One thing I would like to point out is that wheat can be in various products, including medicine, herbal supplements and vitamins.
Here are some tips and pointers:
- Read labels always. Even if it's a product you use often. Reformulations are not uncommon. i.e., Morning Star vegetable crumbles (which contain wheat) used to be vegan. Years ago I used to buy quite a bit of it. One day I noticed it tasted different and so I read the ingredients and eggs were amongst the ingredients listed. I contacted the company and they had just reformulated it a few months prior, but the new product just made its way to my local grocery store.
- If you ever need medication (over the counter or prescription) ask a pharmacist to review the ingredients to see if wheat or gluten are present. It is my understanding that if a prescription drug has wheat or gluten in it, and it is absolutely necessary you take that medication (there are no viable substitutes), you can ask the pharmacist to help you locate a compounding pharmacy. This is a pharmacy that mixes drugs to meet the needs of patients with restrictions.
- Wheat and Gluten can be in a lot of unsuspecting products; like oats, prepared mustard, salad dressing, malt vinegars, modified food starch, vegetable starch, vegetable gum, miso paste (or soup), frozen french fries (including those at fast food restaurants), soy sauce, caramel coloring, sausages and lunch meats (but why would you eat them anyway?), canned baked beans, cheap brands of chocolates, candy, dried mustard powder, curry powder... basically, read the label and look for reputable . If there isn't one, contact the producer!!! They have to tell you what's in it.
The point I would like to really drive home here is that you really need to become familiar with ingredients and what they truly are. Reading labels is very important and can save you from having pain or discomfort associated with eating wheat/gluten. In the U.S., the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act mandates that labels on foods manufactured after January, 2006, will list the word “wheat” to indicate the presence of wheat. However, the label does not have to list other gluten-containing grains such as barley, rye, spelt, kamut, or triticale. There is currently no U.S. government regulation or enforcement of gluten-free labeling.
