Jump to content
  • 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

A Warning About Ground Beef Ground In Store At Meijer


motheroftwins2010

Recommended Posts

motheroftwins2010 Rookie

My son and i got glutened by Laura's vegitarian fed ground beef because it was ground or reground in the meijer store and was either cross contaminated or had filler added. I called the store they confirmed they grind the beef at the store and had no clue what gluten was nor were they concerned about it. I then called Laura's headquarters to find out that they are owned by meijer and that cross contamination happens in the store and to be safe i should buy the prepackaged kind since its guaranteed gluten free. She told me the meijer meat counter workers dont always care or understand! Normally i only shop at whole foods and this has never happened but yeah lesson learned the hard way. I hope to keep someone else from enduring this painful mistake. I am very sensitive to trace cross contamination so i dont know if filler was added or it was just ground on a contaminated machine but my suspicions say filler was added since my son who has ncgs reacted and this is the worse glutening i have ever had.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ravenwoodglass Mentor

Sorry this happened to you. Are you sure it couldn't have been anything other than the ground beef? Reactions can be delayed so it might be something you had earlier in the day or even the week.

CC happens but it is illegal for a company to add fillers without disclosing them. So if it was the ground beef it was CC and not a filler. The usual filler for ground beef is also usually soy and that will be disclosed.

Do be sure that you have done all you need to do in your kitchen to be safe. I say this because you are new and I don't know if you are also new to the diet as well as the board. If you haven't already be sure to read the Celiac 101 thread.

I hope you are both feeling better soon.

motheroftwins2010 Rookie

I am 100% sure it was the beef. The HQ even agreed cross contamination with gluten in the store happens. My house and family is 100% gluten, dairy, seafoof, and pineapple free due to food allergies. When i was diagnosed we tossed all appliances, cookware, utensils, spices, food, and tupperware in addition to personal items and anything remotely questionable. I eat a naked gluten free diet and my reactions are delayex 6-12 hours 12 if i go to sleep right after the contact. When i called Lauras beef hq which is actually meijer hq she told me that cross contamination happens because they cook a lot of stuff back there and sometimes they grind their own beef on site at meijer and I quote, " they are minimum wage workers that might not understand or care." I was told that the prepackaged Laura's beef that is not on the styrofoam trays is verified gluten free. I was shocked at the response. It may not have been fillers it may have just been an improperly cleaned machine but the response told me it was not the first complaint they've received about this.

kareng Grand Master

Wow! Your store must have a filthy meat department. Where I live, you aren't allowed to cook anything near the raw meat and where they cut and grind it. They scrub the tables and the floors constantly. You might think about reporting it to the local health department. And if it is store policy to mishandle the meat, maybe report to the USDA?

Edited: I keep thinking about this. How could a store admit that they cc baked goods, soups, coleslaw, etc with raw meat juices? They must be making a lot of people very sick. I would think the health department would notice.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

If the store is very open I could see how flour could float into and contaminate the meat. It is too bad the HQ can't bother to at least try to educate the workers.

At my local Wegmans I went to buy some fresh shrimp one day and found it beside items that were breaded. One short polite conversation with the meat dept manager and the next time I went in the shrimp had been placed in a different display case and only items that were breaded on site were in the case the shrimp had been in.

Have you talked to the store manager about this issue. They are more likely to be helpful than someone at their main headquarters. Employees may be taking short cuts by not cleaning the grinder, which by health dept regs (if I am not mistaken), needs to be cleaned before a different food item is put through it. At the very least they need to post CC warnings so people with food allergies are aware of the risk.

I would let the manager know why I would not be shopping there any more and perhaps make a call to the local health dept. An inspection should done not just for the sake of those with allergies but for everyones safety. It doesn't take that much to educate your employees and if they don't respond to that education employees who will should be hired. Using minimum wage workers is not an good excuse for not training them properly.

w8in4dave Community Regular

I noticed at Kroger they have stuffed pork chops and seasoned chops right next to the plain cut pork chops. I opted to get the other brand that was away from those. My friend asked me why I was getting those instead of the other ones. I said well those are right up against the stuffed ones and if you look you can see some are touching.  She was like ohhhhhhhh yea your right! I was going to say something, maby talk to the manager. But they were busy. Makes me wonder if I want to buy from the meat counter and just get the cut and wrapped ones. 

LauraTX Rising Star

Generally any place with a meat counter, if they have breaded items out I will not buy anything that is in there.  Usually they have more in the back or can cut you more from their stock in the back.  Just ask.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kareng Grand Master

Generally any place with a meat counter, if they have breaded items out I will not buy anything that is in there.  Usually they have more in the back or can cut you more from their stock in the back.  Just ask.

That is a different thing and that makes sense. I can't believe a grocery would be allowed to cook things behind the meat counter, where they cut meat. If they are doing that, I think they need to be reported.

motheroftwins2010 Rookie

It is a gross store the gluten free isle is in the same isle as the four bags and usually has exploded flour all over the floor its a nightmare and i think giving the health department a call is an excellent idea. I usually only buy my kids gluten free school snack cracker things there. That was the 1st and LAST time I will ever buy meat there. I saw the prepared meat behind the counter with bread crumbs and stuff so I asked where the grass fed beef was they sent me to the case and the closest thing there was laura's vegitarian fed. Thats where the problem comes in i did not know Laura's beef was ground in the meijer store because i didnt know meijer owned Lauras beef. The HQ told me the possibility of cross contamination was present, not the store. The store had no clue what i was talking about when i asked about gluten or they played stupid so i called lauras beef which is actually meijer. This was not even meat behind the counter it was wrapped in plastic wrap on one of those meat trays in the case. I have never had this problem at whole foods its just our closet whole foods is still under construction and the next closest is 30 mies away, and i didnt have time to drive 30 miles for beef so i went to meijer. HQ did tell me the sealed and Laura's branded ground beef that does not have the tray and is vaccum sealed is certified gluten free.

Ps sorry for misspellings im using a tablet and it driving me bonkers.

  • 8 months later...
Dee.ells Newbie

My son and i got glutened by Laura's vegitarian fed ground beef because it was ground or reground in the meijer store and was either cross contaminated or had filler added. I called the store they confirmed they grind the beef at the store and had no clue what gluten was nor were they concerned about it. I then called Laura's headquarters to find out that they are owned by meijer and that cross contamination happens in the store and to be safe i should buy the prepackaged kind since its guaranteed gluten free. She told me the meijer meat counter workers dont always care or understand! Normally i only shop at whole foods and this has never happened but yeah lesson learned the hard way. I hope to keep someone else from enduring this painful mistake. I am very sensitive to trace cross contamination so i dont know if filler was added or it was just ground on a contaminated machine but my suspicions say filler was added since my son who has ncgs reacted and this is the worse glutening i have ever had.

Considering gluten is a protein found in wheat and Laura's lean is a 92% lean ground beef that is both packaged from Laura's Lean along with being carefully grounded at most Meijer stores. I'm also sure there was confusion surrounding a wheat protein being found in any meat product when contacting a meat department. Laura's lean and most Meijer's have a contract, but Laura's lean is not owned by Meijer and it is also distributed by its competitor. No business would do business with a company that doesn't care how its product is marketed and sold.

Dee.ells Newbie

I am 100% sure it was the beef. The HQ even agreed cross contamination with gluten in the store happens. My house and family is 100% gluten, dairy, seafoof, and pineapple free due to food allergies. When i was diagnosed we tossed all appliances, cookware, utensils, spices, food, and tupperware in addition to personal items and anything remotely questionable. I eat a naked gluten free diet and my reactions are delayex 6-12 hours 12 if i go to sleep right after the contact. When i called Lauras beef hq which is actually meijer hq she told me that cross contamination happens because they cook a lot of stuff back there and sometimes they grind their own beef on site at meijer and I quote, " they are minimum wage workers that might not understand or care." I was told that the prepackaged Laura's beef that is not on the styrofoam trays is verified gluten free. I was shocked at the response. It may not have been fillers it may have just been an improperly cleaned machine but the response told me it was not the first complaint they've received about th

 

Cross contamination of gluten (protein from wheat) occurring within a meat department that doesn't prepare food, cook food, nor offer any packaged foods within close distance to its department by employees that make over minimum wage due to education and skill required to work in and run the meat department along with salaried and competitively based butchers/managers seems very unreasonable to your claims:)

SMRI Collaborator

Cross contamination of gluten (protein from wheat) occurring within a meat department that doesn't prepare food, cook food, nor offer any packaged foods within close distance to its department by employees that make over minimum wage due to education and skill required to work in and run the meat department along with salaried and competitively based butchers/managers seems very unreasonable to your claims:)

 

Well, gluten isn't only found in wheat and cross contamination at a meat counter is very common since many meat counters also sell seasoned meat options, stuffed meat options and breaded meat options.  Even at my wonderful, locally owned grocery store that employs real butchers in the meat department, CC is an issue. 

kareng Grand Master

once again - The OP's assertion that foods are cooked/baked behind the meat counter is not likely.  There are federal and local health standards that must be met. I have seen meat counters that do marinate or bread meats but never have I seen one where they " they cook a lot of stuff back there ".

SMRI Collaborator

once again - The OP's assertion that foods are cooked/baked behind the meat counter is not likely.  There are federal and local health standards that must be met. I have seen meat counters that do marinate or bread meats but never have I seen one where they " they cook a lot of stuff back there ".

 

Our meat market in our grocery store makes rotisserie chicken and a few other things like that, behind the meat counter. She didn't say anything about cooking meat?

w8in4dave Community Regular

That is a different thing and that makes sense. I can't believe a grocery would be allowed to cook things behind the meat counter, where they cut meat. If they are doing that, I think they need to be reported.

Not cooking , just stuffed pork chops right next to the plain cut pork chops. There is a separation lil thing but they still touch. Still off topic tho , sorry! 

w8in4dave Community Regular

Well, gluten isn't only found in wheat and cross contamination at a meat counter is very common since many meat counters also sell seasoned meat options, stuffed meat options and breaded meat options.  Even at my wonderful, locally owned grocery store that employs real butchers in the meat department, CC is an issue. 

This is more what I was talking about.  This stuff touching plain cut meat. 

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Scott Adams replied to JoJo0611's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      1

      Just diagnosed today

    2. - Scott Adams replied to GlorietaKaro's topic in Super Sensitive People
      1

      Am I nuts?

    3. - Scott Adams replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      28

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

    4. - Russ H replied to Samanthaeileen1's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      6

      Thoughts? Non-endoscopic Celiac diagnosis in two year old

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,805
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    CeceNV
    Newest Member
    CeceNV
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Scott Adams
      First, please know that receiving two diagnoses at once, especially one you've never heard of, is undoubtedly overwhelming. You are not alone in this. Your understanding is correct: both celiac disease and Mesenteric Panniculitis (MP) are considered to have autoimmune components. While having both is not extremely common, they can co-occur, as chronic inflammation from one autoimmune condition can sometimes be linked to or trigger other inflammatory responses in the body. MP, which involves inflammation of the fat tissue in the mesentery (the membrane that holds your intestines in place), is often discovered incidentally on scans, exactly as in your case. The fact that your medical team is already planning follow-up with a DEXA scan (to check bone density, common after a celiac diagnosis) and a repeat CT is a very proactive and prudent approach to monitoring your health. Many find that adhering strictly to the gluten-free diet for celiac disease helps manage overall inflammation, which may positively impact MP over time. It's completely normal to feel uncertain right now. Your next steps are to take this one day at a time, focus on the gluten-free diet as your primary treatment for celiac, and use your upcoming appointments to ask all your questions about MP and what the monitoring plan entails. This dual diagnosis is a lot to process, but it is also the starting point for a managed path forward to better health. This article has some detailed information on how to be 100% gluten-free, so it may be helpful (be sure to also read the comments section.):    
    • Scott Adams
      Your experience is absolutely valid, and you are not "nuts" or a "complete weirdo." What you are describing aligns with severe neurological manifestations of gluten sensitivity, which is a recognized, though less common, presentation. Conditions like gluten ataxia and peripheral neuropathy are documented in medical literature, where gluten triggers an autoimmune response that attacks the nervous system, leading to symptoms precisely like yours—loss of coordination, muscle weakness, fasciculations, and even numbness. The reaction you had from inhaling flour is a powerful testament to your extreme sensitivity. While celiac disease is commonly tested, non-celiac gluten sensitivity with neurological involvement is harder to diagnose, especially since many standard tests require ongoing gluten consumption, which you rightly fear could be dangerous. Seeking out a neurologist or gastroenterologist familiar with gluten-related disorders, or consulting a specialist at a major celiac research center, could provide more validation and possibly explore diagnostic options like specific antibody tests (e.g., anti-gliadin or transglutaminase 6 antibodies) that don't always require a gluten challenge. You are not alone; many individuals with severe reactivity navigate a world of invisible illness where their strict avoidance is a medical necessity, not a choice. Trust your body's signals—it has given you the most important diagnosis already.
    • Scott Adams
      Some members here take GliadinX (a sponsor here) if they eat out in restaurants or outside their homes. It has been shown in numerous studies to break down small amounts of gluten in the stomach, before it reaches your intestines. This would be for small amounts of cross-contamination, and it would not allow any celiac to eat gluten again.
    • Russ H
      The anti-endomysial antibody test is an old test that is generally reported as positive or negative - a lab technician looks down a microscope to check for fluorescence of the sample. It is less sensitive but more specific for coeliac disease than IgA tTG2. Hence, it is not "barely positive" - it is positive. People diagnosed in childhood recover much more quickly than adults.  I would look at testing all 1st degree relatives - parents, siblings.
    • GlorietaKaro
      Hiya- I have been eating gluten free for several years now— but the learning curve has been steep!  I got serious about the strictness of my diet at the beginning of the COVID pandemic: I missed baking bread and thought there would be no harm in making bread in a bread machine— I was just assembling the ingredients, not actually touching it. Well, some flour puffed up in my face and I lost my voice!  At that time, I had many other scary things going on: muscle fasciculations, dropping things, missing things I was reaching for, tripping and trouble navigating around corners and doors ( I ran into them!), muscle weakness resulting in severe incontinence, issues with irregular heartbeat, and other things. I thought I had ALS. I have since learned to avoid all traces of gluten and oats and everything has resolved, but even a trace amount of gluten will cause me to start tripping, dropping things, and have muscle spasms. The last series of micro-exposures resulted in half my face going numb, like Bell’s Palsey   I have consulted with several doctors about this, and mostly they look at me like I’m mentally ill and treat me like a hypochondriac.  One doctor suggested that I start eating gluten again so I could get a diagnosis, but that is a scary prospect— I do like to be able to breathe! I feel like a test run with gluten could put me in the hospital, or even kill me. So my question is— am I crazy?  Could all of those symptoms be caused by gluten?  Is there any way to get a definitive diagnosis without eating gluten(like a scratch test or something?)? Also, in a city full of gluten avoidant individuals (who look a lot like me) but who still occasionally eat gluten foods or cook with gluten or who can still walk into a bakery or pizza restaurant, how can I get taken seriously? Mostly I just want to find out if I am a complete weirdo, or if there is anyone else out there who reacts like I do— 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.