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

"gluten Free" Items That "got You"


NorthernElf

Recommended Posts

NorthernElf Enthusiast

I KNOW I've been glutened by so called gluten-free items. I am a pretty sensitive celiac and a very careful one. When I am at home and get sick I can usually pinpoint exactly what got me, mostly because my diet doesn't vary too much.

Off the top of my head, I know Kettle chips affect me, despite their gluten free label. I've eaten in 4 restaurants with gluten free menus and been glutened twice. 50/50 odds aren't very appealing to me !

So, I was wondering about other people's experiences - have you been glutened by so called gluten-free items ? I came across an article the other day that questioned the quality control of gluten-free items, esp. from big manufacturers, and just how gluten-free they were (I wish I could remember where it was). Rice Chex comes to mind since that seems to have affected some people.

Anyone ???


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • Replies 102
  • Created
  • Last Reply
jerseyangel Proficient

Utz Chips come to mind--they made me very sick. :angry:

tarnalberry Community Regular

just the honey nut and chocolate chex, as I recall. but I am *not* an uber sensitive one.

lpellegr Collaborator

Lay's potato chips and Fritos. Sure, the ingredients are gluten-free, but the cross contamination must be significant.

Franceen Explorer

I never can pinpoint it exactly for sure but suspect the following:

Cinnamon Flavored Chex (almost certain) - do fine with the corn and rice and honey nut.

Van's Waffles (almost certain because reaction is consistent every time I eat them)

gluten-free Menu items at Uno's (Cheesburger item - just a cheeseburger w/o bun - suspect cross contamination in kitchen)

Outback Restaurant - unknown which item eaten. But that was once out of about 50 times I've eaten there - They are the SAFEST gluten-free restaurant I've ever been to.

I seem to have better luck with the European brands (Glutano, Scharr, etc) made in Europe and imported. So far also ok with Glutino pretzels.

The more mainstream Celiac becomes, the more companies are jumping on the bandwagon - and rushing to the market with stuff - hence the cross contamination issues and the unintentional hidden ingredients. They get bad info, and 3rd party suppliers don't comply and they don't know it.

It IS a significant problem. Right now I'm suffering from repeated glutenings from having to travel unexpectedly for a funeral and not being able to take food or choose restaurant. Did the best I could, but I'm suffering!

I'm guessing this problem will never go away completely. I'm hoping for the "morning after" pill someday or the "in preparation for" pill someday (they are doing clinical trials on some now)........

hannahp57 Contributor

I am allergic to MSG along with my gluten intolerance. I was eating cape cods chips for a while because there website declared them to be gluten free. some flavors would give me horrid stomach pains while others were perfectly fine. then i read on this forum that autolyzed yeast was another word for MSG...so now i have another word to look out for during reading labels...

ive also been gotten by Carrabas chicken caesar salad.. off the gluten free nenu...

Emily888 Rookie

I never can pinpoint it exactly for sure but suspect the following:

Cinnamon Flavored Chex (almost certain) - do fine with the corn and rice and honey nut.

There is soy lecithin in the Cinnamon Flavored chex but not the corn or rice chex. It maybe the soy that is bothering you. I can not have soy, I have a bad reaction from soy in addition to the gluten issue.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



darlindeb25 Collaborator
Utz Chips come to mind--they made me very sick

This surprises me Patty, I eat the regular UTZ all the time, and never have a reaction. Did you eat reg or flavored?

I can't eat any "gluten free" labeled foods. The cereals make me ill, as do any of the bars, cookies, crackers, anything with other grains in them. I feel the CC issue is my problem. All the other grains are CC'd by gluten to begin with. Along with the fact that most "gluten free" foods still contain at least 5ppm of gluten and up to 20ppm.

Meds are an issue too. Azo Standard is considered gluten free, yet it glutened me and I was sick for 3 months. Many vitamins are listed as gluten free, yet make so many ill, and many have barley or wheat grasses in them....I just do not believe they are safe.

In my opinion, this isn't good for any of us, even if you do not react to the product.

taweavmo3 Enthusiast

We are a sensitive bunch here too. I have had to become super vigilant in the processed foods we decide to eat, b/c my dd has not grown at all in a year. I suspect (no one shoot me down who loves their Chex) it was the small amount of gluten she was getting in Chex and other gluten free products.

All Chex

Van's waffles

Lays

Amy's frozen meals (we both react to these, badly)

Hershey's syrup (it took a few days before a reaction happened)

That's all I can think of, but I know there's more. We really don't do much processed food at all anymore, except for a few Kraft items. I do trust Kraft and the small gluten free companies, but that's about it!

NorthernElf Enthusiast

Interesting - I can't do Lay's stacks chips even though they should be safe - but then I think I'm developing a more sensitive dairy issue. Tostitos are hit & miss.

It is SO hard to travel. I'm with family right now and we made sushi 2 days ago & I am still recovering. No obvious gluten that I can figure out unless it's in smoked salmon (!)...maybe it's just CC in the knives, etc. Argh !

One just gets to the point where one wants to NOT be sick and eat safely darn it - and not have to only stick with rice & potatoes...

jerseyangel Proficient
This surprises me Patty, I eat the regular UTZ all the time, and never have a reaction. Did you eat reg or flavored?

They were the plain ones--marked gluten-free. Lays always affected me the same way, actually other than Stax plain, I never did find a chip that would work for me.

I see Van's waffles listed by a couple people--I reacted to those early on, too.

I've gotten to the point that I eat almost no processed food at all--but at the same time, I eat very well. :)

missy'smom Collaborator

Ancient Harvest quinoa flakes. The company told me if I wanted no chance of CC, stick with the whole grain quinoa which is processed in a different facility.

Trader Joes almond meal/flour. Didn't contact them but when I switched to a different brand that is processed in a gluten-free facility, my symptoms went away and didn't come back.

OptimisticMom42 Apprentice

Lays potato chips Classics got me a couple of times. But it was a couple of times out of hundreds of servings. When I have the choice I buy Better Made instead now because they are "Made in Michigan" with Michigan (and several other states) grown potatoes and have stopped using soy oil. A company representative assured me that the only source of gluten in the factory is the BBQ flavoring used on some of the chips. The lines are steam cleaned between batches. I believe Lays uses the same steam cleaning process but they have more products that do contain gluten so the chances for CC are higher.

Maybe I should write letters to both companies asking them the use a dedicated line for gluten free items.

Love my chips!

RA

MaryJones2 Enthusiast

I can name quite a few too! Pretty much anything made on shared lines gets me. Lay's potato chips (oh, how I do miss those!), canned tomatoes, and a gluten-free brand of coconut are a few items that seriously got me.

It doesn't happen as much these days. I don't know if it's because I just don't take chances with processed foods any more or if the 20ppm concept is making companies focus more when determing if a product is gluten-free. I think it's a little of both.

Emily888 Rookie

Oil of Olay soap got me :( I only use Dove now.

I called the company before using it and was told that it did not contain gluten. I used it twice and became very sick, it took a few days to get over the reaction.

I find that for me, lately, gluten sneaks up in the products that I use (shampoo, conditioner, soap, etc...)

darlindeb25 Collaborator

The mention of coconut reminded me...SoDelicious Coconut Milk got me...definitely CC. When I notified the company, they first told me it wasn't possible, yet when they sent me a refund, they thanked me for letting them know there was a CC issue, and they would be looking into it.

I just found the SoDelicious Coconut Yogurt in our local Stop-n-Shop yesterday, but now, I will not try it, I don't trust easily after being bitten once. Besides, who could afford to eat it, $2.29 for the tiny container.

Just when I was going to try Pacific Almond Milk, someone mentioned being glutened by it...so, I gave up.

I experimented this weekend...if I add lactose free milk to my coffee anytime after lunch, I have insomnia, if I use it first thing in the morning, I can get away with it. One good cup of coffee a day!!!! :D

cbear6301 Explorer

The Honey Nut Chex, the strawberry and chocolate chex...I am extremely sensitive and have gotten sick every time with the flavored chex. :(

chiroptera Apprentice

Lays and Ruffles have been hit or miss so we don't eat those now. The Lays Stax make me and one of my gluten-free daughters very sick even though they said they are on dedicated lines. All of the flavored gluten-free Chex cereals have made us sick, except the Rice Chex. We're disappointed about that, because my girls loved the chocolate and strawberry flavors.

I got VERY sick from Clarinex and also from a new prescription of Synthroid. Abbott told me they couldn't verify if Synthroid was gluten-free and I'm knowing the .137 blue tablets are not so I have stopped taking them. Don't know what to do about that though.

The trial and error stuff is very hard and we always feel like Sherlock Holmes trying to decide what made us sick that was supposed to be safe. Journaling our food is very helpful.

dilettantesteph Collaborator

I am very sensitive. The question is more what gluten free foods don't get me! There aren't very many left.

summerteeth Enthusiast

Kettle Brand Thai Spice chips... that was not a fun next morning...

Also, "gluten free" mostacolli and red sauce from a local restaurant. I was sick for 2 weeks!

Then of course my own airhead moments like dressing (I figured it couldn't be gluten free... boy was I wrong!) and Amy's corn crust pizza (not technically my fault... and I noticed before I ate it).

minniejack Contributor

I've spent all weekend blaming my favorite restaurant for screwing up my salad.

Well....last night, my daughter starting screaming at her brother, I know, nothing unusual right?

But, she's screaming, "Mom these have wheat!" I asked her what had wheat--nothing in my house has wheat.

They were the Baked Lay's. My son had a party over the weekend and a girl had brought chips with her. It clearly states wheat as an ingredient.

That explains my bathroom trips, extreme irritability, lethargy and my son's stomach aches and bathroom breaks/temper, etc...

Sad thing was--they didn't even taste good. I only had a few to "get rid of them" Aargh!@!*

moonflowerpdx Newbie

I *can* have whiskey and scotch without a reaction, and that's because of the distilling process. So I thought I'd try soy sauce. 'Cause that's distilled, right? I got glutened.

Early in this process of me finding out I was gluten intolerant, I had McDonald's fries. Everyone here probably already knows that's a good way to gluten yourself... and it most certainly is.

Taco Bell's corn tortillas have wheat in them, and that was another early wake up call for me. So no more fast food for me... can't kill me... with 2 exceptions.

Taco Time (not Taco Bell!) has great tortillas, pure corn, and I never had cross-contamination from them. Burgerville only cooks their fries in dedicated oil -- fries-only oil -- and they are safe. Burgerville and Taco Time are only in Washington and Oregon though, I think.

I didn't test positive for celiac disease (from a blood sample), but I did test gluten-intolerant from a saliva test I got from a very good naturopath.

kimis Collaborator
Lays and Ruffles have been hit or miss so we don't eat those now. The Lays Stax make me and one of my gluten-free daughters very sick even though they said they are on dedicated lines. All of the flavored gluten-free Chex cereals have made us sick, except the Rice Chex. We're disappointed about that, because my girls loved the chocolate and strawberry flavors.

I got VERY sick from Clarinex and also from a new prescription of Synthroid. Abbott told me they couldn't verify if Synthroid was gluten-free and I'm knowing the .137 blue tablets are not so I have stopped taking them. Don't know what to do about that though.

The trial and error stuff is very hard and we always feel like Sherlock Holmes trying to decide what made us sick that was supposed to be safe. Journaling our food is very helpful.

I just switched from unithroid to synhroid 25 mcg. I haven't been feeling that well lately, and it didn't even cross my mind it could be from that. I know armour is gluten free...but that is pretty hard to get a script for, and I hear it's on backorder. I would love to know what you come up with :)

FinsUp Rookie

My son is our resident celiac, and he is fairly sensitive. He has reacted to Midel animal crackers & chocolate chip cookies and to Van's waffles. He eats Lay's chips regularly without any issues. His gastro does follow-up blood work every 6 mos., and he has tested negative (i.e., no indications of gluten ingestion) for the last 2 1/2 years.

JennyC Enthusiast

Wellshire Kids Dinosaur shaped chicken nuggets and Wellshire corn dogs were glutening my son. He had sporadic D and I could never figure out why, and his tTG entered the upper limit of the normal reference range. It was not until there was a Chicago Tribune article about this company posted here, that I figured out that it was the chicken nuggets and corn dogs that were making him sick. Their products are labeled gluten free, yet they were being manufactured on equipment shared with wheat. They also told me that since they are meat products, that they chose to follow the USDA "safe" levels, which is <200 ppm. Needless to say that I will NEVER buy another one of their products again! :angry: Now that I have removed Wellshire products from his diet, his tTG went back down to very low levels.

Someone mentioned something about BurgerVille having dedicated fryers. I wanted to add that my local BV fries walla walla onion rings and other seasonal foods in the french fry frier, so I do not to take my son there. It might be a good idea to call ahead to BV before eating there. :)

...and I won't even get started on the McDonalds french fry debate. :o

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - cristiana replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here

    2. - trents replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here

    3. - Theresa2407 replied to Theresa2407's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      2

      Probiotics

    4. - KathyR37 replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here

    5. - Scott Adams replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,817
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    sleuth
    Newest Member
    sleuth
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • cristiana
      Hi @KathyR37 and a very warm welcome here.  I am so very sorry that you are going through all of this. I just wanted to check, have you ever been tested for any other gastrointestinal conditions? Cristiana  
    • trents
      @KathyR37, I would suspect that in addition to gluten intolerance, you have other food intolerances/sensitivities. This is very common in the celiac community. The most common offenders are oats, dairy, soy, corn and eggs with dairy and oats being the big two. Have you considered this? Have you tried keeping a food diary to detect patterns?
    • Theresa2407
      thank you for your advice.   I have always taken them and I use Stonehedge because they are in a glass bottle, but don't have to be refrigerated.  I also like they are 3rd party tested and state gluten free. But you never know if something better has come alone over the years.
    • KathyR37
      Thank you for your response. I have already learned about the info you sent but i appreciate your effort. I am the only one in my family cursed by this disease. I have to cook for them too. I make sure that my utensils are free of gluten and clean after using them for other food. I use non-porous pots and pans and  gloves when cooking for them. One huge problem I have is a gag reflex out of this world and if something doesn't taste good it is not going down. Most commercially made breads and such taste like old cardboard.Pastas are about the same. I did find one flour that I like and use it regularly, but it is so expensive! All gluten free food is way more expensive. I only eat twice a day because I cannot afford to buy all that. We live on a very low income so my food purchases are quite limited.
    • Scott Adams
      What you've described—the severe weight loss, the cycle of medications making things worse, and the profound fear of eating before leaving the house—is a heavy burden to carry for 15 years. It is absolutely not your fault. While everyone's journey with celiac is different, the struggles with the learning curve, social isolation, and dietary grief are feelings many in the community know all too well. Your question about whether you should just eat what you want and manage the symptoms is a heartbreaking one, born from years of frustration. It's crucial to know that the diarrhea is a sign of ongoing damage to your small intestine from gluten, and simply managing the symptom with Imodium doesn't stop that internal harm or the risk of other complications. The fact that you are still getting sick within an hour of eating, even while trying to be gluten-free, is a huge red flag that something isn't right. This could be due to cross-contamination in your kitchen (e.g., using a shared toaster, colander, or condiment jars), hidden gluten in foods, or the possibility of another concurrent condition like refractory celiac disease. Don't give up!  This article has some detailed information on how to be 100% gluten-free, so it may be helpful (be sure to also read the comments section.):    
×
×
  • 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.