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

Is There Gluten-free, MSG Free Beef &/or Chicken Bullion?


squirmingitch

Recommended Posts

squirmingitch Veteran

I'm looking for a gluten-free, msg free beef & chicken bouillon. And not a bouillon with the msg listed under another name. Can anyone help?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



psawyer Proficient

Good luck with that.

MSG is the sodium salt of glutamic acid, a naturally occurring amino acid present in just about every protein, whether animal or vegetable. As protein breaks down (commonly via hydrolysis) glutamate radicals are released. If this does not happen during the manufacturing process, it will happen in your body as you digest the protein. Once the glutamate radical meets up with a sodium ion (your body contains lots of salt), you get MSG.

We can debate concentration levels, and speed of absorption, but if it contains chicken or beef, it contains "hidden" MSG.

auzzi Newbie

[url=Open Original Shared Link

psawyer Proficient

No Added MSG

Yup, they didn't add any. They didn't have to. It was already there. ;)

squirmingitch Veteran

Very interesting Peter. Thank you. I did not quite understand that before you explained it that way.

Pauliewog Contributor

Have you seen the Pacific Foods soups? I don't know if they have a cube bullion. I have bought their organic bullions in the carton.

Open Original Shared Link

Skylark Collaborator

I don't think you understood what Peter is trying to say, Pauliewog. As meat is boiled, the proteins break down and MSG is naturally formed. There is no such thing as an MSG-free commercial broth or bouillon.

You can make a low-MSG broth at home that you should tolerate by boiling chicken without the skin for no longer than 2 hours, quick-cooling the pot in cold water, and freezing the broth promptly. It is not a particularly rich-tasting stock, partly becasue of the low MSG. Supposedly you can get the broth richer by cracking the bones but I haven't tried it. You can make beef broth this way too, but finding freshly-slaughtered beef that doesn't have some MSG already accumulated in the meat from aging is tricky.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



BethM55 Enthusiast

I use "Better than Bouillion" brand. The low sodium chicken version is gluten free (last time I checked, anyway). You might check their ingredients, see if that or their vegetable bouillion might work for you.

squirmingitch Veteran

I will see if I can find it. Thanks.

Skylark Collaborator

I will see if I can find it. Thanks.

Sometimes I feel like I'm completely wasting my time here. Are you even bothering to read my posts, squirmingitch? Or do you really not care about MSG?

Better than Bouillon Low Sodium Chicken:

Chicken Meat with Natural Juices [contains MSG formed in processing], Salt, Organic Cane Juice Solids, Maltodextrin (from corn), Chicken Fat, Yeast Extract [high MSG], Natural Flavors [MSG], Dried Onion, Potato Flour, Spice Extractives, Turmeric. * Minimally processed, no artificial ingredients. Sodium content has been reduced from 680mg to 500 mg per reference serving.

Better than Bouillon Vegetable:

(Carrot, Celery, Onion), Salt, Hydrolyzed Corn Protein [MSG], Maltodextrin, Cane Sugar, Canola Oil, Yeast Extract [MSG], Corn Syrup Solids, Natural Flavors [MSG], Dried Potato, Turmeric.

pricklypear1971 Community Regular

I will see if I can find it. Thanks.

Be careful, some BTB has gluten in it. Others use some ingredients I found suspicious because they were in foods that had made my rash flare.

Open Original Shared Link

MaryJones2 Enthusiast

I have not seen a bouillon that doesn't contain some form of MSG (yeast extract). I would think the Kosher and Middle Eastern versions would be your best bet.

squirmingitch Veteran

Skylark, yes I read your posts seriously. I DO check products out myself before I eat them. I'm not just going to go flying out & buy something because someone mentions it. I am however, grateful when people do try to help & answer a question I have posed. I am also grateful for info. that people like you & Peter & Prickly & anyone else provides. I got the big picture the minute Peter explained what he did. Okay, so my own body makes msg. And I appreciate your telling me how to make the broth myself that I should be able to tolerate. But I will just simply do without for now as we are renting while we build a home & the place we are renting .... well, the kitchen is like a closet & I'm sure you can imagine I have my hands full with planning the home & all the details involved in that & we haven't even begun to build yet. Plus, we have our old home up for sale which is 700 miles away. No time for spending hours making my own even if this kitchen were user friendly. But I have copied your instructions for when we are in the new house, in the kitchen I designed to be user friendly to me.smile.gif

jeanzdyn Apprentice

Herb-ox brand states on the label "no gluten" and "no msg".

chicken flavor and beef flavor, both labels make the claims.

squirmingitch Veteran

Thank you Jean but the whole point was the word "added" as to the msg. It states no msg ADDED. So they don't add any but never the less msg is in there. Please read psawyer's 2 posts righ near the top of this thread & you will understand what we're talking about.

Skylark Collaborator

I'm glad you understood! :) Good luck finding broth you do tolerate.

I'll throw out another brand that is good and gluten-free, Pacific Natural Foods fre range organic chicken broth. There is no yeast extract in it, only various chicken concentrates. It's a broth, not a bouillon. Their beef broth does have the autolyzed yeast extract for MSG, unfortunately.

squirmingitch Veteran

I'll check it out. Thanks.

Bubba's Mom Enthusiast

I was looking for broth or bouillion without added MSG or autolyzed yeast extract, and no soy. It was hard, but I found Pacific organic free range chicken broth, and Kroger's culinary chicken stock are ones that meet my needs.

I haven't seen a condensed version, like a cube, but thought maybe I could make my own by cooking the broth down a bit until it's more concentrated, and then freezing it in ice cube trays? Once frozen the cubes could be dumped into a freezer bag. Then we could grab one or two to boost the flavor in recipes where we don't want to add a lot of extra liquid?

I'm going to try it later this week when I have a bunch of other cooking to do. I'll be in the kitchen anyway. :D

  • 5 years later...
James Post Newbie
On 3/28/2012 at 10:00 PM, Bubba's Mom said:

I was looking for broth or bouillion without added MSG or autolyzed yeast extract, and no soy. It was hard, but I found Pacific organic free range chicken broth, and Kroger's culinary chicken stock are ones that meet my needs.

I haven't seen a condensed version, like a cube, but thought maybe I could make my own by cooking the broth down a bit until it's more concentrated, and then freezing it in ice cube trays? Once frozen the cubes could be dumped into a freezer bag. Then we could grab one or two to boost the flavor in recipes where we don't want to add a lot of extra liquid?

 

I'm going to try it later this week when I have a bunch of other cooking to do. I'll be in the kitchen anyway. :D

Like you, I found that real natural broths are a rarity. When they are labeled as such, they often contain hidden MSG, such as yeast extracts. And when they are really natural, the price is prohibitive. 

 

To cut a long story short.... I am setting up a micro business in the rural north of Thailand (where I live mostly), which allows the artisanal production of vegetable broth by solar PV energy, which are than dehydrated using solar dryers.  I am still not sure about chicken broths, but when I do, it would be without skins and de-fatted. 

 

After powdering, I then plan to add a healthy & tasty dehydrated herb & spice mix that should double as natural preservatives, in addition to a little salt. Since we plan to vacuum pack the broth this would not be required during transport, but I believe this is necessary in case moist is attracted while using the broth powder.

 

While this procedure is labor intensive, it is feasible to sell the dehydrated real natural broth at prices more close to the so-called natural broth powder. Upon success, the concept can be easily multiplied, providing better work for locals, and a step forwards toward affordable healthy food.

 

I have two questions hereto:

 

1. Is it correct that e.g. dehydrated cinnamon and lemon grass retain their preserving properties?

 

2. Is my assumption correct that it is better to dehydrate these herbs & spices for better preservation and taste? (rather than adding them to the broth).

 

Thanks for your highly appreciated opinion.

kareng Grand Master
24 minutes ago, James Post said:

Like you, I found that real natural broths are a rarity. When they are labeled as such, they often contain hidden MSG, such as yeast extracts. And when they are really natural, the price is prohibitive. 

 

To cut a long story short.... I am setting up a micro business in the rural north of Thailand (where I live mostly), which allows the artisanal production of vegetable broth by solar PV energy, which are than dehydrated using solar dryers.  I am still not sure about chicken broths, but when I do, it would be without skins and de-fatted. 

 

After powdering, I then plan to add a healthy & tasty dehydrated herb & spice mix that should double as natural preservatives, in addition to a little salt. Since we plan to vacuum pack the broth this would not be required during transport, but I believe this is necessary in case moist is attracted while using the broth powder.

 

While this procedure is labor intensive, it is feasible to sell the dehydrated real natural broth at prices more close to the so-called natural broth powder. Upon success, the concept can be easily multiplied, providing better work for locals, and a step forwards toward affordable healthy food.

 

I have two questions hereto:

 

1. Is it correct that e.g. dehydrated cinnamon and lemon grass retain their preserving properties?

 

2. Is my assumption correct that it is better to dehydrate these herbs & spices for better preservation and taste? (rather than adding them to the broth).

 

Thanks for your highly appreciated opinion.

Perhaps you could find a university that has degrees in food science and ask them these questions?

James Post Newbie

Hello Kareng,

Thanks for the suggestion; I contacted the University of Wageningen/Netherlands Food Science division. I hope it will have effect. But besides the technicality questions, I would like some feedback on what you and your members think about the concept to produce dehydrated broth. As mentioned, I could not find this approach anywhere on the Internet (except those who do it themselves). Either its MSG, hidden or not and other crazy ingredient such as palm shortening, rice flour and sugar.

It would help me a lot when you could discuss that with your readers. IMO they could benefit but I would like to know what they feel.

Thanks,

James

Jmg Mentor

Hi James,

I make my own broth/stock from both chicken and beef. I can't answer the technical questions but on this:

2 hours ago, James Post said:

But besides the technicality questions, I would like some feedback on what you and your members think about the concept to produce dehydrated broth.

I think the concept is sound. A lot of people who are interested in the health benefits of broths and stocks lack the time or inclination to prepare them themselves. I could see people being interested providing that they were reassured on the quality of the ingredients going in, the manufacturing process itself and critically that dehydrating wasn't severely impacting on the health benefits.  For that I think you'd need to include a little science in the marketing. 

For this community you'd also need to ensure and stress that there was absolutely no gluten involved at any stage. 

Best wishes

Matt

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. - knitty kitty replied to suek54's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      6

      Awaiting dermatitis herpetiformis confirmation following biopsy

    2. - suek54 replied to suek54's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      6

      Awaiting dermatitis herpetiformis confirmation following biopsy

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

      how much gluten do I need to eat before blood tests?

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

      how much gluten do I need to eat before blood tests?

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

      how much gluten do I need to eat before blood tests?

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

    • Total Members
      133,257
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    KariNoMoreGluten
    Newest Member
    KariNoMoreGluten
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • knitty kitty
      Welcome to the forum, @suek54, I have Dermatitis Herpetiformis, too.  I found taking Niacin B3 very helpful in clearing my skin from blisters as well as improving the itchies-without-rash (peripheral neuropathy).  Niacin has been used since the 1950's to improve dermatitis herpetiformis.   I try to balance my iodine intake (which will cause flairs) with Selenium which improves thyroid function.   Interesting Reading: Dermatitis herpetiformis effectively treated with heparin, tetracycline and nicotinamide https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10844495/   Experience with selenium used to recover adrenocortical function in patients taking glucocorticosteroids long https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24437222/   Two Cases of Dermatitis Herpetiformis Successfully Treated with Tetracycline and Niacinamide https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30390734/   Steroid-Resistant Rash With Neuropsychiatric Deterioration and Weight Loss: A Modern-Day Case of Pellagra https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12532421/#:~:text=Figure 2.,(right panel) upper limbs.&text=The distribution of the rash,patient's substantial response to treatment.   Nicotinic acid therapy of dermatitis herpetiformis (1950) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15412276/
    • suek54
      Thank you all for your advice and the dermatitis herpetiformis article. The latter made me realise I had stopped taking my antihistamine, which I will restart today. The Dapsone has cleared the rash entirely but I still get quite a bit itching, absolutely nothing to see though. I know its notoriously hard to clear and its still relatively early days for me.  The iodine issue is very interesting. I do eat quite a bit of salt because I have Addison's disease and sodium retention is an issue. I also have autoimmune hypothyroidism, not sure how a low iodine diet would play into that? Because of my Addison's I am totally steroid dependent, I take steroids 4 x daily and cannot mount any defence against inflammation. I need to increase my meds for that. Now that I know what is wrong I can do just that if Im having a bad day. Life is very sweet, just so damn complicated sometimes! Hey ho, onwards. Thank you again for your advice.  
    • trents
      So, essentially all of the nutrition in the food we eat is absorbed through the villous lining of the small bowel. This is the section of the intestinal track that is damaged by celiac disease. This villous lining is composed of billions of finger-like projections that create a huge amount of surface area for absorbing nutrients. For the celiac person, when gluten is consumed, it triggers an autoimmune reaction in this area which, of course, generates inflammation. The antibodies connected with this inflammation is what the celiac blood tests are designed to detect but this inflammation, over time, wears down the finger-like projections of the villous lining. Of course, when this proceeds for an extended period of time, greatly reduces the absorption efficiency of the villous lining and often results in many and various nutrient deficiency-related health issues. Classic examples would be osteoporosis and iron deficiency. But there are many more. Low D3 levels is a well-known celiac-caused nutritional deficiency. So is low B12. All the B vitamins in fact. Magnesium, zinc, etc.  Celiac disease can also cause liver inflammation. You mention elevated ALP levels. Elevated liver enzymes over a period of 13 years was what led to my celiac diagnosis. Within three months of going gluten free my liver enzymes normalized. I had elevated AST and ALT. The development of sensitivities to other food proteins is very common in the celiac population. Most common cross reactive foods are dairy and oats but eggs, soy and corn are also relatively common offenders. Lactose intolerance is also common in the celiac population because of damage to the SB lining.  Eggs when they are scrambled or fried give me a gut ache. But when I poach them, they do not. The steam and heat of poaching causes a hydrolysis process that alters the protein in the egg. They don't bother me in baked goods either so I assume the same process is at work. I bought a plastic poacher on Amazon to make poaching very easy. All this to say that many of the issues you describe could be caused by celiac disease. 
    • catnapt
      thank you so much for your detailed and extremely helpful reply!! I can say with absolute certainty that the less gluten containing products I've eaten over the past several years, the better I've felt.   I wasn't avoiding gluten, I was avoiding refined grains (and most processed foods) as well as anything that made me feel bad when I ate it. It's the same reason I gave up dairy and eggs- they make me feel ill.  I do have a bit of a sugar addiction lol so a lot of times I wasn't sure if it was the refined grains that I was eating - or the sugar. So from time to time I might have a cookie or something but I've learned how to make wonderful cookies and golden brownies with BEANS!! and no refined sugar - I use date paste instead. Pizza made me so ill- but I thought it was probably the cheese. I gave up pizza and haven't missed it. the one time I tried a slice I felt so bad I knew I'd never touch it again. I stopped eating wheat pasta at least 3 yrs ago- just didn't feel well after eating it. I tried chick pea pasta and a few others and discovered I like the brown rice pasta. I still don't eat a lot of pasta but it's nice for a change when I want something easy. TBH over the years I've wondered sometimes if I might be gluten intolerant but really believed it was not possible for me to have celiac disease. NOW I need to know for sure- because I'm in the middle of a long process of trying to find out why I have a high parathyroid level (NOT the thyroid- but rather the 4 glands that control the calcium balance in your body) I have had a hard time getting my vit D level up, my serum calcium has run on the low side of normal for many years... and now I am losing calcium from my bones and excreting it in my urine (some sort of renal calcium leak) Also have a high ALP since 2014. And now rapidly worsening bone density.  I still do not have a firm diagnosis. Could be secondary HPT (but secondary to what? we need to know) It could be early primary HPT. I am spilling calcium in my urine but is that caused by the high parathyroid hormone or is it the reason my PTH is high>? there are multiple feedback loops for this condition.    so I will keep eating the bread and some wheat germ that does not seem to bother me too much (it hasn't got enough gluten to use just wheat germ)    but I'm curious- if you don't have a strong reaction to a product- like me and wheat germ- does that mean it's ok to eat or is it still causing harm even if you don't have any obvious symptoms? I guess what you are saying about silent celiac makes it likely that you can have no symptoms and still have the harm... but geez! you'd think they'd come up with a way to test for this that didn't require you to consume something that makes you sick! I worry about the complications I've been reading about- different kinds of cancers etc. also wondering- are there degrees of celiac disease?  is there any correlation between symptoms and the amnt of damage to your intestines? I also need a firm diagnosis because I have an identical twin sister ... so if I have celiac, she has it too- or at least the genetic make up for having it. I did have a VERY major stress to my body in 2014-2016 time frame .. lost 50lbs in a short period of time and had severe symptoms from acute protracted withdrawal off an SSRI drug (that I'd been given an unethically high dose of, by a dr who has since lost his license)  Going off the drug was a good thing and in many ways my health improved dramatically- just losing 50lbs was helpful but I also went  off almost a dozen different medications, totally changed my diet and have been doing pretty well except for the past 3-4 yrs when the symptoms related to the parathyroid issue cropped up. It is likely that I had low vit D for some time and that caused me a lot of symptoms. The endo now tells me that low vit D can be caused by celiac disease so I need to know for sure! thank you for all that great and useful information!!! 
    • trents
      Welcome, @catnapt! The most recent guidelines are the daily consumption of a minimum of 10g of gluten (about the amount found in 4-6 slices of wheat bread) for a minimum of two weeks. But if possible stretching that out even more would enhance the chances of getting valid test results. These guidelines are for those who have been eating gluten free for a significant amount of time. It's called the "gluten challenge".  Yes, you can develop celiac disease at any stage of life. There is a genetic component but also a stress trigger that is needed to activate the celiac genes. About 30-40% of the general population possesses the genetic potential to develop celiac disease but only about 1% of the general population actually develop celiac disease. For most with the potential, the triggering stress event doesn't happen. It can be many things but often it is a viral infection. Having said that, it is also the case that many, many people who eventually are diagnosed with celiac disease probably experienced the actual onset years before. Many celiacs are of the "silent" type, meaning that symptoms are largely missing or very minor and get overlooked until damage to the small bowel lining becomes advanced or they develop iron deficiency anemia or some other medical problem associated with celiac disease. Many, many are never diagnosed or are diagnosed later in life because they did not experience classic symptoms. And many physicians are only looking for classic symptoms. We now know that there are over 200 symptoms/medical problems associated with celiac disease but many docs are only looking for things like boating, gas, diarrhea. I certainly understand your concerns about not wanting to damage your body by taking on a gluten challenge. Your other option is to totally commit to gluten free eating and see if your symptoms improve. It can take two years or more for complete healing of the small bowel lining once going gluten free but usually people experience significant improvement well before then. If their is significant improvement in your symptoms when going seriously gluten free, then you likely have your answer. You would either have celiac disease or NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity).
×
×
  • 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.