We all worry about this possibility, and we wonder if it actually happens. Apparently it does. The following quote comes from a letter that appears in todays newsletter from The Gluten Free Pantry. I was going to post their web address, but my Trend Micro PC-cillin Internet Security suite shows it to be a dangerous phishing site. I don't know if they've been hacked, or they are gathering that information intentionally, but it prompted me to close that browser tab and get the hell away from there as soon as the warning popped up. The address that collects the "pilfered" information is (http://server1.streamsend.co). I added the parentheses so that the system software wouldn't display it as a live link. Anyway, here's the letter:
Apparently there was no mention on the label, that the product was processed on a production line that also handles products that contain gluten.FYI: I was diagnosed as having Celiac Disease in 2001. I have learned a lot. During the past few years, I have eaten gluten-free cereal for breakfast pretty much every day. It doesn't have a lot of food value but at least with a banana in it, it filled me up. Recently, I began getting sick every day. I didn't have a clue what was doing it to me so I started checking EVERTHING I put in my mouth every single day including my medication and tooth paste. With gluten-free printed in big letters across my cereal, I almost didn't call the company because how could that be that it might contain gluten. Anyway, as last resort, I called the company. The young lady there assured me there was no gluten in the product. HOWEVER, when I asked if it was processed in a dedicated area, she said it was not. They wipe down the equipment but could not guarantee that it wouldn't get contaminated. I must have gotten a batch that got contaminated because I eliminated it from my diet and have been fine since. How can a company get away with this? Joan
Just being careful isn't always enough - sometimes we have to be lucky, in order to eat a truly gluten-free diet. While this is mostly a risk for processed foods, it's certainly not impossible that whole, "unprocessed" food items could also be contaminated in a similar way, especially since so many of these products are brought to market in bulk, (unpackaged).
Tex