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  • Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    The Gluten Contamination Study We've Been Waiting For

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Do you really need that dedicated gluten-free toaster and dedicated flatware? A new study says you might not.

    The Gluten Contamination Study We've Been Waiting For - Image: CC BY-SA 2.0--threefingeredlord
    Caption: Image: CC BY-SA 2.0--threefingeredlord

    Celiac.com 10/14/2019 - One of the big debates among people with celiac disease concerns how vigilant celiacs need to be to make sure they avoid gluten. What does science say about gluten contamination in three common scenarios? How careful do you need to be about gluten contamination?

    For example, how likely are you to get gluten over 20ppm if you share a toaster, pasta water, or slice a cupcake with the same knife used to cut a non-gluten-free cupcake?

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    A team of researchers recently set out to assess three common scenarios where people with celiac disease might reasonably fear gluten contamination. How did the actual risk for each situation measure up?

    • Scenario 1: Water used to cook regular pasta is reused to cook gluten-free penne and fusilli. The gluten-free pasta is then rinsed and served.
    • Scenario 2: Toasting Gluten-Free Bread in an Uncleaned Shared Toaster Gluten-containing bread is toasted in a toaster. Immediately afterward, gluten-free bread is toasted in the same toaster.
    • Scenario 3: Slicing a Gluten-Free and Regular Cupcake with Same Knife

    The research team included Vanessa M. Weisbrod, BA; Jocelyn A. Silvester, MD PhD; Catherine Raber, MA; Joyana McMahon, MS; Shayna S. Coburn, PhD; and Benny Kerzner, MD. They are variously affiliated with the Celiac Disease Program, Children’s National Health System, Washington, DC, USA; and the Harvard Celiac Disease Program, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA.

    Their paper titled, Preparation of Gluten-Free Foods Alongside Gluten-Containing Food May Not Always Be as Risky for Celiac Patients as Diet Guides Suggest, appears in Gasterojournal.org.

    Control samples of gluten-free pasta, bread, and cupcakes all tested below the limit of detection. Samples were individually packaged in plastic bags with randomized sample numbers. To avoid “hot spots” and ensure even analysis, all items were homogenized for analysis. 

    Gluten content was measured with R5 sandwich ELISA (R7001, R-Biopharm, Darmstadt, Germany) which has a limit of detection of 5 ppm gluten by Bia Diagnostics (Colchester, Vermont). All control samples were similarly tested. 

    The team then quantified gluten samples as under 5ppm, 5-10ppm, 10-20ppm, or over 20ppm, and based their confidence intervals upon binomial distribution.

    Boiling Gluten-Free Pasta in Regular Pasta Water

    In the first scenario, the team boiled sixteen-ounce packages of gluten-containing Barilla brand penne and fusilli separately in stainless steel pots in fresh tap water for 12 minutes, then removed with strainers. The water was reused to cook Dr. Schar gluten-free penne and fusilli. The team also tested the effect of rinsing some samples of the cooked and contaminated pasta under cold tap water for 30 seconds. 

    The team found that Gluten was detected in all pasta samples cooked in water used for gluten-containing pasta, ranging from 33.9ppm to 115.7ppm. The rinsed gluten-free pasta samples tested at 5.1 ppm and 17.5 ppm detectable gluten. 

    Interestingly, rinsing pots with water alone after cooking gluten-containing pasta was as effective as scrubbing with soap and water to prevent detectable gluten transfer. 

    Toasting Gluten-Free Bread After Non-Gluten-Free Bread

    In the second scenario, the team toasted regular gluten-containing bread in two rolling toasters in a busy hospital cafeteria at 20-minute intervals, or in one of three shared pop-up toasters. Immediately after toasting the gluten-containing bread, they toasted Dr. Schar Artisan White Bread. Gluten-containing crumbs were visible in all toasters. They team did not clean the toasters. 

    The team found that toasting in a shared toaster was not associated with gluten transfer above 20ppm; the four samples with detectable gluten had levels ranging only from 5.1 ppm to 8.3 ppm gluten.

    Slicing a Gluten-Free Cupcake with Knife Used on Gluten Cupcake

    In the third scenario, the team used a knife to slice frosted gluten-containing cupcakes. The knife was then reused to slice a frosted gluten-free Vanilla Cupcake from Whole Foods Gluten-Free Bake House. 

    The knife was then washed in soap and water, rinsed in running water, or cleaned with an antibacterial hand wipe (Wet Ones) and a new gluten-free cupcake was sliced. Both gluten-free cupcakes were analyzed for gluten content.  Although 28/30 cupcake samples had detectable gluten transfer, only 2/28 tested over 20ppm. 

    The team found that cutting cupcakes with a knife used to cut frosted gluten-containing cupcakes was associated with low-level gluten transfer even when crumbs were visible on the icing adhered to the knife. All three knife washing methods tested were effective in removing gluten. 

    The team acknowledges the limitations of their study, including small sample size, etc. They are calling for further study to assess best kitchen practices for people with celiac disease who are trying to avoid gluten contamination in shared kitchens.

    Main Takeaways

    1) Some kitchen activities may pose less of a risk of cross-contact with gluten than is commonly believed. 
    2) Standard washing effectively removes gluten from shared utensils.
    3) Cooking gluten-free pasta in the same water as regular gluten-containing pasta is likely okay, as long as the pasta gets rinsed well.
    4) Sharing a toaster is unlikely to result in gluten contamination.

    Read more in Gastrojournal.org

    Conflict of Interest Declaration: JAS has served on an advisory board of Takeda Pharmaceuticals and received research support from Cour Pharma, Glutenostics, and the Celiac Disease Foundation. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose. Funding Source: Supported by philanthropic gifts from the Celiac Disease Foundation, Dr. SCHAR USA, and Bia Diagnostics. JAS is supported by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number K23DK119584. 



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    sc'Que?
    On 9/1/2024 at 10:37 AM, trents said:

    What you are describing is reconstitution, not osmosis.

    Reconstitution, sure. But via the process that science calls osmosis.  

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    trents
    3 hours ago, sc'Que? said:

    Reconstitution, sure. But via the process that science calls osmosis.  

    As I think about it more, you may have a valid point about it being osmosis but the experiment outlined in the article, as limited as it was, suggests that not much osmosis actually happened. And I wonder if you're example of adding fish sauce to the water makes the pasta take on the fish sauce flavor because it has crossed the semipermeable membrane (as it were) or because it clung to the outside of the noodles. I wonder how "fishy" they would taste if you rinsed them thoroughly. An remember, the molecules won't pass through the membrane if they are larger than the porosity of the membrane.

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    sc'Que?
    On 9/2/2024 at 7:23 PM, trents said:

    As I think about it more, you may have a valid point about it being osmosis but the experiment outlined in the article, as limited as it was, suggests that not much osmosis actually happened. And I wonder if you're example of adding fish sauce to the water makes the pasta take on the fish sauce flavor because it has crossed the semipermeable membrane (as it were) or because it clung to the outside of the noodles. I wonder how "fishy" they would taste if you rinsed them thoroughly. An remember, the molecules won't pass through the membrane if they are larger than the porosity of the membrane.

    I'm still not sure that "cellular membranes" are involved here in exactly the way that you are implying.  As you previously stated, we are talking about a dehydrated starch product. What happens to the starch when water is removed?  It shrinks into a more compact shape. 

    How does the pasta get re-constituted? By the osmotic effects of {salt + water} ΔHeat.  Heat causes expansion and the salted water (and whatever else is in that salted water) fills in the gaps of the osmotic, aqueous expansion.  If you over cook it, it will turn to mush.

    Yes, theoretically, there could be broken cell-walls (broken due to salt... or due to prior cooking) that might also exchange their bits. But we're talking about the food here, not cellular walls per-se. 

    The point is: whatever is in that water gets exchanged and also co-mingled with the pasta in its final, edible form.  If there is gluten, it will stick itself in there. 

    And the only way I will be convinced otherwise is through rigorous scientific testing.  

    Equal (and somewhat opposite) are the gluten-reduced communion wafers that claim to "wash" the gluten away from the dough.  Gluten is a binder. I find it very difficult to believe that you can "wash" the dough to remove adequate gluten to meet the required threshold of <20-ppm.  

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    trents

    Still, the scientific definition of osmosis involves a semipermeable membrane.

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    sc'Que?
    11 hours ago, trents said:

    Still, the scientific definition of osmosis involves a semipermeable membrane.

    But it does not specify that it need be at the cellular level.  Adding salt to a system causes the concentration to move from high to low, until some degree of equilibrium is reached.  If that "membrane" is the outer surface of your pasta, so be it.  And as heat + salt + water causes that surface to soften, salted water penetrates the pasta, again, along with whatever microscopic particulates or aqueous congeners may be present. 

    If you cook your pasta with pickled beet brine, your pasta will be beet-red essentially throughout. It will not simply stick to the surface for you to be able to "wash off". 

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    trents

    That makes sense. Do you really make pickle beet pasta?

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    Eldene

    A link for Gluten Free Watchdog pls? 

    I also watched a video that listed foods that mimic gluten - any advice on this plse Tx. 

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    sc'Que?
    2 hours ago, trents said:

    That makes sense. Do you really make pickle beet pasta?

    I have... because I hate wasting beet brine.  But also to add a culinary flair to both the plating and the palate.  Pretty sure it was rice pasta with cubed beef; chunked fresh beets; Eastern-bloc spices (caraway, pickled thyme, etc); plums instead of tomatoes for acidity (I'm allergic to tomatoes and other nightshades)... served Stroganov-style with creme-fraish/yoghurt and green onion. 

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    Jojer
    On 9/2/2024 at 5:23 PM, trents said:

    As I think about it more, you may have a valid point about it being osmosis but the experiment outlined in the article, as limited as it was, suggests that not much osmosis actually happened. And I wonder if you're example of adding fish sauce to the water makes the pasta take on the fish sauce flavor because it has crossed the semipermeable membrane (as it were) or because it clung to the outside of the noodles. I wonder how "fishy" they would taste if you rinsed them thoroughly. An remember, the molecules won't pass through the membrane if they are larger than the porosity of the membrane.

    Fish sauce is a flavor enhancer, just as is anchovy paste. I use it often and have never had a fishy taste.

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    sc'Que?
    11 hours ago, Jojer said:

    Fish sauce is a flavor enhancer, just as is anchovy paste. I use it often and have never had a fishy taste.

    Depends on the brand and also how much you use. But let's not get off-topic here--aside from not all fish sauces are gluten-free, of course. 

    We're talking about gluten-response to cross-contaminated pasta water... SPECIFICALLY as it relates to boiling gluten-laden pasta, then re-using said pasta water for preparing gluten-free pasta... and whether that is (a) still gluten-free and (b) safe for Celiacs.

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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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