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Don't Animals Have Traces Of Gluten In Them?


George Knighton

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George Knighton Apprentice

Beef, meat, pork, chicken, etc. They all eat wheat so wouldn't they still have traces of gluten when you purchase the food?


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CR5442 Contributor

Apparently they don't but as a lot of meat has protein added to it in order to give it water weight in packaging, I am not entirely sure! I certainly react to some chicken breasts I buy sometimes. The last ones were skinless and deboned, so it really makes you wonder what is added! Usually if I buy meat on the bone I don't react at all.

kareng Grand Master

George- You said you eat alot of refried beans. If I cut you open, would I find refried beans? No of course not. Your body processes it & turns it to hair, muscle, fat, etc. Same with animals if they are fed wheat. Also, the animals have different digestive systems than we do. for example, a cow is able to process large amounts of grass. If humans ate more than a mouthfull or two, we would be messed up. We can't digest it.

Reba32 Rookie

only if you're eating the contents of their stomachs!

Skylark Collaborator

Beef, meat, pork, chicken, etc. They all eat wheat so wouldn't they still have traces of gluten when you purchase the food?

Gluten is too large of a molecule to make it into the bloodstream and contaminate the muscle, which is what we eat. There was actually a study done on milk, and even if the cow is fed 100% grain, no gluten goes into the milk because the cud-chewing breaks it down. The stomach and intestines are removed during slaughter because the intestinal contents would make the meat unsafe so there isn't concern about undigested food.

Caroline, plumping solution must declare wheat if you're in the US or Canada. It's usually water with sodium phosphate anyway, not protein. Protein would be expensive and they're trying to save money by adding water to the meat.

CR5442 Contributor

Gluten is too large of a molecule to make it into the bloodstream and contaminate the muscle, which is what we eat. There was actually a study done on milk, and even if the cow is fed 100% grain, no gluten goes into the milk because the cud-chewing breaks it down. The stomach and intestines are removed during slaughter because the intestinal contents would make the meat unsafe so there isn't concern about undigested food.

Caroline, plumping solution must declare wheat if you're in the US or Canada. It's usually water with sodium phosphate anyway, not protein. Protein would be expensive and they're trying to save money by adding water to the meat.

Hi Skylark, here in Europe there are plants that use protein. There was a big hoo haa about it! They use a mixture usually and probably some sort of adherence agent. I have looked for ingredients on the packaging but they aren't required here from what I gather. Needless to say I keep well away from boneless meat.

T.H. Community Regular

There was actually a study done on milk, and even if the cow is fed 100% grain, no gluten goes into the milk because the cud-chewing breaks it down.

Oooh, do you have the title of that study, by any chance? I've been looking for one like that! Found one on human breastmilk and gluten, but never could find one on dairy! :-)


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Skylark Collaborator

Here you go. I put them in this post a while back.

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