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

reactions to coffee or coffee based drinks??


Megan16

Recommended Posts

Megan16 Rookie

Does anyone ever have any kind of reactions from coffee, or coffee flavored drinks? I've found myself having issues with them, I tried a iced caramel mocha from Kwik Trip and threw up after having a little bit and from what I read on their website they should be gluten free. I also have tried Bolthouse Farms Mocha Cappuccino which is also Gluten free/no preservatives added/no artificial colors or flavors. I don't think it has anything to do with dairy as I don't seem to have reactions to anything else dairy. Anyone have any ideas as to what this could be? Open to any idea or any other suggestions.

Thanks!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



cstark Enthusiast
5 minutes ago, Megan16 said:

Does anyone ever have any kind of reactions from coffee, or coffee flavored drinks? I've found myself having issues with them, I tried a iced caramel mocha from Kwik Trip and threw up after having a little bit and from what I read on their website they should be gluten free. I also have tried Bolthouse Farms Mocha Cappuccino which is also Gluten free/no preservatives added/no artificial colors or flavors. I don't think it has anything to do with dairy as I don't seem to have reactions to anything else dairy. Anyone have any ideas as to what this could be? Open to any idea or any other suggestions.

Thanks!

The caffeine in the coffee flavored drinks acts as a stimulant which means it sets the body into a "hyper" mode.  This is why it's so effective for staying awake when you are tired.  I know for me if I have too much of it at one time, I start to get really jittery.  I completely cut off any coffee or caffeine when I went off gluten because the caffeine content was a trigger for the episodes.

Peacenik Newbie

I saw coffee on one of those sites that lists things people are cross reactive too. I've cut out all coffee and started feeling better immediately. 

kareng Grand Master
9 minutes ago, Peacenik said:

I saw coffee on one of those sites that lists things people are cross reactive too. I've cut out all coffee and started feeling better immediately. 

Sorry.  there is no scientific evidence for cross-reactive to gluten foods.  There may be a real reason you are feeling better off of coffee, but coffee does not cause a Celiac immune response.

 

Open Original Shared Link

"There is not yet reliable data about cross-reactivity. As for the alleged possibility that many gluten-free foods or drinks (such as coffee, milk, orange juice, etc.) would trigger symptoms in celiac individuals due to hidden antigens mimicking gluten or cross-reacting with anti-gluten antibodies, it must be clearly stated that this is all false information, devoid of any scientific basis, and must be rejected as untrue."

Megan16 Rookie
2 hours ago, cstark said:

The caffeine in the coffee flavored drinks acts as a stimulant which means it sets the body into a "hyper" mode.  This is why it's so effective for staying awake when you are tired.  I know for me if I have too much of it at one time, I start to get really jittery.  I completely cut off any coffee or caffeine when I went off gluten because the caffeine content was a trigger for the episodes.

yeah, I use to never have any reactions to caffeine, until I became gluten intolerant about 4 months ago. I never even got jittery or anything from it, ever!  Maybe that's whats happening to me is its just triggering something. Just weird that it would do that, I wonder what it is in coffee/caffeine that would trigger something?

kareng Grand Master
9 minutes ago, Megan16 said:

yeah, I use to never have any reactions to caffeine, until I became gluten intolerant about 4 months ago. I never even got jittery or anything from it, ever!  Maybe that's whats happening to me is its just triggering something. Just weird that it would do that, I wonder what it is in coffee/caffeine that would trigger something??  

Have you tried plain coffee?  Both of those choices have a lot of extra "stuff".  Maybe it isn't even coffee?

Megan16 Rookie

I have not, I hate plain coffee lol, I have to have creamer or something in it.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



cstark Enthusiast
51 minutes ago, Megan16 said:

yeah, I use to never have any reactions to caffeine, until I became gluten intolerant about 4 months ago. I never even got jittery or anything from it, ever!  Maybe that's whats happening to me is its just triggering something. Just weird that it would do that, I wonder what it is in coffee/caffeine that would trigger something?

It isn't the coffee that is the trigger, it's the caffeine because it is a stimulant.  it's just like when a car reves up, everything in the engine goes faster.  It's the same concept. With a stimulant in the body, the body works faster and thus whatever is causing a reaction in the body, like gluten, comes on faster and symptoms can seem more severe.

pipermarau Rookie

here is an interesting tid-bit:  some coffee bean farms shake their beans in flour to prevent them from sticking.  i had to call every coffee company i used and asked them about the early production stages and learned that this is a common practice.  after they dust the beans and get them through the processing belt they are supposed to be rinsed off before being ground into powder or packaged whole.  the rinsing process does not always remove every trace of gluten.  not every coffee farm uses wheat flour, but it is a good idea to make some calls if some coffee makes you sick but not all coffee.  the rest of the responses are also correct.  it could be the caffeine.  also, if you are newly diagnosed coffee can do a real number on the stomach.  hope you feel better.  matcha tea can be a good replacement for coffee, but i am not sure if they have caffeine free flavors.  i also enjoy heating up a cup of plain green tea and adding a teaspoon of hot chocolate mix.  again, caffeine.  maybe i am not the best for finding a coffee replacement, lol.  sorry about that.

kareng Grand Master
4 minutes ago, pipermarau said:

here is an interesting tid-bit:  some coffee bean farms shake their beans in flour to prevent them from sticking.  i had to call every coffee company i used and asked them about the early production stages and learned that this is a common practice.  after they dust the beans and get them through the processing belt they are supposed to be rinsed off before being ground into powder or packaged whole.  the rinsing process does not always remove every trace of gluten.  not every coffee farm uses wheat flour, but it is a good idea to make some calls if some coffee makes you sick but not all coffee.  the rest of the responses are also correct.  it could be the caffeine.  also, if you are newly diagnosed coffee can do a real number on the stomach.  hope you feel better.  matcha tea can be a good replacement for coffee, but i am not sure if they have caffeine free flavors.  i also enjoy heating up a cup of plain green tea and adding a teaspoon of hot chocolate mix.  again, caffeine.  maybe i am not the best for finding a coffee replacement, lol.  sorry about that.

That's a new one to me.....  I would think wheat flour, imported into their country,  would be too expensive for this use.

pipermarau Rookie
1 minute ago, kareng said:

That's a new one to me.....  I would think wheat flour, imported into their country,  would be too expensive for this use.

i thought it was very strange, honestly.  ok, i just spent a few minutes trying to find the articles i found back when i went gluten free, but all i'm really getting are the cross reaction articles.  ok, from what i found out, this wheat dusting only happens with certain companies.  i did not keep the list.  for that i am very sorry because it is useful information.  some of the coffee-gluten issues come from a shared facility while others flat out use wheat flour to prevent the beans from clumping on the belt.  they did not give me a reason why and i remember i was using folger's, tried starbucks home blends, and nestle.  i remember nestle DID have cross contamination issues as well as certain starbuck's blends that were harvested in certain regions.  they may have changed their practices, which is why i suggest calling them and asking if wheat is involved at any point of processing.  aside from obviously glutened flavored blends, the results varied.  i remember also having to call wine companies because i was getting sick and of all things one of my favorite companies told me they dust wheat on the corks!!  of course i asked why do that, won't it dry out the cork?  they said it was to prevent mold and that only certain wines from their line get dusted corks and they could not confirm if any of their products were gluten free because of it.  now i'll only drink wine if it comes with a screw on cap.  

 

the information about the coffee and the wine was given to me directly from customer service and i do not believe they had any reason to lie to me, since i was asking a health question.  i was advised to avoid some companies because they were not certain which products were safe and which were CC or fully glutened.  it has been a few years and things might have changed with society becoming more aware of our need for gluten free products and some companies are answering our pleas to swap out the wheat gluten with something safe for a thickening/sticky agent.  

 

wheat on coffee beans...i know.  twilight zoneish.  i'm sorry i can't be more helpful.  i made those calls a little over 4 years ago.

kareng Grand Master
39 minutes ago, pipermarau said:

i thought it was very strange, honestly.  ok, i just spent a few minutes trying to find the articles i found back when i went gluten free, but all i'm really getting are the cross reaction articles.  ok, from what i found out, this wheat dusting only happens with certain companies.  i did not keep the list.  for that i am very sorry because it is useful information.  some of the coffee-gluten issues come from a shared facility while others flat out use wheat flour to prevent the beans from clumping on the belt.  they did not give me a reason why and i remember i was using folger's, tried starbucks home blends, and nestle.  i remember nestle DID have cross contamination issues as well as certain starbuck's blends that were harvested in certain regions.  they may have changed their practices, which is why i suggest calling them and asking if wheat is involved at any point of processing.  aside from obviously glutened flavored blends, the results varied.  i remember also having to call wine companies because i was getting sick and of all things one of my favorite companies told me they dust wheat on the corks!!  of course i asked why do that, won't it dry out the cork?  they said it was to prevent mold and that only certain wines from their line get dusted corks and they could not confirm if any of their products were gluten free because of it.  now i'll only drink wine if it comes with a screw on cap.  

 

the information about the coffee and the wine was given to me directly from customer service and i do not believe they had any reason to lie to me, since i was asking a health question.  i was advised to avoid some companies because they were not certain which products were safe and which were CC or fully glutened.  it has been a few years and things might have changed with society becoming more aware of our need for gluten free products and some companies are answering our pleas to swap out the wheat gluten with something safe for a thickening/sticky agent.  

 

wheat on coffee beans...i know.  twilight zoneish.  i'm sorry i can't be more helpful.  i made those calls a little over 4 years ago.

I am not sure why they would use wheat flour.  When damp, wheat flour quickly clumps up and gets sticky.  

notme Experienced
4 hours ago, Megan16 said:

yeah, I use to never have any reactions to caffeine, until I became gluten intolerant about 4 months ago. I never even got jittery or anything from it, ever!  Maybe that's whats happening to me is its just triggering something. Just weird that it would do that, I wonder what it is in coffee/caffeine that would trigger something?

maybe your gut is absorbing the caffeine more, now that you're gluten-free and healing.

squirmingitch Veteran
4 hours ago, pipermarau said:

i thought it was very strange, honestly.  ok, i just spent a few minutes trying to find the articles i found back when i went gluten free, but all i'm really getting are the cross reaction articles.  ok, from what i found out, this wheat dusting only happens with certain companies.  i did not keep the list.  for that i am very sorry because it is useful information.  some of the coffee-gluten issues come from a shared facility while others flat out use wheat flour to prevent the beans from clumping on the belt.  they did not give me a reason why and i remember i was using folger's, tried starbucks home blends, and nestle.  i remember nestle DID have cross contamination issues as well as certain starbuck's blends that were harvested in certain regions.  they may have changed their practices, which is why i suggest calling them and asking if wheat is involved at any point of processing.  aside from obviously glutened flavored blends, the results varied.  i remember also having to call wine companies because i was getting sick and of all things one of my favorite companies told me they dust wheat on the corks!!  of course i asked why do that, won't it dry out the cork?  they said it was to prevent mold and that only certain wines from their line get dusted corks and they could not confirm if any of their products were gluten free because of it.  now i'll only drink wine if it comes with a screw on cap.  

 

the information about the coffee and the wine was given to me directly from customer service and i do not believe they had any reason to lie to me, since i was asking a health question.  i was advised to avoid some companies because they were not certain which products were safe and which were CC or fully glutened.  it has been a few years and things might have changed with society becoming more aware of our need for gluten free products and some companies are answering our pleas to swap out the wheat gluten with something safe for a thickening/sticky agent.  

 

wheat on coffee beans...i know.  twilight zoneish.  i'm sorry i can't be more helpful.  i made those calls a little over 4 years ago.

 

4 hours ago, pipermarau said:

i thought it was very strange, honestly.  ok, i just spent a few minutes trying to find the articles i found back when i went gluten free, but all i'm really getting are the cross reaction articles.  ok, from what i found out, this wheat dusting only happens with certain companies.  i did not keep the list.  for that i am very sorry because it is useful information.  some of the coffee-gluten issues come from a shared facility while others flat out use wheat flour to prevent the beans from clumping on the belt.  they did not give me a reason why and i remember i was using folger's, tried starbucks home blends, and nestle.  i remember nestle DID have cross contamination issues as well as certain starbuck's blends that were harvested in certain regions.  they may have changed their practices, which is why i suggest calling them and asking if wheat is involved at any point of processing.  aside from obviously glutened flavored blends, the results varied.  i remember also having to call wine companies because i was getting sick and of all things one of my favorite companies told me they dust wheat on the corks!!  of course i asked why do that, won't it dry out the cork?  they said it was to prevent mold and that only certain wines from their line get dusted corks and they could not confirm if any of their products were gluten free because of it.  now i'll only drink wine if it comes with a screw on cap.  

 

the information about the coffee and the wine was given to me directly from customer service and i do not believe they had any reason to lie to me, since i was asking a health question.  i was advised to avoid some companies because they were not certain which products were safe and which were CC or fully glutened.  it has been a few years and things might have changed with society becoming more aware of our need for gluten free products and some companies are answering our pleas to swap out the wheat gluten with something safe for a thickening/sticky agent.  

 

wheat on coffee beans...i know.  twilight zoneish.  i'm sorry i can't be more helpful.  i made those calls a little over 4 years ago.

Both the statement about the wheat flour on the coffee beans and the wine corks being dusted with wheat are ridiculous, absurd & completely false. More likely this all came from the endless internet myths of where gluten lurks. 

Firstly, wheat is one of the top 8 allergens & would, by law, be required to be listed in the ingredients list.

I personally find it impossible to believe that you called companies & they told you these things. Maybe you dreamed you made these calls. Maybe you had extreme brain fog from being glutened. Maybe you got the idea from reading this:

Perhaps all this came about from someone getting their facts wrong because someone told someone who told someone, who told someone else that there was coffee flour and as the truth became a rumor & got passed along it morphed into something totally different then the original statement. You see, there is such a thing as coffee flour but it has noting to do with wheat and everything to do with coffee fruits. Read about it here:

Open Original Shared Link

 

So that puts that gluten myth to rest. 

Now for the wine cork myth.....

It's quite possible the gluten in wine myth came from here:

Now let's go a little further smashing that myth. 

Open Original Shared Link

 

@Megan16 

As was mentioned in the "wheat on coffee beans" thread, it's possible your problem with coffee is the acid content. 

 

kareng Grand Master

I have to agree.  It does all seem a bit unlikely.  Wheat flour would be very expensive to waste in these countries.  And it really wouldn't keep them from sticking or growing mold as it gets sticky with moisture.  

 

I would think that that some of the Celiac organizations would warn us.  I think it's likely these companiy service reps didn't understand the question.

pipermarau Rookie
6 hours ago, squirmingitch said:

 

Both the statement about the wheat flour on the coffee beans and the wine corks being dusted with wheat are ridiculous, absurd & completely false. More likely this all came from the endless internet myths of where gluten lurks. 

Firstly, wheat is one of the top 8 allergens & would, by law, be required to be listed in the ingredients list.

I personally find it impossible to believe that you called companies & they told you these things. Maybe you dreamed you made these calls. Maybe you had extreme brain fog from being glutened. Maybe you got the idea from reading this:

Perhaps all this came about from someone getting their facts wrong because someone told someone who told someone, who told someone else that there was coffee flour and as the truth became a rumor & got passed along it morphed into something totally different then the original statement. You see, there is such a thing as coffee flour but it has noting to do with wheat and everything to do with coffee fruits. Read about it here:

Open Original Shared Link

 

So that puts that gluten myth to rest. 

Now for the wine cork myth.....

It's quite possible the gluten in wine myth came from here:

Now let's go a little further smashing that myth. 

Open Original Shared Link

 

@Megan16 

As was mentioned in the "wheat on coffee beans" thread, it's possible your problem with coffee is the acid content. 

 

all of that was plain rude.  if the representatives i spoke to had no idea what was going on then that would be the only reason they would say something like that.  as far as i knew i was getting accurate information.  why would i even share something that i didn't think was true or had been told?  this isn't the first time i've been met with "smug" on this site.  GOODBYE.  i'm deleting my profile.  

notme Experienced

hey, man.  don't pick on wine............ ;)

  • 2 weeks later...
dustinhxc Newbie

I use Cameron's Coffee. They are a Gluten Free company. Make sure to look for that on companies products and websites. (Which you did) If you're reacting to a product that says Gluten Free then it was probably cross contaminated, dairy affects you, or the caffeine. I am actually limiting my caffeine now because of a caffeine overdose. I also do not have dairy. Good luck! :)

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. - pilber309 replied to pilber309's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      15

      Burning Sensation in the small intestine

    2. - cristiana replied to pilber309's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      15

      Burning Sensation in the small intestine

    3. - pilber309 replied to pilber309's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      15

      Burning Sensation in the small intestine

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

    • Total Members
      132,890
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    GGMa Mary
    Newest Member
    GGMa Mary
    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

    • pilber309
      Stop eating oats as it did give me irritation.The only diffrent thing i have been consuming are a new probitics which seem to have a fruit ive never heard of as a prebiotic
    • cristiana
      It could well be a new intolerance developing.  Does your diet incorporate pure oats i.e. those safe for coeliac consumption?  I find I can only tolerate a certain amount, same goes for dairy in fact, then I start to get gastric symptoms.   Or have you started consuming a new type of gluten-free bread, or more gluten-free bread than normal, that might contain oats?  I remember reading a post on this forum from a woman who had started to eat a lot of loaves made with oat flour and her coeliac symptoms kicked off again.  I am sure you know this, but some coeliacs cannot tolerate pure oats.
    • pilber309
      I eat a lot of dairy but its intermittent is this burning so I would assume it would happen all the time. Plus I have been tested for lactose intolerance  etc and I am fine and the other symptoms of that I don't get. As a aside  my dad died last month after a long illness so I wonder if the stress of that might be a influence as a bodily reaction to stress.
    • pilber309
    • knitty kitty
      You should be fine.  You may start feeling better within a few days.  Someone who is very low in thiamine may notice improvement within hours.   Did you get the NeuroMag  or another magnesium supplement?
×
×
  • 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.