Support the Work

If you have found the information on this blog useful, enjoyable, candid, or inspirational ... help keep it reader supported, journalistically driven, available to all, and advertiser-free. If you are able and inspired to do so, please consider a subscription to this blog. You can drop a dime or two every month, every year, or whenever you feel moved.

It will keep me writing, gathering facts, and interviewing the experts.

Love,

Elisabeth

CLICK HERE TO SUPPORT THE WORK

Parent / Sponsor

 

 

NEED TO FIND SOMETHING?
Join The Email List

Get Tastiness to Your Inbox

* indicates required

Daily Tips

When it comes to food allergies, there is a big learning curve.  To help with the details, we are posting a daily tip about the top food allergens, cross contamination and how to avoid it, crazy hidden places that food allergies hide, cooking and baking tips, and more.  There will be a new one every day!  Read them with your morning beverage, forward to family & friends who need them, and discuss.

 

 

Entries in gluten-free regulations (1)

Friday
Aug022013

FDA Sets Gluten-free Regulations after 9 Years!

The Basics of the Regulations

After nine long years, the label "gluten-free" will actually mean something. Gluten-free regulations, meaning the rules for using  labels claiming that a product is gluten-free, have been approved, and will go into effect on August 1, 2014, one year from approval. 

This means that products with "gluten-free", as well as "free of gluten", "made without gluten", and "no gluten", need to be tested for gluten and that these products must fall below the 20ppm gluten-free minimum standard specified in the regulations. Although several manufacturers already comply with the regulations, manufacturers have one year to comply with them.

Alessio Fasano, director of the Center for Celiac Research at Massachusetts General Hospital, said the FDA took an “excruciating” amount of time to finalize its gluten-free definition in part because it had to consider a massive amount of research on celiac disease as well as varying opinions from activists who wanted even more stringent standards and industry officials who argued for more lenient requirements. In the end, he said, the agency struck the right balance.

From The Washington Post, "Nine years after Congress’s request, FDA defines ‘gluten-free’"

Other products, such as eggs, fruits, vegetables, and bottled water can also be labeled "gluten-free", as long as they inherently contain no gluten. The gluten-free community will still have to exercise judgement as manufacturers begin to comply with the regulations, and will still need to be diligent about other products that are not labeled, but could be cross contaminated with gluten.

This is a big win for the gluten/wheat-allergic, and the celiac community. It will cause less stress when shopping for food. We need to send a big thank you to Jules Shepherd of Jules Gluten-Free Flour, 1in133.org, and the vendors who participated in bringing awareness to this important cause.

Read More from Other Sources:

From The Washington Post, "Nine years after Congress’s request, FDA defines ‘gluten-free’"

From Jules Shepherd's Blog, "Blood, Sweat, Tears, and 700 pounds of Frosting Later, Gluten-Free Food Regulations are Here!"

From Forbes.com, "The FDA Gets Serious About Gluten-Free Labeling Law"

From FDA.gov, "Gluten-Free Labeling of Foods"