Guest guest Posted December 31, 2004 Report Share Posted December 31, 2004 > > > > I live in Silicon Valley - here Fry's has abandoned groceries in > favor > > of electronic superstores. ;-) > > > > Safeway can get Bob's Red Mill GF products. > > Whole foods has grain products from at least 3 manufactorers > as well as the whole grains in the bins. > > I have this basic question about Bob's Red Mill and I was not > convinced. They not only sell GF grains and additives, they > also sell glutin and wheat extracts. I am not sure that these > items are made in separate facilities with separate grain feeds. > > I bought the Xanthum gum for my cornbread recipes from a company that > did not also sell wheat or rye products. As I mentioned earlier, > protein and sugar are easy enough to separate, but also easy enought > to crosscontaminate. But if the issue is crosscontamination, then you > also have to worry about companies they use the same machines and > bins to make both GF and non-GF products, and the manufactorer needs > to make absolutely clear on the packaging that they do so. Based on our family experiences, not detailed scientic research: We have never experienced any problems with Bob's Red Mill GF products, and we have tried just about everything they make - we were in the Mill store last summer and my son put EVERYTHING with the GF emblem in our cart. I stuck the soy back on the shelf, but lugged the other 3 shopping bags full home to California. As we have worked through the assortment, no problems at all. BUT I will not buy any bulk grains from Whole Foods ever again! At the 2 stores in our area you can see people move the scoops from bin to bin, and see the different colored flours mixed together. I call it the ultimate example of cross contamination. The Arrowhead Mills grains I have bought there have seemed very old, and did not taste fresh. Of course, your exerience could be different. I'd be curious to know if other do feel they get glutened by Bob's products. Maureen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2004 Report Share Posted December 31, 2004 > BUT I will not buy any bulk grains from Whole Foods ever again! A mg of contamination a week would not be noticable, but would continue to do damage. Certain individuals are complaining about antibody levels that are still high after a year, how do we know that those levels are do to residual contamination in the food. Can you be sure that there is less than 1 mg of rye, barley or wheat gliadin per bag of product? > At the I'd be curious to know > if other do feel they get glutened by Bob's products. I saw the same thing at Whole foods, I learned a little trick in the lab for chemicals if you need the fresh stuff, scoop the surface layer aside and dig into the 'clean' areas. I did not see alot of evidence for crosscontamination in the bins but I saw the potential for contamination, obviously. But the only bin I am interested in is the corn meal, and it is relatively easy to distinquish it from flour or cracked wheat. The last time I was there they had just refilled the corn meal container, so there was no risk of x-contamination. I also inspected the meal when I got home, it was corn meal with about an average number of unidentifyable objects. The Bob's Red Mill Cornmeal was 10 times as expensive, _No thank you_. BTW, apparently you can buy their stocks if they have extra, they claim. The oats if I were to try them I would buy whole kernal so that I could look for the wheat berries in them. This, according to one recent paper, is the reason why Oats are variably sensitizing to CD patients. I am not sure that crosscontamination is the cause, it could be that Oats variable genetics could also be a reason for the difference, but, if it is a possibility that wheat is a contaminant and the contamination in the cause then I would definity want to see the grains before they are cracked. Making flour is not that difficult, I have produced flour on several occasions in the lab. The problem would be with Whole oats would be whether the person purchasing the oats could tell the difference between oats and other grains because they appear very similar. I didn't see anything else there that I would buy, and most of it would include things a GF individual should not buy. I don't mean to be putting down a specific vendors product, my only opinion on the matter is this. And it applies to all vendors. 1. The company manufactors gluten powder, which can crosscontaminate if it is made in the same building. 2. For the flour mixtures he is basically taking flour out and puting rice flour or yam flour in and xanthum gum. It is likely that some of the ingredients for flour products are shared with GF products which makes me really suspicious. 3. They could be packaging using the same equipment GF and Non GF mixtures 4. " Friday night paint job " . you don't have enough of X to finish a batch so you mix in Y, very common in manufactoring. Friday night paint job is the last car to come of the assembly line on friday night as they try to clean out the paint reservoir, in 2 years that individual will have to repaint his car, but the manf really don't care because they saved a couple dollars worth of paint. 5. The product is overly dressed up and cannot be inspected prior to purchase. 6. At the price that they are charging for their product, in some cases 20 times the bulk price one should expect that some of this price is in quality control and not simply packaging, and that quality control would be an aspect of the product literature. (i.e. labeling) I read all of these manf products and found no assurance that the took affective measures to avoid crosscontamination. If you are 'glutened' and they are the source without proper labeling you have no recourse against them. 7. Most importantly, they cost to darn much. ;^). The point is if you are using the product alot, call the company and ask them. I was in the liquor store today,heh-heh, looking for a bottle of tequila and I noticed something. All the really expensive tequilas had on the bottle 100% tequila derived from the blue agave. The cheaper more 'comercial' brands we are used to seeing make no such claims. So I asked the clerk why one tequila says 100% and the others don't. His basic claim was they probably mixed the tequila with other cheaper alcohols. In the case of what should be considered GF, only those items that are marked by percent composition and explicitly labeled that no other ingredients. THis gets me somewhat curious because some of the tequilas are 25% alcohol and I am remembering that gliadins are the the alcohol soluble component of wheat. BTW. Of the 2 wine coolers I found both were malted, the vendor said coolers were out of fashions, I did not see any brands I was familiar with. Probably a good idea to stay away from coolers. While we are discussing stores and products, I should plug the local open markets. I buy a tremendous amount of grains at good price at the market vendors. The yellow corn I cannot find anywhere else, not even whole foods, they also sell beans and other grains bulk and I have found these to be of the highest quality with little observable contamination, many of the market vendors sell no wheat products what so ever, and their prices are dirt cheap. I know in California you guys have great markets because I shopped and eaten in a few while I was there. In the one here in houston they even sell mills so that you can grind your own grains and avoid entirely the issue of 'what the manufactorer missed'. As the saying goes, think outside of the box. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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