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Celiac Friendly Companies


parkerrmmc

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parkerrmmc Apprentice

Does anyone have a list of companies that are good about not hiding ingredients on their labels? From other posts I've read, sounds like one good brand is Kraft. I called Betty Crocker yesterday about their fruit snacks and the lady said that they don't ever hide ingredients on their labels.

Thanks!


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KaitiUSA Enthusiast

Betty Crocker is because it is made by General Mills. All of General Mills products do not hide anything either. Hersheys, Kraft, Nestle,Nabisco,Russell Stover,Breyers,Klondike,Popsicle, and Good Humor won't hide anything either. If you go to Edy's website they have a list of gluten free products. Frito Lay also has a list you can request and 3 of their products are on dedicated gluten free lines. There are many more companies as well but I don't have my list by me. Hope this helps some :D

lovegrov Collaborator

This list is not complete. Some are subsidiaries of larger companies also listed, but not all subsidiaries of the larger ones are listed either. There are more companies than this. richard

Aunt Nelly's

Balance

Baskin Robbins

Ben & Jerry

Betty Crocker

Blue Bunny

Butterball *lists wheat only

Breyers

Campbells

Cascadian Farms

Celestial Seasonings

ConAgra *lists wheat only

Country Crock

Edy's

General Mills

Good Humor

Green Giant

Haagen Daz

Hellman's

Hershey

Hormel

Hungry Jack

Jiffy

Knorr

Kozy Shack

Kraft

Libby's

Lipton

Martha White

McCormick

Nabisco

Nestle

Old El Paso

Ortega

Pillsbury

Popsicle

Post

Progresso

Russell Stover

Seneca Foods

Smucker

Stokely's

Sunny Delight

T Marzetti

Tyson

Unilever

Wishbone

Yoplait

Zatarain's

Carriefaith Enthusiast

Where do you guys find this information?

lovegrov Collaborator

That list I gathered by calling companies and asking others on various forums and then checking it out. The list is preserved in the archives of the delphiforums celiac forum.

richard

celiac3270 Collaborator

Medaka, if you e-mail the companies and ask about their labeling, policies, you can find out. Richard compiled this list and also posted it on Delphi...I would assume through e-mailing or calling the companies.

celiac3270 Collaborator

Oops...sorry--I posted it one minute too late ;)


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Carriefaith Enthusiast

OK. Thanks!

parkerrmmc Apprentice

Thanks to all of you for the information! What a huge help

Missy

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    • Rejoicephd
      Thank you very much @trents! This is super helpful. The only time I wasn’t sick after my diagnosis was when I was ordering and eating certified gluten-free meals from a company. I did that for a few months right after being diagnosed and then I started to try to figure it out how to cool and eat gluten-free meals myself. I think I’m probably getting low levels of gluten exposure and maybe that’s what’s making me ill. Possibly other things also not helping the situation (like dairy). Anyway this gives me something to focus on to see if it helps. So thanks for that!
    • trents
      Welcome to the celiac.com, @Rejoicephd! 1. "Gluten Free" does not equate to "contains no gluten". According to FDA advertising regulations, it means it cannot contain more than 20ppm of gluten. This is a good standard for most in the celiac community but not good enough for those on the sensitive end of the spectrum. If you find the "Certified Gluten Free" symbol on a package that is even better, indicating that there is no more than 10ppm of gluten.  2. When you are choosing "gluten free" items from a restaurant, realize that it only means gluten is not an intentional ingredient. It does not rule out CC (Cross Contamination) caused by those cooking and preparing the food back in the kitchen who may be cooking it on the same surfaces or in the same pots/pans as they are gluten containing food items and handling it with the same utensils they are handling gluten-containing food. 3. About 8% of celiacs react to the protein avenin in oats as they do the protein gluten in wheat/barley/rye. In addition, some cultivars of oats actually contain the protein gluten. Many celiacs also react to the protein casein in dairy products as they do gluten or they are lactose intolerant. Eggs, soy and corn are also common "cross reactors" in the celiac community but oats and dairy are the most common.
    • Rejoicephd
      Hi everyone! I was diagnosed with celiac a year ago (they confirmed it on endoscopy following a positive TTG antibody and positive genetic test). I thought the gluten free diet thing wasn’t going to be that hard of an adjustment, but man was I wrong. I’m a year in and still having issues in terms of accidentally glutening myself and getting super sick (I’m starting to think I need to just bring my own food everywhere I go). And also even when I am eating foods that say they are gluten free, I’m still dealing with an upset stomach often. My GI doc said I should avoid dairy as well, and the internal medicine doc said my gut microbiome might be messed up from all of this. I’m just looking for some answers/ideas/tips on what additional things I can do to feel better. Do you all do avoid additional categories of foods beyond just gluten to help alleviate symptoms? Thanks! 
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