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lactose free - list from 1994

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Nestle Baking Products

Choco Bake

These products contain milkfat but no milk. Tread at your own tolerance

Semi-Sweet Chocolate Morsels

Semi-Sweet Chocolate Mini Morsels

Rainbow Morsels

Mint Chocolate Morsels

Semi-Sweet Baking Bar

Alber's Baking Products

Yellow, White Cornmeal

Hominy Quick Grits

Libby's Baking Products

Cherry, Apple, Blueberry Pie Filling

Contadina

Tomato Sauce

Stewed Tomatoes

Mexican Stewed

Italian Stewed

Pizza Squeeze - original

Pizza Sauce - original

Pizza Sauce - pepporoni

Pasta Ready

Olives

Primavera

Mushroom

Chunky Pizza Sauce

Basic

Mushroom

Red Peppers

Libby's Diner

Beans & s

Macaroni & Beef

Pasta Spirals & Chicken

Gravy with Turkey and Dressing

Chili with Beans

Libby's Canned Meats (all)

Lynden Farms Frozen Potatoes (all)

Dated 2 Nov 94

Baked Lay's brand

Original Potato Chips

Bar-B_Que Flavored Potato Chips

Baked Tostitos® brand Original and Unsalted Chips

Baken-ets® brand Fried Pork Skins

Chester's brand

Natural Flavor Popcorn (Popped)

Natural Flavor Microwave Popcorn (only available in vending machines)

Doritos® brand

Regular Flavor Tortilla Chips (no flavoring or seasoning)

Lightly Salted Tortilla Chips

Frito-Lay® brand

Original Bean Dip

Hot Bean Dip

Nut Harvest® brand

Cashews

Corn Nuggets

Salted Peanuts

Sunflower Seeds

Fritos® brand

Corn Chips

Dip Size Corn Chips

Scoops

Grandma's® brand

Fudge Chocolate Chip Big Cookie

Old Time Molasses Big Cookie

Peanut Butter Big Cookie

Strawberry Artificially Flavored Sugar Wafers

Vanilla Artificially Flavored Sugar Wafers

Lay's® brand

Potato Chips

Bar-B-Q Flavored Potato Chips

Kansas City Style BBQ Flavored Potato Chips

Munchos® brand Regular Flavored Potato Chips (no flavoring or seasoning)

Rold Gold® brand all varieties, Rods, Sticks, Thins, Tiny Twists, Fat-Free

Ruffles® brand

Mesquite Grille BBQ Flavored Potato Chips

Reduced Fat Potato Chips

Potato Chips

Santitas® brand

100% White Corn Style Tortilla Chips (no flavoring or seasoning)

Restaurant Style Tortilla Strips

Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips

Smartfood® Toffee Crunch Artificially Flavored Popcorn

Sunchips® brand Original Flavor Multigrain Snacks (no flavoring or

seasoning)

Taco Bell brand

Refried Beans

Refried Beans with Green Chilies

Salsa (Mild, Medium, Hot)

Smooth-N-Zesty Picante Sauce (Mild, Medium, Hot)

Taco Shells

Taco Seasoning Mix

Taco Sauce (Mild, Medium)

Wild Black Bean Dip

Tostitos® brand

100% White Corn Bite Size Tortilla Chips

100% White Corn Crispy Round Tortilla Chips

Lightly Salted Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips (no flavoring or seasoning)

Black Bean Dip

Picante Sauce (Mild, Medium, Hot)

Salsa (Mild, Medium, Hot)

Wavy-Lay's brand Potato Chips

dated 28 feb 96 denotes trademark of Frito-Lay, Inc. ® denotes

registered

trademark of Frito-Lay, Inc.

All products may not be available in all areas. Many of these brand names are

trademarks

of General Mills Side Dishes

Potato Buds

Potato Hash Browns with Onions

Cereals

Body Buddies Natural Fruit

Bunuelitos

Cheerios

Regular Flavor

Apple Cinnamon

Frosted

Honey Nut

Multi Grain

Cocoa Puffs

Corn Total

Country Corn Flakes

Crispy Wheats 'n Raisins

Fiber One

Honey Frosted Wheaties

Kaboom

Kix

NV Lowfat Fruit

NV Cinnamon & Raisin

NV Rolled Oats & Honey

Raisin Nut Bran

Reese's Peanut Butter Puffs

Ripple Crisp Honey Bran

Ripple Crisp Honey Corn

Sun Crunchers

Total

Total Raisin Bran

Trix

Wheat Hearts

Baking Mixes

Bisquick Shake 'n Pour Blueberry Pancake

Bisquick Shake 'n Pour Original Pancake

Cake Mixes

Angel Food 1 Step White

Angel Food Traditional White

Chiffon Lemon

Flour

Gold Medal

All Purpose

Better for Bread

Better for Biscuit

Unbleached

Whole Wheat

Better for Bread Whole Wheat Blend

Wondra

La Pina

Red Band

All Purpose

Self-Rising

Robin Hood

All Purpose

Unbleached

Velvet Cake

Softasilk Cake Flour

Frostings

Fluffy White Frosting Mix

Gold Medal Pouch Mixes

Angel Food White Cake

Apple Cinnamon Muffin

Banana Walnut Muffin

Beverages

Gelooze

Berry Blue

Cherry

Orange

Strawberry

Squeezit

Berry B Wind

Chucklin Cherry

Green Punch

Grumpy Grape

Lifesaver Tropical Fruit

Lifesaver Watermelon

Nickelodeon Adventure Cooler

Rockin' Red Puncher

Smarty Arty Orange

Tropical Lemonade

100 Acrobat Apple

100 Caped Grape

100 Punch

Fruit Snacks

Fruit by the Foot Cherry

Fruit Roll Ups

Cherry

Crazy Colors

Grape

Peel 'n Build

Slimy Grimy Green

Fruit Shapes Berry Bears Fruit Punch

Fruit Shapes Shark Bites Fruit Punch

Gushers Cherry

Gushers Grape

String Thing Cherry

NV Granola Bars

Chocolate Chip

Cinnamon

Cinammon Graham

Oat Bran

Peanut Butter

Crunchy Lowfat Cinnamon

dated March 96, updated 22 sep

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 16, 1995

Contact: nah Stoll

Patty Bannan,

Tringali

CHEESE IS NOT A FACTOR IN LACTOSE INTOLERANCE

Cheese is an ideal source of nutrients for people suffering from

lactose

intolerance, according to gastroenterologists who study the condition.

" Most cheeses are so low in lactose that they do not present a

problem for

patients with lactase deficiency, " said D. Levitt, M.D.,

gastroenterologist

at the Veteran's Affairs Medical Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and

lead

author of a New England Journal of Medicine study on lactose

intolerance. In

addition to being low in lactose, experts agree that cheese provides

essential

nutrients, such as calcium, that Americans aren't getting enough of.

Most of the lactose is removed from the cheese with the whey

during the

manufacturing process. As a result, most ripened cheese contain about

95

percent less lactose (.4-1 gram per serving) than whole milk (9-12 grams

per

serving), and less even that Lactaid milk (3 grams per serving), a

brand of fluid

milk that has most of the lactose specially removed.

The New England Journal of Medicine study, which investigated

the

affects of milk on people with self-diagnosed severe lactose

intolerance, found

that tens of thousands of people may be mistakenly diagnosing themselves

as

lactose intolerant. In addition, the study determined that almost

everyone could

tolerate an eight-ounce glass of milk - or up to 12 grams of lactose - a

day without

experiencing any symptoms. Twelve grams of lactose correlates to the

amount

found in an entire cheese pizza, or four or five cheese sandwiches, more

than

most people would ever eat in one day.

Cheese is Low in Lactose and Nutrient Dense

In addition to its low lactose content, cheese is nutrient

dense. The milk

curds, which form cheese, retain almost all of the milk's protein, and

important

vitamins and minerals, such as calcium ,phosphorus, magnesium,

riboflavin, and

vitamin A.

Health professionals agree that too many Americans - 9 out of 10

women -

are not getting the calcium they need to help build strong bones and

prevent

osteoporosis. The 1994 National Institutes of Health Consensus

Development

Conference on Optimal Calcium Intake recommends a higher calcium intake

for

most groups and states the preferred sources of calcium are through

foods rich in

calcium, such as dairy products.

" To meet NIH's new daily recommendations for optimal health,

many

Americans will have to double the amount of calcium in their diets,' "

said Edith

Hogan, R.D., a consulting nutritionist in Washington, DC.

" Cheese

provides a tasty and viable solution for all groups of Americans to

increase their

intake of calcium - not only does this one product provide a wide range

of

flavoring possibilities, it is also a good way for people with lactose

intolerance to

get the calcium they need. "

~~

Ingredient Substitutions

For butter substitute Fleischmann's unsalted margarine, Crisco or soy butter.

For melted butter substitute oil or melted margarine.

For milk used simply as a liquid, substitute water or Rice Dream. If you're

baking,

fruit juice can add a nice touch. Reduce the amount of sugar that the recipe

calls

for, though.

For cream, try Farm Rich, available in the refrigerator section of many

grocery

stores.

For milk used as a thickener, substitute pureed tofu. (Be sure to puree the

tofu

completely. Finding granular lumps of tofu in a recipe calling for milk is

repulsive.)

If you need to make a roux (which calls for butter and flour) use margerine

and any

other liquid instead. You can thicken soups lightly this way, which permits

you to

make " cream " recipes without the cream.

For condensed or evaporated milk one reader suggests using Jello " cookable "

vanilla pudding mix with soy milk to substitute in recipes for evaporated or

condensed milk. She says, " It works particurlarly well in pumpkin pie. It

would

probably also work in fudge sauce -- just use a receipe based on evaporated or

condensed milk. I add 3 tablespoons of pudding mix to 3/4 cup of soy milk to

get

the equivalent of 3/4 cup of the other milks. "

~~~

The following items on any ingredients list are no-nos:

milk solids ( " curds " )

whey

casein (sodium caseinate, most commonly)

lactose (sodium lactylate, frequently)

lactalbumin and other names that begin with

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