College-bound Students and Gluten Free Food Challenges

When considering a college to attend, be sure to check the institution’s meal programs to see if they accommodate students on a gluten free diet. And you cannot rely 100% on their printed promotional literature or their video presentations because that media is not always accurate or up to date. We know of one reputable college that provided an elaborate audio/video presentation on their gluten free food service only to be forced to disavow it AFTER the student committed, with no out to decommit.

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Gluten in Medicines?

We all know that given the world we live in, gluten is nearly as prevalent as the air we breathe. It’s everywhere, including maybe some of the prescription-issued and OTC medicines we use. And when the GF-free question is asked of the doctor or pharmacist, not always is an accurate answer immediate, although the need for the medicine is. This question of gluten free excipients, which are the inert substances used in drugs, can also apply to eye contacts and contact solutions.

Presently, there are no regulations – state or federal – that require medicine manufactures to list gluten ingredients in their drugs or products, but the The Food and Drug Administration recognizes the need for such labeling and has issued a $50,000 grant to the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness to conduct scientific research into gluten in medication; the study is titled Gluten in Medication.

NFCA will be joined in the study by experts in the field who will be examining both prescription and OTC drugs, and will consult with people who are on a gluten free diet who have expressed adverse affects when taking specific medications.

Scientific research began in November, 2011, and questionnaires are due to be sent out in early 2012 to the gluten free community seeking their input which will all be factored into the mix before recommendations are suggested to the FDA.

For more information you may contact NFCA at www.celiaccentral.org.

Begin Campaign To National Fast Food Chains To Provide Equal Menus of Gluten Free Items

This is the first in a series of continuing articles on the need and ways of messaging our gluten free needs to schools, colleges, our family and social contacts, restaurants and food service businesses.

You can Google up and access hundreds – if not thousands – of websites that go into great detail about gluten free foods, who offers what GF products, the dire and life-threatening consequences of straying, newsletters that announce GF cook-ins w/ recipes, etc., and all of that information is very helpful. If you step back 10 years, rare were the publications that addressed our GF needs and rarer still were food companies that produced GF products. But as time went on, consumer media published enlightening articles on Celiac, small shops developed lines of GF products, and then big business joined in, resulting in many new products – albeit expensive – that we have today. And without a doubt, our GF dietary lives are infinitely better for all of that.

But what happens when our GF kids go off to college and leave the sanctuary of their homes and have to fend for themselves? What happens as we’re bombarded with commercial after commercial, or inundated with newspaper and magazine ads encouraging the viewer/reader to visit McDonald’s, Taco Bell, Burger King, Subway, Dunkin Donuts, Starbucks, the national Pizza chains of Pizza Hut, Domino’s, and Papa John’s, and so on? We can go fly a kite for all of their concern – with the exception of Subway which is ‘experimenting’ with GF rolls in Texas. Kudos to Subway for addressing the need.

We find it hard to understand why, for example, McDonald’s has not made an effort to address our GF needs on their mainstream menu items. According to a recent article in the WSJ, Friday, December 9, 2011, McDonald’s “global same-store sales jumped 7.4% in November and has benefited from its broad menu from low-cost value items to higher-margin premium foods and specialty drinks.” Great for them, but I can’t have a Big Mac & fries. Are we to believe that McDonald’s cannot produce an acceptable GF bun and develop a way to avoid cross-contamination?

We need to start a campaign to the McDonald’s and Starbucks of the world emphasizing they are neglecting and depriving 1 in 130 Americans (to say nothing of the rest the GF world) by not having their food scientists, dietitians and product development people come up with a varied menu to satisfy the needs of those on a gluten free diet. Look at what General Mills has done with their gluten free line. Not only have they made our life easier, but they are fulfilling what could be considered a social responsibility by putting us on an even footing with the non-GFers. A bowl of GF Rice Chex for me, a bowl of Cheerios for you.

What about it out there in GF web/blogland? Any ideas on how to go about tackling the giants? Via Facebook? Twitter? Look at the attention “Occupy” got, or how about the Arab Spring?. It can be done, we just need to do it.

Next, kids off to college.

GF Quick News:

Kringle Cookies

Our GF HomeCooking chief resident baker, Elaine, has been invited by Flour Bakery of Boston to share her talents for the children of Cradles to Crayons by providing 4 dozen cookies for their Christmas fund-raiser, and Elaine will be at their Cambridge, Mass. bakery December 18 for what promises to be a rewarding and fun time. Elaine will bake our Kriss Kringle cookies which are a favorite during the holidays or, in fact, great any time of the year.

Flour Bakery is owned by Joanne Chang who discovered, after graduating from Harvard with a degree in economics, that her true love was baking pastries and pursued that desire to open 3 extremely successful bakeries in the greater Boston area and during this time, authored several spectacular cookbooks. But one of her most satisfying challenges was her triumph over Bobby Flay on the Food Network’s Throwdown when they dueled over baking sticky buns. It’s wonderful that a business that serves over 1,500 Bostonians every day can become involved in the community of helping children at a very important time of year for them.

Cradles to Crayons is an organization that recognizes the need to help underprivileged children, and does something about it. Their vision, and we quote: “Our vision is that one day every child will have the essentials they need to feel safe, warm, ready to learn and valued. Through the Giving Factory we provide those essentials, as donated clothes, shoes, books, and school supplies to homeless and low-income children.”