following a low-FODMAP diet.

Standard portion: 1 piece (60 g). Maximum intake according to the low-FODMAP diet: 1 piece.

Nutritional value

Energy

1900 kJ / 450 kcal

Fat

24 g

of which saturated fat

2,4 g

Carbohydrates

53 g

of which sugars

35 g

Fibre

2,0 g

Protein

4,1 g

Salt

0,7 g

In everyday language, gluten is a collective term for some of the proteins found in the cereals wheat, rye, and barley. Gluten also occurs in varieties and hybrids of wheat, rye, and barley – including spelt (also called dinkel or spelt), durum wheat, emmer wheat, and rye wheat. Gluten is therefore present in many popular foods, especially bread and baked goods. It can also be added to various other foods, such as meat products, soups, and ready-made meals. A person with celiac disease must therefore always read the ingredient list on food products. It is now easier to do so because gluten-containing ingredients are required to be highlighted.