<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>> I just got back from South America (Uruguay and Argentina), and I wanted to share this with you all. I was walking down the street there, and passed a newspaper kiosk, with a magazine displayed on the side of recipes for celiacs. I bought one of them, asked the lady running the kiosk if she could get any more of them, and they found 2 others for me. Evidently it is a series of 8 magazines, all dedicated to celiac recipes, with some medical questions and advice articles, as well. However, they are predominantly recipes, with nice color pictures of the finished product for each one. I wrote to the source, in Argentina, and am waiting for a response, as to whether there is also an English version, but I'd highly recommend these to those of you who speak Spanish. Each magazine is 4.90 in Argentine Pesos on the web, $39.20 for all 8. At the current exchange rate, that's about $13.00 USD for all 8 of them, and hopefully they will reply to me soon about shipping charges for international orders. If you'd like to take a look at them, here is the web link: http://www.eviaediciones.com/shop/productsByCategory.asp?intCatalogID=10 004&strCatalog_NAME=Cocina%20y%20Salud <http://www.eviaediciones.com/shop/productsByCategory.asp?intCatalogID=1 0004&strCatalog_NAME=Cocina%20y%20Salud> The first entry, Cocina Clasica para Celiacos, Coleccion de 8 numeros, is what it sounds like, the collection of all 8, the next entries are the individual magazines themselves. By the way, while I was down there (I went for a software conference), I was talking to some colleagues about some design issues for web "shopping carts." Specifically, I talked about some ideas for sort/search criteria for products, and I used the celiac/ casein intolerance issues as an example. What I was talking about was the difficulty of classifying products, when dairy or gluten can be disguised under so many names as an ingredient, and that people want to find a product, like a GFCF muffin mix, but there's so much product data listed, it's frustrating to wade through it all. And if you have other allergies, like soy or corn, etc., it starts getting very complex, etc. So we were in the middle of a conversation about the best ways to do that kind of exclusion/inclusion sort criteria, and one of the men in the group (all of us were software nerds, you understand) spoke up and said that he and his family had a farm, and was already supplying the celiac community in Argentina with GF, non-contaminated oats and other grains. He seemed very surprised when I told him that we had a problem getting certain items here in the U.S., and being assured that they were contaminant-free. So evidently they are much more accommodating to their celiac population than U.S. agri-business is here. Maybe I need to relocate - wow, I have to say, I DID have some wonderful meals down there! I always do, makes it hard to come home. Linda Ireland, Seattle * All posts for product information must include the applicable country *