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

rumberg

Recommended Posts

rumberg Rookie

I just noticed my favorite coffee mugs which are probably glazed porcelain or possibly glazed ceramic are showing wear along the rim surface (where you place your lips).  Can they be washed well or is this a source of cross contamination?  I haven't noticed this topic anywhere.  I read not to use steel wool on porcelain or glass in other threads.  Is this because the steel wool with scratch glass and make it then not useable? (I already used steel wool on glass pyrex because it did have scratches already).  Folks talk about throwing out wood, plastic, and teflon that is scratched but what about glass or porcelain (like my coffee mugs)?  I also read that if you used flavored coffee in your Keurig machine pre diagnosis, it could be cross contaminated.  Since it is plastic essentially, does that mean throw out?  How would I clean it?  Still trying to get all gluten out of kitchen and new at this.  Thanks


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kareng Grand Master

What would you have used the cups for that had gluten?  Also, I have never seen a Keurig cup with gluten.  I suppose you could send some vinegar through and then several plain water cycles.  There is also somehting called a "de-scaler" that is supposed to go thru coffee systems and get the calcium build-up from water and coffee oil build-up off.

rumberg Rookie

I would eat gluten throughout the day while drinking my coffee pre diagnosis.  So exchange from my mouth to the rim of the cup.  Some of my cups have areas  no longer glazed or with scratches on them on that rim.  Wondering if  those are small areas that gluten could hide and be difficult to clean because porous (due to scratches or deglazed areas).  Still working on that initial clean out of old gluten contamination in kitchen items.  

 

kareng Grand Master
44 minutes ago, rumberg said:

I would eat gluten throughout the day while drinking my coffee pre diagnosis.  So exchange from my mouth to the rim of the cup.  Some of my cups have areas  no longer glazed or with scratches on them on that rim.  Wondering if  those are small areas that gluten could hide and be difficult to clean because porous (due to scratches or deglazed areas).  Still working on that initial clean out of old gluten contamination in kitchen items.  

 

I don't think I would worry there was gluten hiding there.  But I think you need new cups - you probably shouldn't use cups that no longer have a good base of glaze. 

rumberg Rookie

Thanks for responding.  I decided you are absolutely right that I just need to get rid of them anyway.  I was going to throw away most of my quality pots and pans because all of them over the years have scratches or even some pitting in them?  I am trying to understand the concept related to scratches on kitchen items.  Do I consider if the item is nonporous (like aluminum/stainless pans or pyrex glass) and assume I can clean those even if they have scratches with good scrubs?  And only worry about scratches on porous items like cutting boards, tuber ware or plastics?  Also throw out juicer which has plastic and mesh strainer mounted on the motor in which possibly glutenous substances were used in it before or graters?  (I understand sifters and colander).  I have a large kitchen drawer filled with clips, pens, pencils, rubber bands, scotch tape etc etc.  When they say deglutenize your kitchen, does that mean throwing out things that could have been contaminated by my dirty gluten free hands in prior life?  I already have eczema on hands and don't want to have to wash hands after I touch anything pre diagnosis.  But am mostly focusing on kitchen and bathrooms.  Or am I being crazy?  I am asymptomatic so I will not know when I have exposed myself.  Sorry, I hope to pay it forward to newbies one day but right now I am going crazy trying to be compliant and it is the above type of questions that are driving me NUTS!  Thanks

 

kareng Grand Master

I think we sometimes go a bit overboard on this throwing out kitchen stuff.  The basic idea is that anything that is hard to clean - like all the little holes in a colander or a porous pizza stone- should  be replaced.  If you think you can get something clean- use it.  The fact is, it's not going to be an endless supply of gluten in the little scratches on your pans.  If it's going to come out - it will the first time you use it.  I put old pans in the dish washer and have been using them.  

I cleaned out the kitchen drawers because they get crumbs.  We should all probably clean them out more.  Just wash off the pens if you want.  Throw it all out and start a new junk drawer if that helps.  :lol:

rumberg Rookie

"If  is gonna come out, it will the first time you use it"  will absoulutely give me comfort.  The nurse in me is too focused on cross contamination.  I am thinking if I put a pan or pen in a shelf or drawer that has gluten in or on it then I will need to reclean the entire shelf or drawer and all items in it and worse never know the source.  It is really helpful to hear from folk that have immediate reactions because they know cross contamination realistically.  Thanks


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kareng Grand Master
22 minutes ago, rumberg said:

"If  is gonna come out, it will the first time you use it"  will absoulutely give me comfort.  The nurse in me is too focused on cross contamination.  I am thinking if I put a pan or pen in a shelf or drawer that has gluten in or on it then I will need to reclean the entire shelf or drawer and all items in it and worse never know the source.  It is really helpful to hear from folk that have immediate reactions because they know cross contamination realistically.  Thanks

I worked in health care, too.  But the fact is, gluten isn't like a germ.  It won't multiply and dried crumbs don't really stick...  Just use some common sense and you will be fine

GFinDC Veteran

Hi rumberg,

I often rinse things before I use them, just to be sure.  It only takes a few seconds to rinse something off.  But I live with gluten eaters so I know there is flour floating around sometimes.  If I lived by myself I'd never intentionally bring gluten items into the house so I wouldn't worry about rinsing things.  Unless I was buying something gluteney as a gift of course.

I think the far more likely source of gluten would be food products you might eat that have some gluten in them.  Many foods are now labeled gluten-free.  Meats, veggies, eggs, and fruits are naturally gluten-free.  Nuts you have to be careful of because they sometimes add flavoring to them and it could contain gluten.  So always read labels.  The best labels have only one ingredient listed, but up to 3 ingredients is usually a good item.  After you've been gluten-free for a few months things will be a little easier.  You get used to checking labels and avoiding certain things and change your eating habits.  A simple whole foods diet is good for beginners as it avoids most hazards with processed foods and saves a lot of time and worry when purchasing foods.  You may end up cooking more but you know what you are eating too.  You can always branch out to more processed foods after you get a handle on the basics.

kareng Grand Master

If there is sentimental value to a coffee cup - your kids gave you one that says " mom" or something - you can always use them to hold pens on your desk or as a vase for small flowers

deb-rn Contributor

I got rid of all wooden things in my kitchen, and wiped down all surfaces that used to hold flour, etc.  I wiped down the toaster oven good initially.  Yep... it's the nurse in us!

 

Debbie RN

cyclinglady Grand Master

My diagnosis ocurred during my 25th wedding anniversary.  I tossed a lot of things that were just worn out and old.   It was a great excuse to spend money.  This included most plastics (Tupperware-type items go funny anyway....), wooden items, mixer, speciality baking pans (too hard to clean), etc.  I kept my favorite cookie sheets and i use parchment paper as gluten-free dough tends to stick.  I kept my ancient Revere pots after a good scrub and cleaned and re-seasoned my cast iron.  ( Bake super high temperature).   Some things were already dedicated to my hubby as he had been gluten-free long before me.  

Actually,  it did not cost a lot as I am a bargain shopper. 

deb-rn Contributor

We try to use glass whenever possible for storing leftovers now, in part due to the leaching of chemicals out of plastics... even BPA free.... plus the plastic holds in more bacteria, etc.  I still have to use it for freezing some things, but I try to use as much glass as humanly possible.  You especially don't want to put acidic things in plastic as the acid degrades the plastic.... and where do those particles go?  Yep... right in  YOUR  food!

Debbie

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      129,612
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Shantell Marrero
    Newest Member
    Shantell Marrero
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.2k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Alibu
      I was tested back in 2017 and my TTG-IGA was mildly elevated (an 11 with reference range <4) but my EMA was negative and biopsy was negative. Fast forward to 2 weeks ago where I was like y'know what, I still have so many symptoms and I'm always so sick, I should repeat this, thinking it was not going to be positive.  I also found out through 23 and me that I do have the HLA-DQ2.5 gene so I thought it would be good to repeat given my ongoing symptoms. Well my blood work came back with a ttg-iga level of 152.6 with a reference range of <15 and my EMA was positive and EMA titer was 1:10 with reference range of <1:5. I guess I'm nervous that I'm going to do the biopsy and it's going to be negative again, especially since I also had an endoscopy in 2020, not to look for celiac but just as a regular 5 year thing I do because of all my GI issues, and they didn't see anything then either. I have no idea how long the EMA has been positive but I'm wondering if it's very recent, if the biopsy will show damage and if so, if they'll say well the biopsy is the gold standard so it's not celiac? I of course am doing all the things to convince myself that it isn't real. Do a lot of people go through this? I think because back in 2017 my ttg-iga was elevated but not a huge amount and my EMA was negative and my biopsy was negative, I keep thinking this time it's going to be different. But this time my ttg-iga is 152.6 with reference range <15, and my EMA was positive. BUT, my titer is only 1:10 and I keep reading how most people here had a ttg-iga in the hundreds or thousands, and the EMA titer was much higher. So now I am convinced that it was a false positive and when they do the biopsy it'll be negative.
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @linnylou73! Are you claiming this based on a reaction or based upon actual testing?
    • linnylou73
      Sams club membermark columbian coffee is either cross contaminated or the pods contain gluten
    • KimMS
    • Scott Adams
      This varies a lot from person to person. I include foods that are not certified gluten-free but are labelled "gluten-free", while super sensitive people only use certified gluten-free. Both types of products have been found to contain gluten, so there are no guarantees either way: It you are in the super sensitive group, eating a whole foods based diet where you prepare everything is the safest bet, but it's also difficult. Eating out is the the most risky, even if a restaurant has a gluten-free menu. I also include items that are naturally gluten-free, for example refried beans, tuna, pasta sauces, salsas, etc., which have a low overall risk of contamination.
×
×
  • Create New...