Submitted by kniki217 t3_yu7lh8 in pittsburgh
Spicethrower t1_iw952r6 wrote
Of course it's gluten free. Apple trees don't produce flour along with apples.
mikeyHustle t1_iw994li wrote
They can be processed on cross-contaminated equipment; this is them saying that the equipment is also kept gluten-free.
Spicethrower t1_iw9uvs7 wrote
Surely they don't make donuts in the cider press machinery.
mikeyHustle t1_iwa0n4e wrote
The entire gluten-free industry labels products like this. It's so people with celiac disease know for sure. When there's no danger of cross-contam (because, no, they don't make donuts there), they label it. And when your oats (which grow without gluten) are processed on a cross-contam machine, they don't label GF.
Spicethrower t1_iwa2iqe wrote
Of course they do. What I'm saying is common sense. Given celiac disease which is dangerous you would think that food and beverage producers would know better than to cross contaminate machinery. This isn't about oats or flour. Can you tell me why there would be a chance that gluten got into apple cider? I worked in a restaurant. Different equipment for gluten vs gluten free.
mikeyHustle t1_iwa2s6y wrote
People don't usually trust "common sense" when it comes to labels and their health or lifestyle. A pack of spaghetti that's just made of durum semolina is still gonna be labeled Vegan, just in case. That's how it is, for peace of mind.
EDIT: And part of it is because large corporations or shared facilities often share equipment to make wildly different things. It is indeed possible that apples run across a gluten-dusted conveyor belt, somewhere.
Spicethrower t1_iwa54w6 wrote
Say hello to the FDA for me.
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