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    Is DiGiorno Gluten Free Pizza Really Gluten-Free?

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    DiGiorno Gluten Free Pizza was reformulated, and is now 100% gluten AND wheat-free.

    Is DiGiorno Gluten Free Pizza Really Gluten-Free? - Image: Scott Adams
    Caption: Image: Scott Adams

    06/20/2024 - Update: DiGiorno Gluten Free Pizza was reformulated, and is now 100% gluten AND wheat-free. Gluten-free wheat starch is no longer used in the product, and I can say that the new forumula tastes outstanding! This excellent gluten-free pizza is widely available, and I get it at Target.

    Original Article:

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    05/24/2021 - Shortly after DiGiorno released their gluten-free frozen pizza, the controversy began. Many people with celiac disease began to complain that the pizza caused celiac-like symptoms. Some pointed to wheat starch as a potential culprit. DiGiorno's frozen gluten-free pizza is made with "gluten-free" wheat starch. The FDA considers wheat starch to be “an ingredient processed to remove gluten.”

    • DiGiorno Gluten-Free Pizzas contain the following ingredients: Water, Wheat Starch*, low-moisture part-skim mozzarella cheese (cultured part-skim milk, salt, enzymes), tomato paste, Parmesan, Asiago and Romano cheese blend (cultured part-skim cow's milk, salt, enzymes), 2% or less of vegetable oil (soybean oil and/or corn oil), modified rice starch, sugar, salt, psyllium fiber, spices, dried garlic.
      CONTAINS: WHEAT*, MILK.

      *The wheat starch has been processed to allow this food to meet the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requirements for gluten-free foods.

    Is DiGiorno's wheat starch gluten-free to FDA standards?

    Foods made with wheat starch may be labeled gluten-free as long as the final food contains below 20 parts per million gluten. Fermented foods and ingredients made with gluten-free wheat starch can be labeled gluten-free.

    So, wheat starch is not a problem by itself. Codex wheat starch, often referred to as “gluten-free wheat starch,” has had the gluten washed out to levels under 20 ppm, and has been considered safe for decades in Europe for people with celiac disease. 

    The Codex quality wheat starch used by Schaer to make Schaer gluten-free croissants is gluten-free to below 5ppm, so high quality gluten-free wheat starch is commercially available.

    Also, wheat starch itself is not considered by FDA to be a fermented or hydrolyzed food. Although, products made with hydrolyzed wheat are subject to a different labeling rule for hydrolyzed foods. Basically, if the wheat starch used by DiGiorno contains hydrolyzed wheat, then it should not be labeled gluten-free.

    Nima Sensor Test Results Indicate DiGiorno May Not Always be Gluten-Free

    To get to the bottom of the problem, we went out and bought a few DiGiorno Gluten Free Four Cheese frozen pizzas at different times so that they came from different batches. We cooked the pizza according to directions, and tested two cooked pizzas using a Nima sensor, which has been shown to be accurate at detecting gluten in products down to 20ppm. 

    For the test, we used only a fresh, spongy piece of crust from the center of a piece of curst, with no other ingredients on it. One of our tests registered positive for gluten, and the other test, which was on a different batch of pizza, tested negative.

    Possibility 1: Some or all of DiGiorno's gluten-free pizzas are not gluten-free. Perhaps DiGiorno is using wheat starch that does not meet Codex gluten-free standards, and some of their wheat starch contains gluten above 20 ppm. That means some of their wheat starch is not gluten-free below 20 ppm, and so the pizzas would reflect that.

    Possibility 2: Our Nima Sensor is wrong and gave a reading in error, and DiGiorno is gluten-free, but according to Nima the sensor is very accurate, and can detect gluten in such products without issues.

    Possibility 3: The wheat starch used by DiGiorno contains hydrolyzed wheat starch, and depending on the testing being done, it is creating misleading test results, for example, When testing starch for residual gluten, test-maker R-Biopharm recommends competitive R5 ELISA, which detects gluten that has been broken apart by processing procedures, such as hydrolysis, rather than sandwich R5 ELISA, which is used to quantify intact gluten protein. However, competitive R5 ELISA also has some limitations. It's doubtful that Nestle would use hydrolyzed wheat starch in this product because it could not legally be labelled gluten-free.

    Actions
    We reached out to DiGiorno to find out if they are using Codex wheat starch in their gluten-free pizza, and if they are regularly testing their ingredients and/or final product to ensure gluten-free status. We have yet to hear back from the company, but will update this article as information becomes available.

    At this time, we don't recommend DiGiorno's "gluten-free" frozen pizzas for people with celiac disease or serious gluten sensitivity. 

     



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    Guest Christie S.

    Posted

    I read the huge label and not the side before I started to get sick. 

    Dizzy, icky feeling and all of my normal gluten responses are starting...it feels so wrong that they would label this like that if it has wheat in it.

    The mixed responses seem to fit in with the tests that some pizzas have gluten and others do not...how sketchy.

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    Guest Vicky L

    Posted

    I tried the pizza last night and within half-an-hour I was violently ill and had to miss a day of work.  There needs to be a disclaimer that for people with Celiac Disease this is not a guaranteed safe option. I 

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    Guest Preppybrown

    Posted

    I eat Freschetta gluten free pizza. It is very good and no issues with being glutened.

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    Guest Celiac Gal

    Posted

    Currently having gluten attack from this exact pizza. I have hives all over my face after eating this product. It is NOT gluten free and should not be labeled as so.

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    Guest Celiac Gal

    Posted

    On 2/2/2023 at 3:47 PM, Guest Vicky L said:

    I tried the pizza last night and within half-an-hour I was violently ill and had to miss a day of work.  There needs to be a disclaimer that for people with Celiac Disease this is not a guaranteed safe option. I 

    I agree! I am breaking out in hives currently after eating this late last night. This is awful. How can they advertise as gluten free. 

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    Guest Celiac Gal

    Posted

    On 8/7/2021 at 8:31 PM, trents said:

    By current FDA standards, it is gluten free in that it contains no more than 20ppm of gluten. That is the current definition of gluten free in the USA and it works for most celiacs. But 20ppm is too much for some celiacs who suffer reactions to that amount.

    trents, since when does the FDA stating guidelines ever meant that it is in reality “safe”. Do you know what lobbyists are? You must work for digiorno. All of your comments for this article try negating the study. I saw in a previous thread you blamed false positives on NIMA malfunctions. 

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    trents
    55 minutes ago, Guest Celiac Gal said:

    trents, since when does the FDA stating guidelines ever meant that it is in reality “safe”. Do you know what lobbyists are? You must work for digiorno. All of your comments for this article try negating the study. I saw in a previous thread you blamed false positives on NIMA malfunctions. 

    @Celiac Gal, In debating an issue on this forum there is no need to be rude to others by the use of sarcasm. I do know what a lobbyist is and I do not work for DiGiorno.

    The 20ppm figure was arrived at some years ago by the FDA through extensive research and consultation. The point is, 20ppm is safe for  the majority of celiacs but not for all. Some are much more sensitive. This is what I have been saying. Gluten free does not mean zero gluten. If it did, we would lose almost all of our gluten free manufactured food products and the gluten free food industry would tank. We have people who stated on this forum that they got glutened by walking down the supermarket aisle and smelling the fresh baked bread. Think about that as you consider a class action suite. If the standard is too strict the gluten free food market will disappear. Does the 20ppm figure need revising? Perhaps. Is DeGiorno not meeting the 20ppm standard consistently? Perhaps. Are a significant number of celiacs getting glutened by DeGiorno gluten free pizza? Perhaps. I don't know that. Do you? But I would say we have seen a number of posts about people being glutened by DeGiorno's gluten-free pizza. I just don't know the percentage of that relative to the celiac population as a whole.

    As for the NIMA sensors, I believe they are capable of detecting gluten concentrations as low as 5ppm. Well below the 20ppm FDA standard. Their accuracy depends in part on how they are used and I'm sure some users are not following the guidelines for proper use. So, I'm reasonably certain the NIMA sensor is capable of throwing false positives and maybe even false negatives. It is a good and useful tool but not perfect.

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    Scott Adams was diagnosed with celiac disease in 1994, and, due to the nearly total lack of information available at that time, was forced to become an expert on the disease in order to recover. In 1995 he launched the site that later became Celiac.com to help as many people as possible with celiac disease get diagnosed so they can begin to live happy, healthy gluten-free lives.  He is co-author of the book Cereal Killers, and founder and publisher of the (formerly paper) newsletter Journal of Gluten Sensitivity. In 1998 he founded The Gluten-Free Mall which he sold in 2014. Celiac.com does not sell any products, and is 100% advertiser supported.


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