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Old Fri, Feb-12-21, 17:34
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Kristine Kristine is offline
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Default Gluten Contamination in Fryers - Recent Study

If you're like me and have reactions to gluten, you're probably already leery of restaurant food because of possible cross-contamination. This little study demonstrates what we probably already know - if you eat deep-fried food from a restaurant that also fries gluten-containing foods in the same fryer, even your gluten-free food probably won't be anymore.

Gluten-free foods cooked in shared fryers with wheat: A pilot study assessing gluten cross contact

Quote:
Introduction: Consumers with celiac disease are dissuaded from eating fried foods cooked in shared fryers with wheat-containing foods at restaurants based on presumed gluten exposure. The purpose of the present study is to assess gluten levels of fries free of gluten-containing ingredients cooked in shared fryers with wheat.

Methods: 20 orders of fries were purchased from 10 different restaurants. Restaurants confirmed that fries and oil were free of gluten-containing ingredients. All restaurants confirmed that their fryers were used to cook wheat-containing foods. Fries were sent to Bia Diagnostics and tested in 1-gram duplicates using the R7001 sandwich R5 ELISA and the R7021 competitive R5 ELISA. A microwave control also was run.

Results: The sandwich ELISA found gluten in 9/20 fry orders (7 to > 84 ppm). The competitive ELISA found gluten in 3/20 fry orders (14 to > 283 ppm). In the microwave control (60-ppm gluten mixture of wheat flour and canola oil) , the unheated mixture tested at a mean level of 64 ppm gluten using the sandwich ELISA and 137 ppm gluten using the competitive ELISA. The mixture heated to 190°C tested at a mean level of 55 ppm gluten using the sandwich ELISA and < 10 ppm and 16 ppm gluten using the competitive ELISA.

Discussion: Based on test results, 25% of fry orders would not be considered gluten-free.

Summary: Gluten cross contact may occur when gluten-free foods are cooked in shared fryers with wheat. ELISAs may underperform when analyzing for gluten that has been heated.

FWIW, I believe foods are allowed to be declared gluten-free if there's <20 ppm thereof.

So if the crappy canola/soybean/whatever garbage seed oil isn't a good enough reason to avoid the above, the unintended wheat ingestion also doesn't help. It's generally best to deep-fry yourself at home or find a restaurant with a separate fryer.
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