Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Can I Buy gluten-free Flour At The Asian Market ?


aseidman62

Recommended Posts

aseidman62 Newbie

Can I buy gluten-free flour at the Asian markets ? Many Asian markets sell Rice Flour, Chickpea Flour and more at very good prices. It is mass produced and the ingredients are clear (Rice - Period, Chichpeas - period)). BUT.. the packeages do not explicitly say Gluten Free. They sometimes remain silent on the topic and sometime say "packaged in a facility that packages nuts and wheat products". Is this a real problem ? I look at the size of these bags of flour and can not imagine that the cross contamination is significant enough to cause me harm.. but....

Please advise.

Allen


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Skylark Collaborator

Funny, I was just talking to a friend about this. I personally prefer to buy from a supplier like Bob's Red Mill who actively tests for gluten in all their products. I know it costs a lot more but I think it's worth it to keep gluten out of my diet as carefully as possible.

Asian food is particularly scary to me after all the issues in the food supply chain in China. If people are actively putting things that are dangerous in their food (melamine) how would they possibly be taking care for something as minor as wheat CC?

lilbit Apprentice

I buy rice flour from the asian grocery store... I haven't had a problem yet. Funny enough I went into an Asian grocery store near Boston over the weekend and they had "gluten free" labels on some of the shelves. I totally cracked up. I got buckwheat soba noodles there for a fraction of the cost as well.

and the rice noodles... again fraction of the cost. My system is pretty sensitive, but so far so good.

aseidman62 Newbie

Funny, I was just talking to a friend about this. I personally prefer to buy from a supplier like Bob's Red Mill who actively tests for gluten in all their products. I know it costs a lot more but I think it's worth it to keep gluten out of my diet as carefully as possible.

Asian food is particularly scary to me after all the issues in the food supply chain in China. If people are actively putting things that are dangerous in their food (melamine) how would they possibly be taking care for something as minor as wheat CC?

The price difference is enormous - like 4 to 1. So I am really tempted. I may stay with CGF for a while and then try these products and see if I get a reaction. The flours I am looking at are typically in Indian stores and produced in India, not China. Not sure if that makes a difference or not, but .. we will see :)

aseidman62 Newbie

I buy rice flour from the asian grocery store... I haven't had a problem yet. Funny enough I went into an Asian grocery store near Boston over the weekend and they had "gluten free" labels on some of the shelves. I totally cracked up. I got buckwheat soba noodles there for a fraction of the cost as well.

and the rice noodles... again fraction of the cost. My system is pretty sensitive, but so far so good.

Thanks... I think I will wait until I clear up (DH no intestinal issues) and then try and see if I react. that way I have a reference point.

Thanks again,

Allen

GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

All of the products I have in my pantry from the Asian food store came from Thailand, none from China. I eat the rice paper wrappers and rice noodles and bean thread noodles frequently (several times a week). I have only used the rice flour a couple times. So far no reactions and I am very sensitive to CC. I HAVE reacted however to Bob's Red Mill products that are supposed to be certified gluten free. So I trust the Asian products more than Bob. My take is that it may be safe CC-wise than an American or European company that also makes wheat products. Asian companies are less likely to produce wheat flour on the same lines as rice flour. Also, those packages of gluten free flour are often stocked in my regular grocery stores right next to bags of regular flour. Even if the gluten-free flour is sealed in plastic, there could be a coating of flour on the outside of the bag. I picked up a box of King Arthurs gluten-free Flour that was sitting right in between sacks of regular flour. One of the regular flours tipped over on the shelf and flour dust went everywhere. I held my breath and ran, then I promptly put the gluten-free flour back on the shelf and went ot wash my hands. My point is, I never see bags of regular flour at the Asian market I go to. The rice flour is there by itself on the shelf. So less chance of CC on the shelves, IMO. This is just my opinion, however. I haven't done any research to back this up. I will trust the Asian stuff as long as I don't have a reaction. And besides, the Asian market has cheaper produce as well. ;)

Monklady123 Collaborator

I agree with Glutenfreemama.... I buy at the Asian store, and it's not Chinese. I buy from a Thai store, and from an Indian one. (I love living in this area....lots of ethnic stores and restaurants). The price is a HUGE deal for me. And the variety. I remember the first time I went into the Thai store looking for rice noodles for pad thai (this was before I was diagnosed). The guy asked if he could help me and I said "yes please, I need some rice noodles" -- thinking to myself "rice noodles" simply because in my regular grocery store there is only one kind of "rice noodle". He said "oh, we have many noodles, what are you cooking?" When I said pad thai he led me to the rice noodle section and said I wanted *that* one not *this* or *this*. lol.. same as how we have linguini vs. spaghetti noodles. Personally I don't care if I eat spaghetti sauce on linguini noodles, but in the world of Thai cooking apparently one must NOT use the wrong noodles. lol..

I love shopping in these markets.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Skylark Collaborator

I got some dduk at a local Korean market and it had an odd fishy flavor. The only ingredients were water and rice flour. Has anyone else run across this? I do buy bean thread there and they have an entire aisle of different rices. The veggies there are cheap and good too. I love baby bok choi.

missy'smom Collaborator

You have to watch with the buckwheat soba noodles-make sure they're 100% buckwheat and not dusted with wheat flour to prevent sticking. I order my as a specialty item online.

Each Asian country is very unique so we have to be careful not to assume that the problems with Chinese products carry over into products from other Asian countries.

I buy my rice flour and tapioca flours/starches that are Vietnamese and a potato starch that is Korean and sweet rice flours that are Japanese all at a Korean market.

mamaw Community Regular

Asian flours are okay but flours from China may contain lead. After using rice flour from Asian sources , I found my lead levels were much higher than they ever were before using rice flour.... So now I stick with flour I know are tested . It hurts my pocket but health is what counts in the end. Without good health , cash does not do us any good because we are to ill to enjoy it!!!!!

Products from Thailand are said to be fine....but again I stopped using all .

blessings

mamaw

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      130,025
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    JoAnn85
    Newest Member
    JoAnn85
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • xxnonamexx
      I haven't taken blood test for deficiencies yet since self diagnosed but I started a Multi vitamin from reading consumerlabs Nature Made Multivitamin For Her 50+ with No Iron, Womens Multivitamin for Daily Nutritional Support, Multivitamin is actually good for men compared to the mens version since im 47 I figured this should be ok. I also just started taking Kirkland Signature Super B-Complex with Electrolytes which consumerlabs which is an independent lab that tests what is actually in it states this is a good balanced B complex vitamin where its not too much of any vitamin for you to take.  I was thinking of taking the Gluten test after the summer  ut I think if I reintroduce gluten for this test I will be so sick and make things worse. I heard there is a blood test coming in a year that they add gluten to the blood to test which would be nice but prob in a year or 2. 
    • xxnonamexx
      I have been on this gluten-free journey a few months now and I work in a deli so I'm around gluten all day. I noticed sometimes once a day my eyes tear as if I am peeling onions. I think it is an allergy to gluten. Anything to take for this issue? I heard it might be low vitamin so I started to take a multi vitamin that I found from consumerlabs and started a vitamin B complex for energy issue. As I continue my journey 2x this month I have been careful with gluten and ate out 2x that wee gluten friendly and had no issues so now I feel better when I go out the few places I can eat gluten-free and not get sick. However I have been trying to track what triggered me the 2x this month where one time I introduced a gluten-free pretzel PB filled and no other ingredient in it bothered me. The other time I think it might have been due to high fiber intake due to introducing mission gluten-free tortilla wraps. Next week I will be on vacation to LBI and I already scoped out 2 places gluten-free so I am hoping I have a good time with the family. In August we plan on going to Aruba and I found a few gluten-free places as well but I am nervous for any cross contamination especially during flights to and from which makes me nervous. ANy help suggestions. Thanks
    • Scott Adams
      The pharmaceutical industry (including BIG PHARMA! 😉) is very good about cleaning procedures before different drugs might be made using the same machinery. I don't believe cross contamination would be something to worry about, otherwise people with serious allergies, for example to antibiotics, would have serious issues with prescriptions drugs.
    • KimMS
      Thanks for sharing that site! Do you know if that site has any information about manufacturing/possible cross contact on it? I can't find it. When I have called manufacturers, most of them say they can't guarantee no cross contact in manufacturing (except Lannett, Mylan and possible Amneal, which aren't available near me).
    • Diana Swales
      After years of living with Celiac Disease, learning through every bump and breakthrough, and guiding others through the gluten-free maze — I've officially qualified as a **Nutrition Coach** with Precision Nutrition. Now I’m ready to take this journey deeper… but I need your help. To complete my final certification hours, I’m offering **a limited number of FREE spots** (yes, completely free!) to work with me over the next few weeks. I’m looking for **5 people** who: Are newly diagnosed with Celiac Disease or gluten-intolerant Feel overwhelmed, confused, or frustrated with food Want support from someone who truly understands Are ready to build confidence and calm in their daily eating We’ll work together on what matters to *you*: Your food choices Your mindset Your kitchen habits Your ability to speak up for your needs This isn’t just about avoiding gluten — it’s about reclaiming ease, joy, and nourishment. If you're interested, comment below or DM me the word **"Ready"** and I’ll send you the info to get started. Let’s make food feel safe again. With care, **Diana**
×
×
  • Create New...