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  • Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    Gluten Contamination of French Fries Cooked in Fryers Shared with Wheat Products

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Cross-contamination of gluten-free foods cooked in fryers shared with wheat products is a real problem for celiacs. Here's the rundown.

    Gluten Contamination of French Fries Cooked in Fryers Shared with Wheat Products - Fresh French Fries! - Minnesota State Fair. Image: CC BY 2.0--scostello22
    Caption: Fresh French Fries! - Minnesota State Fair. Image: CC BY 2.0--scostello22

    Celiac.com 04/18/2023 - The collective wisdom is that people with celiac disease should avoid eating French fries cooked in fryers shared with wheat products. But what's the real story? Is there any science to back up the idea? It turns out, there is. A research team recently assessed gluten levels in French fries that were free of gluten-containing ingredients, but were cooked in shared fryers with wheat-containing foods. Here's the rundown.

    To do so, researchers bought 20 orders of fries from 10 different restaurants and tested them for gluten levels using two different ELISA tests. All the restaurants confirmed that their fryers were used to cook both gluten-free and wheat-containing foods.

    Study Results Showed Gluten Contamination is Common when Gluten-Free Foods are Cooked in Shared Wheat Food Fryers

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    According to the sandwich ELISA test, gluten was found in 9 out of 20 fry orders, ranging from 7 to over 80 ppm gluten. The competitive ELISA test found gluten in 3 out of 20 fry orders, ranging from 14 to over 270 ppm gluten. However, the study also noted that ELISAs may underperform when analyzing for gluten that has been heated.

    The findings suggest that one out of four French fry orders would not be considered gluten-free, which suggests that individuals with celiac disease may risk gluten exposure when eating fried foods cooked in fryers shared with wheat-containing foods. 

    The study emphasizes the importance of informing individuals with celiac disease and other gluten-related disorders about the potential risks of consuming fried foods cooked in shared fryers, and the need for food service establishments to adopt policies to prevent gluten contamination.

    This study is important for people with celiac disease, who must avoid gluten completely to manage their condition, and for whom even trace amounts of gluten can cause harm. The results suggest that many restaurants may not fully understand the risks of cross-contamination when cooking gluten-free foods in shared fryers. 

    Unreliable ELISA Results for Heated Foods

    This study also highlights the limitations of using ELISA tests to detect gluten in heated foods, as the tests may underperform in these situations. This may suggest that the actual gluten levels in the fries could be higher than what was detected in the study. 

    Because of this, people with celiac disease need to be aware of this risk and probably want to avoid French fries, or any other products, cooked in shared fryers.

    More research is probably needed to determine the exact extent and conditions of gluten contamination in shared fryers, and to develop better testing methods to accurately measure gluten levels in heated foods.

    But even in the absence of further data, cross-contamination of gluten-free foods cooked in shared fryers is definitely an issue for people with celiac disease, and those affected should avoid eating any food that is cooked in a fryer that is also used to cook products that contain wheat.

    Here's an article on where people with celiac disease or gluten sensitivity can get decent fast food French fries.
     



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    Scott Adams

    They have a separate fryer for those foods. When I used to work their it was call the "pie fryer," and everyone was trained never to use the same fryers as the fries. This approach was never focused on the gluten-free thing, but is done for quality purposes--to keep their fries taking perfectly. They also had a very strict schedule for changing the cooking oil in their fryers for the same reason, and this was the least-loved job to do at McDonald's.

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    pixiegirl

    Ok, good to know. I was agree with your comment about the nightshade plants (potatoes, tomatoes, etc). I eat them all the time. ;)

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    Blue-Sky

    @Scott Adams

    The Macdonalds here have a sticker on the window on the drive through, where you pay which says that the french fries are not cooked in a dedicated frier, and that other wheat containing products are cooked in the same oil.

    The Macdonalds website is confusing but it gives a link to the complete ingredients in the UK at the bottom of the page along with a complete UK allergy information page. There isn't a complete allergen booklet linked on that page for the USA so it is probably a UK only site. In the UK they likely have dedicated friers and they might at some Macdonalds in the USA I am not sure.

     

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    pixiegirl

    I have not been to a McDonalds in years but I know the one local to me, when I was first diagnosed told me that they sometimes put wheat things in the french fry fryer.

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    Scott Adams
    16 hours ago, Blue-Sky said:

    @Scott Adams

    The Macdonalds here have a sticker on the window on the drive through, where you pay which says that the french fries are not cooked in a dedicated frier, and that other wheat containing products are cooked in the same oil.

    The Macdonalds website is confusing but it gives a link to the complete ingredients in the UK at the bottom of the page along with a complete UK allergy information page. There isn't a complete allergen booklet linked on that page for the USA so it is probably a UK only site. In the UK they likely have dedicated friers and they might at some Macdonalds in the USA I am not sure.

     

    I have never seen such a sticker...any chance you could get a photo of it for Celiac.com? I would love to update our info based on this, but need that first. According to Chat-GPT: 

    Quote

    In the USA, McDonald's uses dedicated fryers for their French fries and hashbrowns. This is done to prevent cross-contamination with other food items that may contain allergens such as gluten or dairy. The fryers are typically only used for cooking these specific items and are not used to cook any other food items. This helps ensure that customers with specific dietary requirements can safely enjoy McDonald's fries and hashbrowns.

     

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    Blue-Sky

    Sure I can get you a picture but it might be a week or two as I there aren't any close to where I live and I don't need to go to town right now. 

    The USA MacDonald website is this:

    https://www.mcdonalds.com/us/en-us

    The UK version is:

    https://www.mcdonalds.com/gb/en-gb/help/faq/which-of-your-products-are-gluten-free.html

    With a "gb" and "en"

    I don't trust chat GPT as it gets its information from the internet, and has been known to get things wrong. You might ask it where it got that information?

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    Scott Adams

    No pressure and no rush...but a picture would be worth a thousand words!

    I even called 5 McDonald's today, and everyone said the same thing--only fries and hashbrowns are cooked together in dedicated fryers. Obviously I don't want give any wrong info here, and would love to update it if possible.

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    Rick Sanchez
    On 4/27/2023 at 1:25 PM, Scott Adams said:

    I have never seen such a sticker...any chance you could get a photo of it for Celiac.com? I would love to update our info based on this, but need that first. According to Chat-GPT: 

     

    Airport Road, Zanesville, Ohio, USA 

    The McDonalds Statement is from 2018.

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    Scott Adams

    If this is the one you mean, I just called them and they use a dedicated fryer and cook only their French fries and hash browns in their fryers:

    Quote

    Service options: Dine-in · Drive-through · Delivery

    Address: 4995 E Pike, Zanesville, OH 43701

    Hours: Open 24 hours · More hours

    Confirmed by this business 6 days ago

    Menu: mcdonalds.com

    Phone: (740) 452-1417

     

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    Scott Adams
    On 4/26/2023 at 5:27 PM, Blue-Sky said:

    @Scott Adams

    The Macdonalds here have a sticker on the window on the drive through, where you pay which says that the french fries are not cooked in a dedicated frier, and that other wheat containing products are cooked in the same oil.

    The Macdonalds website is confusing but it gives a link to the complete ingredients in the UK at the bottom of the page along with a complete UK allergy information page. There isn't a complete allergen booklet linked on that page for the USA so it is probably a UK only site. In the UK they likely have dedicated friers and they might at some Macdonalds in the USA I am not sure.

     

    In a personal message to me you indicated that you saw this sticker in a drive through window at the McDonald's on in Montrose, CO "on townsend Ave." The only one I could find is listed below, which is actually just off of Townsend Ave. I called them and they indicated that they definitely do use dedicated fryers, and only cook their French fries and hash browns in dedicated fryers where nothing else is cooked. You also mentioned a McDonald's with this sticker in Delta, CO, but since there are 38,000 McDonalds in the world, and I can't all each of them, I recommend that you contact them directly and report what you find here. 

    As mentioned, my first job was at McDonald's way back in the 80's, and even back then they had this very strict policy to never cook anything but French fries and hash browns in the fry vats. Chicken nuggets, pies (back then they were also fried), filet of fish, etc., were all cooked in separate vats that were back by the grill, and not up front where the fry vats are.

    If anyone finds a McDonald's who will state directly that they cook their fries in vats shared with wheat products, please report it here, and include the location. I'm happy to contact them to verify any that use shared fry vats.

    Quote

    McDonald's
    Address: 1451 Odelle Rd, Montrose, CO 81401
    Hours: 
    Open ⋅ Closes 11 PM
    Menu: mcdonalds.com
    Phone: (970) 240-2722

     

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    Rick Sanchez
    On 4/25/2023 at 7:20 PM, Scott Adams said:

    I understand why you may avoid McDonald's, but they do use dedicated French fry fryers, and only cook their fries and hash browns in them. They always done this, and it's not to keep things gluten-free, but to avoid bad tasting French fries, which is part of their trademark now--they don't mess with their fries!

    This is an excerpt from the late 2020 McDonalds USA French ingredients.   They put up stickers, I seen them, other users have seen them. They reintroduced the donut sticks in February 2020, and have discontinued them since. The fries may be gluten-free now, but they certainly weren't in all US McDonalds in 2020. They put the sticker up after I ate them, if they will switch once without informing, chances are they will do it again.  Cut and paste the ingredients list below, put quotes around it in your search engine, several hundreds of contemporary results, McDonalds has since changed the ingredients on their website, but I am sure one of the sources will meet your standard. 

     

    French Fries Ingredients: Potatoes, Vegetable Oil (canola Oil, Corn Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Natural Beef Flavor [wheat And Milk Derivatives]*), Dextrose, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate (maintain Color), Salt. *natural Beef Flavor Contains Hydrolyzed Wheat And Hydrolyzed Milk As Starting Ingredients. Contains: Wheat, Milk. Cooked In The Same Fryer That We Use For Donut Sticks Which Contain A Wheat And Milk Allergen.

     

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    Rick Sanchez
    On 4/26/2023 at 3:05 AM, Rick Sanchez said:

    Some franchises certainly do have cooked donut sticks in their fryers. I don't go there, so I have no idea if it was promotional or they still do.  But they certainly have in the recent past. 

    Why then?

    Screenshot_20230506-111902_Chrome.webp.7d920a302c65d166e6343803f0028059.webp

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  • About Me

    Jefferson Adams

    Jefferson Adams is Celiac.com's senior writer and Digital Content Director. He earned his B.A. and M.F.A. at Arizona State University. His articles, essays, poems, stories and book reviews have appeared in numerous magazines, journals, and websites, including North American Project, Antioch Review, Caliban, Mississippi Review, Slate, and more. He is the author of more than 2,500 articles on celiac disease. His university coursework includes studies in science, scientific methodology, biology, anatomy, physiology, medicine, logic, and advanced research. He previously devised health and medical content for Colgate, Dove, Pfizer, Sharecare, Walgreens, and more. Jefferson has spoken about celiac disease to the media, including an appearance on the KQED radio show Forum, and is the editor of numerous books, including "Cereal Killers" by Scott Adams and Ron Hoggan, Ed.D.

    >VIEW ALL ARTICLES BY JEFFERSON ADAMS

     


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