Guest guest Posted January 12, 2006 Report Share Posted January 12, 2006 Just got an email about this, not sure if anyone was using this brand or not. Not sure if they're actually recalling the bread or not but it is mislabeled. ... -Crystal Mislabeled bread a danger, allergists say By PATRICIA LOPEZ Minneapolis Star Tribune Published on: 01/12/06 MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. * Allergists and food allergy activists alike were shaken Wednesday upon learning that the French Meadow Bakery labeled its spelt bread " wheat-free " when the bread, in fact, contains wheat. For the hundreds of thousands of Americans who are wheat-intolerant or who have a genuine wheat allergy, mislabeled food is no small matter, said Anne Munoz-Furlong, founder of the national Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network, based in Fairview, Va. " Their health and safety depend on them being able to trust what's on a label, " she said. " We can't stop eating food. We can only stop eating the wrong food, and for that we need to know what's in it. " Wheat allergy reactions, she said, can range from hives and digestive problems to * at the most extreme end * death from the inability to breathe. French Meadow, revered by health enthusiasts for its varieties of organic bread, had 30,000 loaves made from spelt and Kamut grain seized Tuesday afternoon by U.S. marshals and agents from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The agency had spent nearly a year attempting to get the bakery to relabel its bread, noting that both spelt and Kamut are varieties of wheat. U.S. Attorney Tom Heffelfinger, whose office is handling the case, said the agents locked most of the loaves in freezers, where they will remain until the case is decided or a court order issued. " The FDA takes the accuracy of food labeling very seriously, " Heffelfinger said. French Meadow has 20 days to respond to the FDA's complaint, he said. He did not know whether any consumer complaints were involved. The company could face administrative penalties and sanctions for the government's costs in prosecuting the case, he said, " but that hasn't been determined yet. This is primarily about resolving the labeling issue. " Steve Shapiro, a partner with Lynn Gordon in the Minneapolis bakery that distributes its products nationwide, did not return calls Wednesday. But he said Tuesday that although he and Gordon disagree with the classification of spelt and Kamut as part of the wheat family, they are putting the final touches on new labels and hope to get their bread back " as soon as we can. " By Wednesday afternoon, the bakery website had pulled the term " wheat-free " from the spelt and kamut varieties of bread, although it retained its claim that they are alternatives for the wheat-intolerant. At the Mississippi Market Co-op in St. , loaves of the bakery's breads still lined the shelves Wednesday, including several loaves of the " Health Seed " spelt bread that bore a colorful label touting it as wheat-free. Steve Conroy, a manager at the co-op, said that while he will continue to stock French Meadow breads, he approves of the FDA action. " I've been in the health food business for 10 years, " Conroy said. " Spelt is a type of wheat, no question. To say that bread is wheat-free just isn't true. " Intimidatingly heavy for its small size, Health Seed spelt bread is a compact loaf, with slices that are barely palm-sized. Its price is daunting, too: $4.99 for the 9-inch loaf. READING LABELS Dr. Lakin, a Burnsville allergist with Minnesota Allergy and Asthma Consultants, said he was " deeply concerned " by the mislabeling. " We train our patients to read labels carefully, " he said. " That wouldn't have helped here. What are they supposed to do when the label says wheat-free? " Lakin said spelt is a primitive forerunner to modern wheat, first cultivated about 7,000 years ago. But " it is a type of wheat, " he said. " It shares many of the same properties as wheat and people who are allergic to wheat can have reactions to spelt. " Kamut, he said, is of even greater concern because it is much more closely related to modern wheat. " Folks who are sensitive to wheat will definitely react to Kamut, " he said. And because both varieties are somewhat obscure, he said, consumers are almost entirely dependent on labels. About 11 million Americans suffer from some type of food allergy and wheat is among the " big eight " categories, Munoz-Furlong said. Lakin put wheat allergy sufferers at about 1 percent, with most of those being wheat-intolerant. Those with true wheat allergies, who risk severe reactions or death, " are probably 1 in 500,000, " he said. PACKED ON POLAR TRIPS Behind the counter at the French Meadow Bakery & Cafe on Wednesday, loaves of organic cranberry corn bread, organic multigrain, country rye and organic ciabatta were for sale, but no spelt. Narnang, the cafe's day manager, said the breads in dispute are delivered only to outside customers. Cafe customers, however, can request that it be used as a wheat-free substitute on sandwiches, she added. Arriving shortly before noon was Will Steger, the polar explorer, who said that he's a longtime fan of the breads and that he stops by the cafe once or twice a week when he's in town from his home near Ely, Minn. On a 1989 expedition to Antarctica, Steger said, he packed along the bakery's spelt bread. Toasted on a tent stove and slathered with peanut butter and butter, it often would serve as breakfast, he said. " Nothing but good results, " Steger said. For those with allergies, however, Munoz-Furlong said, the results are anything but good. " It could be anything from hives to a life-threatening response, she said, " and the worst part is, no one knows at the beginning of the reaction how severe it will be. We know this is something that affects children and adults. " It is serious. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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