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

Road Trip


mbg98

Recommended Posts

mbg98 Contributor

Hi everyone, i'm in count down mode to my disney world trip! I'm so excited!! We will however be driving, 16 hours, yuck! I am of course taking a cooler with snacks and sandwich roll-ups, but in case we stop what can and can't i have? I know there is definatley a risk of cross contamination and such but just in case we stop along the way i want to be prepared. I of course know I can have a Wendy's baked potatoe but can I have there Chili? Mcdonalds i know is iffyl with the Frie issue but last I heard they were gluten free, is anything else there? Arbys, Burger king? What about Cracker barrel do they have a Gluten Free menu?

thanks for the help!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Jnkmnky Collaborator

Stopping at Super walmarts is a great choice. There are lots of super Walmarts right off of major roads. Walmart has a labeling policy and some choice foods you can eat. Also, if there is a supermarket with a salad bar, you can make a salad with hard boiled eggs etc. We've traveled x-country no less than five times with three little kids. Have fun.

mbg98 Contributor

Thanks, but most of the stuff you get at walmart I would have packed in my cooler, Im looking for although risky some type of fast food. Can any one help?

flagbabyds Collaborator

I wouldn't do fast food, I would just stop at walmart once you have exhausted your cooler supply, and then pacl it up again when you stop at the store, you can also see if there is a whole foods on your way and get some food there too.

Have fun!

happygirl Collaborator

mcdonalds, wendys, chick-fil-a, taco bell, burger king, etc all have info on their webpages about allergies, most of whom include gluten information.

however, let me note from personal experience, that being glutened on a trip is one of the worst things in the world (after eating at fast food places). I only eat gluten free items, tell the staff to be careful, etc.....still, cross contamination will happen...

hope that you have a lovely trip! i LOVE disney world...I was Minnie Mouse two years for Halloween as a little girl. :)

Franceen Explorer
mcdonalds, wendys, chick-fil-a, taco bell, burger king, etc all have info on their webpages about allergies, most of whom include gluten information.

however, let me note from personal experience, that being glutened on a trip is one of the worst things in the world (after eating at fast food places). I only eat gluten free items, tell the staff to be careful, etc.....still, cross contamination will happen...

hope that you have a lovely trip! i LOVE disney world...I was Minnie Mouse two years for Halloween as a little girl. :)

After I saw the post with the Walmart labeling policy, my husband and I went to a Walmart Supercenter here in Fredericksburg VA. We spent about 2 hours reading labels to try to find the elusive "gluten free" labels on their "Great Value" items.

After all that time, we found about 3 - 5 items labeled Gluten Free - a jar of PICKLES (gluten-free anyway), a jar of FRUIT, and some popcorn-like snack. Many of their items that are gluten-free are NOT labeled, as WALMART changes suppliers for "Great Value" products almost daily and they are not going to assume liability for their offshore and "private" suppliers.

Their policy is a HUGE PLOY - maybe even "bait and switch". (typical of Walmart). They are labeling some things that are gluten free by their very nature (pickles, Fruit, popcorn). They are not BUYING ANY NEW gluten-free Items, nor even labeling stuff that is gluten-free anyway. Big Disappointment. I asked them if they carry any gluten-free flours or baked items. OF COURSE NOT! "They wouldn't sell".......

I found more gluten-free-labeled stuff at Giant and Food Lion.

I felt like telling Walmart, "why don't you put gluten-free on the barcode of their apples and grapes, etc?"

They could then advertise "over 10,000 MORE items that are gluten-free!" (and have no further liability).

The company really has no intent of merchandising anything gluten-free other than what's already inherently gluten-free.

The stuff at Walmart is the same stuff as everywhere else, one has to know one's "ingredients" and learn to read labels to be gluten-free. Walmart isn't going to help.

Then again, to give benefit of doubt, this area of the country is increasingly turning asian, hispanic, and black. These races do not get Celiac. I've noticed that the international food section of Shopper's Food Warehouse is now almost 2 aisles, with many many hispanic specialties in every section. Therefore this area could be different than a store in New York State or other areas of the country where there are still a lot of northern Euopeans whites - maybe in Wisconsin they have Walmarts with a lot of gluten-free items......but doubt that Walmart regionalizes their own brand.

Anyone else found any gluten-free in Walmart?

:unsure:

frenchiemama Collaborator
Then again, to give benefit of doubt, this area of the country is increasingly turning asian, hispanic, and black. These races do not get Celiac.

That's not true.

Therefore this area could be different than a store in New York State or other areas of the country where there are still a lot of northern Euopeans whites - maybe in Wisconsin they have Walmarts with a lot of gluten-free items......but doubt that Walmart regionalizes their own brand.

Nope. I live in Wisconsin and there are not a lot of gluten free things at walmart.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Felidae Enthusiast
Then again, to give benefit of doubt, this area of the country is increasingly turning asian, hispanic, and black. These races do not get Celiac. I've noticed that the international food section of Shopper's Food Warehouse is now almost 2 aisles, with many many hispanic specialties in every section. Therefore this area could be different than a store in New York State or other areas of the country where there are still a lot of northern Euopeans whites - maybe in Wisconsin they have Walmarts with a lot of gluten-free items......but doubt that Walmart regionalizes their own brand.

Celiac disease may be more predominant in people with different ancestral heritages. But, I think it is becoming less discriminate.

I love the international aisles because you can get some great rice noodles and other stuff for cheap.

jaten Enthusiast

Franceen, I can ditto your 2-3 hr label reading trip to W-M for the elusive gluten-free Great Value brand foods. I had similar results. I was really bummed, because I had gotten psyched for a treasure trove of new foods. The only thing I can add to the sparse list you made is the Great Value apple juice. Woo hoo! (I don't even care for apple juice!)

BTW, I live in the Southeast, about an hour south of Memphis.

  • 3 months later...
Super Bellybutton Rookie
Then again, to give benefit of doubt, this area of the country is increasingly turning asian, hispanic, and black. These races do not get Celiac.

Open Original Shared Link

  • 10 months later...
rtucker2000 Newbie

This is a e-mail response I got from Cracker Barrel:

Thank you for taking the time to contact us here at Cracker Barrel Old Country Store. We appreciate receiving your inquiry and we do understand your concern.

The following is a list of menu items that do not contain wheat, barley, or rye products as an ingredient(the modified food starch in the fried apples is from corn). However, we have an open kitchen where biscuits and dumplings are made from scratch several times daily. Many of our grill items do not contain glutents but are prepared on the same equipment as products that do. There is always a chance that cross-transference may occur.

Please inform a manager of your sensitivity when you visit one of our stores to ensure that every effort is made to prevent the accidental transfer of glutens via the handling and preparation of your meal.

Grill Items: hamburger steak, ribeye and sirloin steak, grilled catfish, grilled trout, grilled pork chops, country ham, city ham, bacon, eggs, pork sausage, turkey sausage

Side Items: carrots, cole slaw, corn, fried apples, green beans, mashed potatoes, baked potato, pinto beans, turnip greens

Excluding the fried chicken tender salad and chunky chicken (homemade chicken salad) salad, salads ordered without croutons would not contain glutens. See the ingredient statements below for our salad dressings choice.

The vinegars used in the salad refined distilled grain vinegars. According to the American Celiac Disease Alliance, "Distilled alcoholic beverages and vinegars are gluten-free. Distilled products do not contain any harmful gluten peptides. Research indicates that the gluten peptide is too large to carry over in the distillation process. This leaves the resultant liquid gluten-free."

Buttermilk Dressing: cultured buttermilk, soybean oil, water, egg yolk, distilled vinegar, salt, corn syrup, sugar, spices, lactic acid, xanthan gum, guar gum, onion*, potassium sorbate and sodium benzoate added as preservatives, garlic*, disodium inosinate, disodium guanylate, calcium disodium EDTA added to protect flavor. *DEHYDRATED

Peppercorn Dressing: soybean oil, water, sour cream solids, egg yolk, distilled vinegar, salt, spices, dehydrated garlic, xanthan gum, potassium sorbate and sodium benzoate added as preservatives, natural flavor, calcium disodium EDTA added to protect flavor.

Honey French Dressing: high fructrose corn syrup, soybean oil, corn-cider vinegar, distilled vinegar, tomato paste, salt, paprika, spices, xanthan gum, onion*, honey, invert sugar, beet juice concentrate, garlic*, natural flavor. *DEHYDRATED

Honey Mustard Dressing: soybean oil, water, high fructrose corn syrup, distilled vinegar, honey, egg yolk, mustard seed, sugar, salt, spice, white wine, natural flavor, xanthan gum, citric acid, tartartic acid, artificial color (including yellow #5), calcium disodium EDTA added to protect flavor.

1000 Island Dressing: soybean oil, water, pickles, sugar, tomato paste, distilled vinegar, high fructrose corn syrup, egg yolk, salt, spice, sodium benzoate, and potassium sorbate added as preservatives, natural and artificial flavors, onion*, bell peppers, garlic*, calcium disodium EDTA to protect flavor, xanthan gum, guar gum, polysorbate 80. *DEHYDRATED

We look forward to having the opportunity to serve you again soon.

Sincerely,

Pam Seay

Guest Relations Representative

Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc.

  • 1 month later...
rajawali Newbie
After I saw the post with the Walmart labeling policy, my husband and I went to a Walmart Supercenter here in Fredericksburg VA. We spent about 2 hours reading labels to try to find the elusive "gluten free" labels on their "Great Value" items.

After all that time, we found about 3 - 5 items labeled Gluten Free - a jar of PICKLES (gluten-free anyway), a jar of FRUIT, and some popcorn-like snack. Many of their items that are gluten-free are NOT labeled, as WALMART changes suppliers for "Great Value" products almost daily and they are not going to assume liability for their offshore and "private" suppliers.

Their policy is a HUGE PLOY - maybe even "bait and switch". (typical of Walmart). They are labeling some things that are gluten free by their very nature (pickles, Fruit, popcorn). They are not BUYING ANY NEW gluten-free Items, nor even labeling stuff that is gluten-free anyway. Big Disappointment. I asked them if they carry any gluten-free flours or baked items. OF COURSE NOT! "They wouldn't sell".......

I found more gluten-free-labeled stuff at Giant and Food Lion.

I felt like telling Walmart, "why don't you put gluten-free on the barcode of their apples and grapes, etc?"

They could then advertise "over 10,000 MORE items that are gluten-free!" (and have no further liability).

The company really has no intent of merchandising anything gluten-free other than what's already inherently gluten-free.

The stuff at Walmart is the same stuff as everywhere else, one has to know one's "ingredients" and learn to read labels to be gluten-free. Walmart isn't going to help.

Then again, to give benefit of doubt, this area of the country is increasingly turning asian, hispanic, and black. These races do not get Celiac. I've noticed that the international food section of Shopper's Food Warehouse is now almost 2 aisles, with many many hispanic specialties in every section. Therefore this area could be different than a store in New York State or other areas of the country where there are still a lot of northern Euopeans whites - maybe in Wisconsin they have Walmarts with a lot of gluten-free items......but doubt that Walmart regionalizes their own brand.

Anyone else found any gluten-free in Walmart?

:unsure:

---------------------------------------

Response to Franceen,

The above response was dated April 9, 2006, and I didn't see it until today (recently diagnosed Celiac victim). I am not sure if you would see mine. Just to let you know, my ethnic background is part Indonesian and part Chinese.

Hope this helps.

Rajawali.

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. - lil-oly replied to Jmartes71's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      1

      Gluten tester

    2. - knitty kitty replied to JudyLou's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      11

      Seeking advice on potential gluten challenge

    3. - JudyLou replied to JudyLou's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      11

      Seeking advice on potential gluten challenge

    4. - knitty kitty replied to JudyLou's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      11

      Seeking advice on potential gluten challenge

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

    • Total Members
      133,156
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    mike101020
    Newest Member
    mike101020
    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

    • lil-oly
      Hey there, have you been tested for allergies? You may not only have celiac disease but be allergic. I have celiac disease and am allergic to Barley, wheat and rye. 
    • JudyLou
    • knitty kitty
      I have osteopenia and have cracked three vertebrae.  Niacin is connected to osteoporosis! Do talk to your nutritionist and doctor about supplementing with B vitamins.  Blood tests don't reveal the amount of vitamins stored inside cells.  The blood is a transportation system and can reflect vitamins absorbed from food eaten in the previous twenty-four to forty-eight hours.  Those "normal limits" are based on minimum amounts required to prevent disease, not levels for optimal health.   Keep us posted on your progress.   B Vitamins: Functions and Uses in Medicine https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9662251/ Association of dietary niacin intake with osteoporosis in the postmenopausal women in the US: NHANES 2007–2018 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11835798/ Clinical trial: B vitamins improve health in patients with coeliac disease living on a gluten-free diet https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19154566/   Nutritional Imbalances in Adult Celiac Patients Following a Gluten-Free Diet https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8398893/ Nutritional Consequences of Celiac Disease and Gluten-Free Diet https://www.mdpi.com/2036-7422/15/4/61 Simplifying the B Complex: How Vitamins B6 and B9 Modulate One Carbon Metabolism in Cancer and Beyond https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9609401/
    • JudyLou
      Thank you so much for the clarification! Yes to these questions: Have you consulted dietician?  Have you been checked for nutritional deficiencies?  Osteoporosis? Thyroid? Anemia?  Do you take any supplements, or vitamins? I’m within healthy range for nutritional tests, thyroid and am not anemic. I do have osteopenia. I don’t take any medications, and the dietician was actually a nutritionist (not sure if that is the same thing) recommended by my physician at the time to better understand gluten free eating.    I almost wish the gluten exposure had triggered something, so at least I’d know what’s going on. So confusing!    Many thanks! 
    • knitty kitty
      @JudyLou,  I have dermatitis herpetiformis, too!  And...big drum roll... Niacin improves dermatitis herpetiformis!   Niacin is very important to skin health and intestinal health.   You're correct.  dermatitis herpetiformis usually occurs on extensor muscles, but dermatitis herpetiformis is also pressure sensitive, so blisters can form where clothing puts pressure on the skin. Elastic waist bands, bulky seams on clothing, watch bands, hats.  Rolled up sleeves or my purse hanging on my arm would make me break out on the insides of my elbows.  I have had a blister on my finger where my pen rested as I write.  Foods high in Iodine can cause an outbreak and exacerbate dermatitis herpetiformis. You've been on the gluten free diet for a long time.  Our gluten free diet can be low in vitamins and minerals, especially if processed gluten free foods are consumed.  Those aren't fortified with vitamins like gluten containing products are.  Have you consulted dietician?  Have you been checked for nutritional deficiencies?  Osteoporosis? Thyroid? Anemia?  Do you take any supplements, medicine, or vitamins? Niacin deficiency is connected to anemia.  Anemia can cause false negatives on tTg IgA tests.  A person can be on that borderline where symptoms wax and wane for years, surviving, but not thriving.  We have a higher metabolic need for more nutrients when we're sick or emotionally stressed which can deplete the small amount of vitamins we can store in our bodies and symptoms reappear.   Exposure to gluten (and casein in those sensitive to it) can cause an increased immune response and inflammation for months afterwards. The immune cells that make tTg IgA antibodies which are triggered today are going to live for about two years. During that time, inflammation is heightened.  Those immune cells only replicate when triggered.  If those immune cells don't get triggered again for about two years, they die without leaving any descendents programmed to trigger on gluten and casein.  The immune system forgets gluten and casein need to be attacked.  The Celiac genes turn off.  This is remission.    Some people in remission report being able to consume gluten again without consequence.   However, another triggering event can turn the Celiac genes on again.   Celiac genes are turned on by a triggering event (physical or emotional stress).  There's some evidence that thiamine insufficiency contributes to the turning on of autoimmune genes.  There is an increased biological need for thiamine when we are physically or emotionally stressed.  Thiamine cannot be stored for more than twenty-one days and may be depleted in as little as three during physical and emotional stresses. Mitochondria without sufficient thiamine become damaged and don't function properly.  This gets relayed to the genes and autoimmune disease genes turn on.  Thiamine and other B vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients are needed to replace the dysfunctional mitochondria and repair the damage to the body.   I recommend getting checked for vitamin and mineral deficiencies.  More than just Vitamin D and B12.  A gluten challenge would definitely be a stressor capable of precipitating further vitamin deficiencies and health consequences.   Best wishes!    
×
×
  • 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.