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 Coffee?


amyfeistel

Recommended Posts

amyfeistel Newbie

Several months ago, I decided to cut caffeine from my diet. Since decaf coffees usually taste terrible, I decided that my "reward" would be to consume some really lovely whole-bean decaf coffee. I've enjoyed this option up until the past few weeks.

Over the past 5 weeks, I've had repeated un-explainable bouts of diahrrea. I've been going crazy trying to pin-point the culprit. (I'm incredibly careful about my diet.) For the past 4 days, I have not consumed any of my coffee. I was feeling sick and was drinking a gluten-free herbal tea. I also did not have any diahrrea.

This morning, I woke up and made a cup of coffee. 30 min. later, at the office, I'm sick again.

Is it possible for decaf whole-bean coffee to contain gluten? If so, are there any gluten-free options that taste good?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



KaitiUSA Enthusiast

All of the folgers brand of coffee is gluten free. All the coffee companies I have checked have been fine.

Anything can contain gluten so you really should call if you are unsure about it before consuming it.

If that is gluten free maybe your body just doesn't like coffee. Or maybe there is another culprit.

lovegrov Collaborator

Never heard of a whole bean coffee, decaf or otherwise, with gluten. In fact, I've never geard of any plain coffee, decaf or otherwise, with gluten. It's possible something about the decaffenating process for that particular brand disagrees with you.

richard

amyfeistel Newbie

Richard,

Thanks.

I think I found the culprit: my yogurt. I also did not have yogurt until today (typical work-day breakfast fare of yogurt and coffee). I eat Stonyfield Farm yogurt. I emailed them. Their flavored yogurts may contain trace amounts of gluten because a grain

alcohol is used to extract flavors from spices for the "natural flavors." Only the plain yogurt is gluten-free.

I'm going to test this by still drinking the coffee and changing the yogurt. Wish me luck.

-Amy

lovegrov Collaborator

Good luck. However, the alcohol in the yogurt is distilled and therefore should be gluten-free.

richard

tarnalberry Community Regular

Amy, have you investigated if you have a problem with dairy? If it's a dairy protein issue, yogurt would be just as bad as any other type of dairy.

calico jo Rookie

I had contacted Stoneyfield Farms a while back also and was told that though they use grain for the flavoring it is distilled, just like with hard liquor, so the gluten should be removed. However, I had found that I was getting ill and pin pointed that as my culprit. I still buy Stoneyfield Farms, but I buy the Fat Free French Vanilla (or Fat free regular vanilla) and mix in my own fruit. I've been fine with that, and eat it almost every morning. It's probably better for you with fresh or frozen fruit anyway.

I'd heard that some coffees could contain gluten (Starbucks makes me violently ill) and that it had something to do with the processing of the beans. I can't recall now where I got that info, but I always stick to Maxwell House.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



darlindeb25 Collaborator
<_< mamy flavored coffees contain gluten--i got very sick from hazelnut coffee--i dont like flavored coffees and i didnt buy it--it had been made in the wrong pot--i only drink regular coffee--if it says 100% coffee, it should be fine--watch for additional ingredients---deb
lovegrov Collaborator

If Starbucks makes you ill it's something other than gluten. Only one Starbucks drink has gluten, and that's because brownies are added when it's mixed.

Regular unflavored coffee is always gluten-free. Flavored coffee is almost always gluten-free.

richard

KaitiUSA Enthusiast

Yep it would be something other then gluten with Starbucks. They assured me all of their drinks except 1 frappaccino is gluten free. I drink coffee there with no problems.. I was so happy last year when I found out I could still have Starbucks

mommida Enthusiast

Except for the cleaning tip to use a piece of bread to clean a coffee bean grinder. It absorbs the oils that go rancid. Vinegar is used to clean coffee makers too. In my opinion eating out is always a concern for cross contamination.

Laura

lovegrov Collaborator

Unless it's malt vinegar you needn't worry. Never heard of a commercial place (or any other place) using bread to clean a grinder. If they did, they'd be fools not to clean the bread out. Few people want bread crumbs in their coffee.

richard

watkinson Apprentice

Hi Amy

I, as well contacted Stoneyfield. Yes, their flavored yogurts contain flavorings made from grain alchohol.. However the alchohol is distilled and the gluten protein should not get through. Even if you are dairy sensitive, you probably would be able to tollerate yogurt because of the digestive enzymes that are in it.

Yes it's true that many coffees are not gluten-free, especially flavored and decaffeinated.

one of the ways to decaffienate coffee is to use ehtyl acetate, (a compound also used to make laquers and paint removers). It can have gluten in it. Maybe your coffee has that ingredient. <_< Best way to know is to contact the company.

Good luck,

Wendy

watkinson Apprentice

Sorry,

I spelled it wrong, it's Ethyl Acetate.

Wendy

tarnalberry Community Regular

I suggested dairy sensitivity because - if the sensitivity is to the protein - yogurt is no better than any other dairy. Yogurt may have less lactose (the sugar), but some people are sensitive to the protein.

gabrielle Contributor

Just a little insight- coffee in many people causes diarrehia. Perhaps, your system was sensitive to the coffee just because it was coffee. Certain coffees make me ill, because they are strong (not just caffeine wise, because I drink decaf), but because the coffee bean itself is just stronger.

Decaffeinated coffee is still practically guaranteed to trigger abdominal spasms, diarrhea, and a very unpleasant sense of urgency. Why? Because all coffee beans, decaf included, contain an enzyme that irritates the entire digestive tract.

Here's the website that is from Open Original Shared Link

It is an IBS website, but the information is helpful because it can affect most people. :-) Good luck!

mommida Enthusiast

Well for the coffee grinder cleaning tip, it was on a Martha Stewart Living segment with some coffee guru. He owns some coffee shops, probably on the east coast area. Sorry I didn't specify that you never leave the bread crumbs in the grinder. It is a safe way to clean the resin off the sharp blades. Place bread in and activate grinder. Dump the crumbs into the garbage. Just use like a disposable sponge, and throw it out.

Vinegar is used for a variety of cleaning tips. The tipster rarely elaborates on what type of vinegar is to be used. Face it, most people don't know and don't care about the finer points of vinegar. The point is someone could use malt vinegar in an attempt to clean.

That is why I feel there is definately a higher risk for cross contamination eating out at a restaurant or coffee shop.

Yes, coffee has also been used to stimulate b.m. Some people are more sensitive.

Laura

lovegrov Collaborator

It's been my experience that malt vinegar is much more expensive and therefore very likely to be used rather than the cheap white or distilled vinegar.

But I did just learn something new about Starbucks coffee -- there are two flavors of of their fancier drinks (frappuccinos I think -- one is mint mocha chip) that use chocolate chips that have gluten. I found this hard to believe but the person I called at Starbucks confirmed it.

richard

KaitiUSA Enthusiast

Yea Starbucks has the frappuccino that is not gluten free...(because of the choc chips) and then the brownie one but they said they discontinued that I believe but they said some of their places still serve it...thats obviously not gluten free. Aside from that they said their drinks and toppings for drinks were gluten free.

  • 1 year later...
laurelfla Enthusiast

a tad bit off-topic but for people that have trouble with coffee, i saw a coffeemaker in P.J.'s (new in Gainesville -- makes "New Orleans" coffee) that i think was called the Toddy. it brews using a cold water process, and the box said that makes the coffee 67% less acidic. i haven't tried it and don't know of anyone who has, but it sounded interesting. also it makes tea from leaves. i am a sucker for coffee related paraphernalia. :D

Gevalia says stay away from their flavored coffees, they contain gluten.

Millstone is supposed to all be safe.

penguin Community Regular
a tad bit off-topic but for people that have trouble with coffee, i saw a coffeemaker in P.J.'s (new in Gainesville -- makes "New Orleans" coffee) that i think was called the Toddy. it brews using a cold water process, and the box said that makes the coffee 67% less acidic. i haven't tried it and don't know of anyone who has, but it sounded interesting. also it makes tea from leaves. i am a sucker for coffee related paraphernalia. :D

Gevalia says stay away from their flavored coffees, they contain gluten.

Millstone is supposed to all be safe.

I have a toddy and love it. It is much gentler and tastes way better, IMO. It doesn't get that bitter taste that brewed coffee does, and one batch lasts you a week. It makes a concentrate that you add hot water to to make a cup of coffee. Also really easy for iced coffee, obviously :)

gfp Enthusiast
I had contacted Stoneyfield Farms a while back also and was told that though they use grain for the flavoring it is distilled, just like with hard liquor, so the gluten should be removed.

This rather depends on a few factors... but industrial alcohol is not distilled to the same standards or way as liquor.

Neither does it need to be the whole gluten molecule ... only parts of the chains. Pure alcohol is not possible by distillation.

What is more important to me is the process of decaffination where you are selectively exchanging a large molecule (caffine) ... I have no idea about what role contaminants in the alcohol in this process and I would doubt the company does either. What I do know as fact is prolamines (including gluten) are readily soluble in alcohol and not water. This is actually part of the definition of a prolamine.

What I can guess is the alcohol is used in an osmotic filter or pump... (the same way alcohol is removed from alcohol free beer) and that for each caffine molecule taken out something must go in.

However, I had found that I was getting ill and pin pointed that as my culprit. I still buy Stoneyfield Farms, but I buy the Fat Free French Vanilla (or Fat free regular vanilla) and mix in my own fruit. I've been fine with that, and eat it almost every morning. It's probably better for you with fresh or frozen fruit anyway.

Probably but I think low or fat free yogourts are one of the biggest running con items on the market. (after low sodium mineral water)

To start with all yogourt is low fat.... even the highest fat double cream yogourt runs at 8% fat... and a standard one at around 5%.

In other words for a litre of yogourt (just over 2 pints) you are getting a little over a teaspoon of fat.

Two pints of yogourty is a LOT....

However if you take a reasonably high fat cheese like mozeralla it has (according to Canadian stat database) Open Original Shared Link

about 25% fat... and eating say 250g (8 oz) of mozeralla is not a HUGE portion but contains 75g of fat

..or 20g of mozeralla contain 5g of fat (a little over a teaspoon) or 2 pintys of normal fat yogourt.

20g of mozeralla isn't much, you wouldn't miss it from a serving of a caprese ....

In the same way parmesan contains half the fat of mozerella to start off with.

I think what bothers me most is the long list of additives they add to make it fat-free when the product is already fat free. Excluding dairry allergies its startig off as a healthy food and then having additives added...

when you actually look at the numbers .. or better still cut a 20g slice of mozerella and compare it to 2 pints of yogourt for the same fat the benefit of low or zero fat yogourt is almost a joke and on the other hand they added lots of chemicals to give it the consistency of yogourt.

I'd heard that some coffees could contain gluten (Starbucks makes me violently ill) and that it had something to do with the processing of the beans. I can't recall now where I got that info, but I always stick to Maxwell House.

Starbucks don't say what type of bean they use (indeeed they are very careful about this in all publicity)

There are two types of bean... robusta and arabica.

The former is much higher caffine (an inseticide) and grows much easier and is much much cheaper.

Any real coffee will list the beans.... I assume any that doesn't is using the cheaper ones!

You can add to this that independant analyses in the US have shown starbucks coffee to be the highest caffine of any of the major's and by a long way. google will show you and a few are very respecable consumer orgs.

Arabicia is less bitter ... rubusta can be burned to try and disguise its origins.

Make your own mind up on this but consider a naturally lower caffine coffee rather than a chemically processed decaffinated one.

taz sharratt Enthusiast
Just a little insight- coffee in many people causes diarrehia. Perhaps, your system was sensitive to the coffee just because it was coffee. Certain coffees make me ill, because they are strong (not just caffeine wise, because I drink decaf), but because the coffee bean itself is just stronger.

Here's the website that is from Open Original Shared Link

It is an IBS website, but the information is helpful because it can affect most people. :-) Good luck!

i have probs with coffee untill i switched the suger i put in it, i like black coffee and really sweet ( like 4 spoons) i switched white suger for demmerra and no more probs :P so now ive figured out the celiac, the dairy, the nuts and now whiye suger there is still somthing i have to exclude that is giveing me stomach probs, hopeing the food diary will help :rolleyes:

  • 3 years later...
Celiac 621554 Newbie
Several months ago, I decided to cut caffeine from my diet. Since decaf coffees usually taste terrible, I decided that my "reward" would be to consume some really lovely whole-bean decaf coffee. I've enjoyed this option up until the past few weeks.

Over the past 5 weeks, I've had repeated un-explainable bouts of diahrrea. I've been going crazy trying to pin-point the culprit. (I'm incredibly careful about my diet.) For the past 4 days, I have not consumed any of my coffee. I was feeling sick and was drinking a gluten-free herbal tea. I also did not have any diahrrea.

This morning, I woke up and made a cup of coffee. 30 min. later, at the office, I'm sick again.

Is it possible for decaf whole-bean coffee to contain gluten? If so, are there any gluten-free options that taste good?

Coffee is known for being a bowl movement initiator...and a diuretic. So, somewhat of a loose bowel would be expected, especially if you chased it with apple juice. But if you're SICK, like throwing up, I'd switch brands and get rid of the coffee maker. Its probably full of mold. My husband used to service those fountain/coffee/juice machines for businesses, and he won't drink from anything but a previously sealed bottle/can because the drink machines were always full of mold and roaches.

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. - chrisinpa commented on Scott Adams's article in Skin Problems and Celiac Disease
      2

      Celiac Disease and Skin Disorders: Exploring a Genetic Connection

    2. - knitty kitty replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      3

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

    3. - trents replied to sha1091a's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      1

      Issues before diagnosis

    4. - trents commented on Jefferson Adams's article in Other Diseases and Disorders Associated with Celiac Disease
      6

      Celiac Disease Patients Face Higher Risk of Systemic Lupus

    5. - knitty kitty replied to EndlessSummer's topic in Food Intolerance & Leaky Gut
      2

      Dizziness after eating green beans?

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

    • Total Members
      132,690
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    EndlessSummer
    Newest Member
    EndlessSummer
    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

    • knitty kitty
      @xxnonamexx, There's labeling on those Trubar gluten free high fiber protein bars that say: "Manufactured in a facility that also processes peanuts, milk, soy, fish, WHEAT, sesame, and other tree nuts." You may want to avoid products made in shared facilities.   If you are trying to add more fiber to your diet to ease constipation, considering eating more leafy green vegetables and cruciferous vegetables.  Not only are these high in fiber, they also are good sources of magnesium.  Many newly diagnosed are low in magnesium and B vitamins and suffer with constipation.  Thiamine Vitamin B1 and magnesium work together.  Thiamine in the form Benfotiamine has been shown to improve intestinal health.  Thiamine and magnesium are important to gastrointestinal health and function.  
    • trents
      Welcome to celiac.com @sha1091a! Your experience is a very common one. Celiac disease is one the most underdiagnosed and misdiagnosed medical conditions out there. The reasons are numerous. One key one is that its symptoms mimic so many other diseases. Another is ignorance on the part of the medical community with regard to the range of symptoms that celiac disease can produce. Clinicians often are only looking for classic GI symptoms and are unaware of the many other subsystems in the body that can be damaged before classic GI symptoms manifest, if ever they do. Many celiacs are of the "silent" variety and have few if any GI symptoms while all along, damage is being done to their bodies. In my case, the original symptoms were elevated liver enzymes which I endured for 13 years before I was diagnosed with celiac disease. By the grace of God my liver was not destroyed. It is common for the onset of the disease to happen 10 years before you ever get a diagnosis. Thankfully, that is slowly changing as there has developed more awareness on the part of both the medical community and the public in the past 20 years or so. Blessings!
    • knitty kitty
      @EndlessSummer, You said you had an allergy to trees.  People with Birch Allergy can react to green beans (in the legume family) and other vegetables, as well as some fruits.  Look into Oral Allergy Syndrome which can occur at a higher rate in Celiac Disease.   Switching to a low histamine diet for a while can give your body time to rid itself of the extra histamine the body makes with Celiac disease and histamine consumed in the diet.   Vitamin C and the eight B vitamins are needed to help the body clear histamine.   Have you been checked for nutritional deficiencies?
    • sha1091a
      I found out the age of 68 that I am a celiac. When I was 16, I had my gallbladder removed when I was 24 I was put on a medication because I was told I had fibromyalgia.   going to Doctor’s over many years, not one of them thought to check me out for celiac disease. I am aware that it only started being tested by bloodwork I believe in the late 90s, but still I’m kind of confused why my gallbladder my joint pain flatulent that I complained of constantly was totally ignored. Is it not something that is taught to our medical system? It wasn’t a Doctor Who asked for the test to be done. I asked for it because of something I had read and my test came back positive. My number was quite high.Are there other people out here that had this kind of problems and they were ignored? 
    • trents
      Welcome to celiac.com, @EndlessSummer! Do you react to all vegetables or just specific kinds or families of them? What you describe with green beans sounds like it has an anaphylaxis component. Like you, walnuts are a problem for me. They will often give me a scratchy throat so I try to avoid them. Does it matter if the vegies are raw or will-cooked in how you react to them?
×
×
  • 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.