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Celiac.com Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Forum: Trader Joe's- Unofficial Poll - Celiac.com Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Forum

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Trader Joe's- Unofficial Poll are their prroducts contaminated? Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   confusedks 

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Posted 29 October 2007 - 07:24 PM

I just am curious to hear who reacts to Trader Joe's products? A lot of their products are gluten free, but they are made on equipment shared with wheat. I just want to who eats these products specifically from Trader Joe's. I bought their pumpkin butter which is amazing, but I think I am reacting to it because it's made in a facility that processes....

Thank you!

Kassandra
Dairy/Casein Free- March 2007
Gluten Free- May 2007
Soy Free- August 2007
Sugar Free- January 2008
Starch Free- January 2008
Egg Free (again!)- February 2008
Sulfur Free- May 2008

Dx'd Lyme Disease and co-infections- December 2007
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#2 User is offline   tarnalberry 

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Posted 29 October 2007 - 07:31 PM

while I haven't had a lot of problem with their stuff, I don't have it all that often.

the good news, on that product, is that pumpkin butter is super easy to make from scratch - well, super easy from canned pumpkin, and just easy from a whole pie pumpkin, so if you still want it, you can just make your own.
Tiffany aka "Have I Mentioned Chocolate Lately?"
Inconclusive Blood Tests, Positive Dietary Results, No Endoscopy
G.F. - September 2003; C.F. - July 2004
Hiker, Yoga Teacher, Engineer, Painter, Be-er of Me
Bellevue, WA
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#3 User is offline   DingoGirl 

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Posted 29 October 2007 - 07:39 PM

Trader Joe's is about two miles from my house and I can't imagine life without it! I am there about twice a week (am on a hugging basis w/ one of the employees and quite a chatting basis with a couple of others :)) and eat TONS of stuff there, no problems at all!

If you like, I"ll write the long list for you....but many of the things, I think, are made on shared equipment, but I haven't reacted at all.
SUSIE

Diagnosed January 2006

"I like nonsense. It wakes up the brain cells." ~Dr. Seuss
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#4 User is offline   confusedks 

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Posted 29 October 2007 - 09:48 PM

Thank you. I am not sure if I react to their stuff. I think it might be the sugar content in the pumpkin butter. We also live at TJ's. I don't know what we'd do without them either. They know us too! LOL!

Kassandra
Dairy/Casein Free- March 2007
Gluten Free- May 2007
Soy Free- August 2007
Sugar Free- January 2008
Starch Free- January 2008
Egg Free (again!)- February 2008
Sulfur Free- May 2008

Dx'd Lyme Disease and co-infections- December 2007
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#5 User is offline   dadoffiveboys 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 03:23 AM

View Postconfusedks, on Oct 30 2007, 01:48 AM, said:

Thank you. I am not sure if I react to their stuff. I think it might be the sugar content in the pumpkin butter. We also live at TJ's. I don't know what we'd do without them either. They know us too! LOL!

Kassandra


I'm going to guess it depends on the particular 'trader joes' and also how they make each product. I know I had a gluten-free flourless chocolate cake.. and myself and two of my sons reacted to it (cross-contaminated). Two of my other sons did not react nor my father. We are also sensitive to gluten but the ones that reacted .. we are VERY sensitive.

If you are highly sensitive I wouldn't recommend any product produced on shared equipment for sure and would rule out Trader Joes products.

Another thing.. my dad said he had 'no reaction' but when he originally went completely gluten-free he was off his blood pressure medicine.. he is now back on it (lower dose) and he eats gluten-free when he goes out, etc.. but I believe he would be off his medicine COMPLETELY if he were 100% gluten-free... I think you get used to the cross contamination. I eat only food I prepare at home so that may explain why I have such a high reaction to even the smallest amounts. My children are homeschooled and also do not get gluten. (We are EXTREMELY healthy now and don't get sick either!!!)

Just my 2 cents..
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#6 User is offline   mandasmom 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 04:39 AM

View Postdadoffiveboys, on Oct 30 2007, 07:23 AM, said:

I'm going to guess it depends on the particular 'trader joes' and also how they make each product. I know I had a gluten-free flourless chocolate cake.. and myself and two of my sons reacted to it (cross-contaminated). Two of my other sons did not react nor my father. We are also sensitive to gluten but the ones that reacted .. we are VERY sensitive.

If you are highly sensitive I wouldn't recommend any product produced on shared equipment for sure and would rule out Trader Joes products.

Another thing.. my dad said he had 'no reaction' but when he originally went completely gluten-free he was off his blood pressure medicine.. he is now back on it (lower dose) and he eats gluten-free when he goes out, etc.. but I believe he would be off his medicine COMPLETELY if he were 100% gluten-free... I think you get used to the cross contamination. I eat only food I prepare at home so that may explain why I have such a high reaction to even the smallest amounts. My children are homeschooled and also do not get gluten. (We are EXTREMELY healthy now and don't get sick either!!!)

Just my 2 cents..

We eat TJs stuff all the time....much of it is prepared on shared equipment...I suppose the only way to know for sure is to periodically have blood drawn to tell if you are reating to the small possiblity of CC. Even shared equipment must be thoroughly cleaned between products..that insures the taste and quality of the food. We havent had any overt problems with anything we have purchased there...so I suppose its a risk we are willing to take!!!
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#7 User is offline   cruelshoes 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 05:04 AM

We eat so much TJ's food it isn't funy. We don't react to any of the products we have tried (LOTS of them :huh: ), and our antibodies are negative. The thing about Trader Joe's is that they don't produce a lot of their products. They have other companies produce them, and then put the TJ's label on them. Last I heard, their pasta was made by tinkyada, for example. So it would be hard to generalize about reacting to their products, since they are made by so many different companies in so many different places.

My only beef with TJ's is that their gluten-free list has errors on it. I always tell people to use it as a starting place, but not to trust it too far. You still have to check the label every time you buy something.
-Colleen
Dx 8/05 via bloodwork and biopsy (total villous atrophy)
11-year old son Dx 11/05 via bloodwork and biopsy
Daughters (13 and 3) have tested negative via bloodwork

A woman is like a tea bag - you never know how strong she is until she gets in hot water. - Eleanor Roosevelt
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#8 User is offline   debslo 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 05:58 AM

View Postcruelshoes, on Oct 30 2007, 05:04 AM, said:

We eat so much TJ's food it isn't funy. We don't react to any of the products we have tried (LOTS of them :huh: ), and our antibodies are negative. The thing about Trader Joe's is that they don't produce a lot of their products. They have other companies produce them, and then put the TJ's label on them. Last I heard, their pasta was made by tinkyada, for example. So it would be hard to generalize about reacting to their products, since they are made by so many different companies in so many different places.

My only beef with TJ's is that their gluten-free list has errors on it. I always tell people to use it as a starting place, but not to trust it too far. You still have to check the label every time you buy something.


I've never had a problem, though I don't eat much from there either. My favorite are the Savory Sesame Rice thin crackers...yum...they are about an hour away from me, otherwise, I'd be getting more from them!

I didn't know that their pasta is made by Tinkyada! Yay!! I'll have to get some on the next run. Maybe it will be the same price as when I find it at the discount food store :rolleyes:
My husband teases me and says G.F. stands for Goodness Free! (though, there hasn't been much that I have prepared that he's passed on!)

Self diagnosed by realizing my "rashes" are DH and is Celiac related, as well as by process of elimination 2000-2003, gluten-free since 2003

Diagnosed Hashimoto's Hypothyroidism 2003

Discovered allergy to cellulose (fillers in meds, most packaged gluten-free foodstuffs and an anti-caking ingredient in many pre-shredded cheeses)when attempting to switch from brand name to generic thyroid meds 2007

Diagnosed with GERD 2007

Discovered allergy to Yellow Dyes 2008
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#9 User is offline   Juliebove 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 07:32 AM

I don't buy anything that was made on shared lines. But then we have numerous allergies. It's not just gluten.
IgG, me: Eggs, oysters OAS : Almonds, pistachios

IgG, daughter: Wheat, spelt, lentils, peas, peanuts, almonds
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#10 User is offline   hathor 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 08:06 AM

I reacted to TJ nuts once, so I won't go there again. I haven't noticed a reaction to anything else, but I'm always nervous when I see those warnings. I guess I just go with a TJ item when I can't find a sub.

Like a locally available dark chocolate bar made without soy lecithin :rolleyes:

Unfortunately, those warning labels are voluntary. Companies decide for themselves whether to have them. (The only restriction I think is that the labels have to be accurate.) So just because one gets something somewhere else that lacks a warning label doesn't mean that it is not manufactured on shared equipment.

The only labelling legally required is for the 8 allergens, with wheat being one (and not gluten, unfortunately). The requirement is for labelling of intentional ingredients. Cross-contamination or unintentional contents don't have to be shown.

McDougall diet (low fat vegan) since 6/00
Gluten free since 1/6/07
Soy free and completely casein and egg free since 2/15/07
Yeast free, on and off, since 3/1/07 -- I can't notice any difference one way or the other

Enterolab results -- 2/15/07
Fecal Antigliladin IgA 140 (Normal Range <10 units)
Fecal Antitissue Transglutaminase IgA 50 (Normal Range <10 units)
Quantitative Microscopic Fecal Fat Score 517 (Normal Range <300 units)
Fecal anti-casein (cow's milk) IgA antibody 127 (Normal Range <10 units)
HLA-DQB1 Molecular analysis, Allele 1 0501
HLA-DQB1 Molecular analysis, Allele 2 06xx
Serologic equivalent: HLA-DQ 1,1 (subtype 5,6)
Fecal anti-ovalbumin (chicken egg) IgA antibody 11 (Normal range <10 units)
Fecal Anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae (dietary yeast) IgA 11 (Normal range <10 units)
Fecal Anti-Soy IgA 119 (Normal Range < 10 units)
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Posted 30 October 2007 - 09:49 AM

No problems with any of their stuff!
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#12 User is offline   Susanna 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 01:56 PM

I eat Trader Joe's stuff all the time and have never had a problem I could feel on my insides. But, even more objective data is that I just had my annual celiac serologies (blood tests) checked, and everything came back negative, so I say Trader Joes is safe for me. And I sure appreciate how much cheaper their stuff is than Whole Foods' and Sprouts' is.

Susanna
Diagnosed in March 2006 by blood test and biopsy. Eleven year old son diagnosed in May 2006. Both gluten-free since diagnosis.

The Susanna (Flagstaff, AZ)

"I GOTTA have more cowbell!."
--The legendary Bruce Dickenson
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#13 User is offline   babinsky 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 02:35 PM

I am a new celiac and went to TJ's last night...I only found a couple of things that are gluten-free...is there a list of things I should know to look for?
Confirmed by endoscopy and blood tests October 2007

Donna
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#14 User is offline   Mango04 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 02:41 PM

View Postbabinsky, on Oct 30 2007, 03:35 PM, said:

I am a new celiac and went to TJ's last night...I only found a couple of things that are gluten-free...is there a list of things I should know to look for?


here's a list. They're always getting new products, so don't assume that just because something's not on the list, it's not safe.

They sell great gluten-free ginger snaps and gluten-free granola. I've heard good things about the gluten-free pancakes too.
"Let food be thy medicine, and let thy medicine be food." - Hippocrates
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#15 User is offline   Mango04 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 02:45 PM

Oh - and I don't react to their products :)
"Let food be thy medicine, and let thy medicine be food." - Hippocrates
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