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Gluten free foods


Skooch

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Skooch Newbie

I am new to the gluten-free way of eating.  Can someone with Celiac disease diagnosis have food with SOY products?  Or is gluten-free on Wheat, Barley, and Rye products??

Thank you in advance

 


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kareng Grand Master
1 hour ago, Skooch said:

I am new to the gluten-free way of eating.  Can someone with Celiac disease diagnosis have food with SOY products?  Or is gluten-free on Wheat, Barley, and Rye products??

Thank you in advance

 

Soy is gluten-free.  The only foods we neeed to avoid are ones that contain wheat, rye or barley and non-certfied as gluten-free oats.  Some oats contain wheat from the farming and harvesting process.

Let me get you a link to the list.  Be right back

 

Start here - 

 

GFinDC Veteran

Right, soy is naturally gluten-free.  But it is often used in soy sauce which usually has gluten in it.  So you have to check ingredient labels.  The other possible issue with soy is that it is a top 8 allergen in the 
USA.  So lots of people have reactions to it.

  • 4 weeks later...
Kittyb Newbie

Read the ingredients-wheat is commonly the first one listed in soy sauce. I buy Kroger store brand, no wheat.

psawyer Proficient

Soy is not gluten, but many of us with celiac disease are also intolerant to soy. Most soy sauce has more wheat than soy--read labels carefully. If you are in Canada, VH Soy Sauce is gluten-free. The brand is owned by ConAgra, but is only sold in Canada. VH makes many sauces; most if not all are gluten-free.

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    • Matthias
    • Scott Adams
      This is a really common area of confusion. Most natural cheeses (cheddar, Swiss, mozzarella, Parmesan, brie, camembert, and most blue cheeses) are inherently gluten-free, and you’re right that the molds used today are typically grown on gluten-free media. The bigger risks tend to come from processed cheeses: shredded cheese (anti-caking agents), cheese spreads, beer-washed rinds, smoke-flavored cheeses, and anything with added seasonings or “natural flavors,” where cross-contact can happen. As for yeast, you’re also correct — yeast itself is gluten-free. The issue is the source: brewer’s yeast and yeast extracts can be derived from barley unless labeled gluten-free, while baker’s yeast is generally safe. When in doubt, sticking with whole, unprocessed cheeses and products specifically labeled gluten-free is the safest approach, especially if you’re highly sensitive.
    • Scott Adams
    • Matthias
      Thanks a lot for your response! Can you maybe specify which kind of cheeses I should be cautious about? Camembert/Brie and blue cheeses (the molds of which are nowadays mostly grown on gluten-free media, though, so I've read, right?) or other ones as well? Also, I was under the impression that yeast is generally gluten-free if not declared otherwise. Is that false?
    • Scott Adams
      I agree with @trents, but thank you for bringing this up here!
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