Harvester Brewing vs. Widmer Omission–Defining What “Gluten-Free” Really Means

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Harvester Brewing is a brewery dedicated to only gluten-free beers, and their beers abide by to the “pure” definition of Gluten Free….which means NO barley, wheat or rye.  Recently Widmer entered the GF-market with their Omission line of beers.  Problem is the Omission beers use a proprietary brewing method that actually removes the gluten from these traditional grains.  These are the two big players in the GF-Market so it was interesting to see the first shot fired across the bow by Harvester in this press-release:

Recent federal ruling on gluten-free labeling reinforces Harvester Brewing’s commitment to dedicated gluten-free beer production.

On May 24th, the United States Department of the Treasury Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) issued a ruling on gluten labeling for... alcohol beverages. The ruling, TTB Ruling 2012-2, reinforces Harvester Brewing’s long-standing decision to use only inherently gluten-free ingredients in its beer. This stands in contrast to other production methods that use barley and attempt to remove gluten proteins enzymatically.

The ruling determined that products made from ingredients that contain gluten (barley, wheat, and rye) cannot be labeled as gluten-free. From the TTB’s press release:

"TTB will not allow products made from ingredients that contain gluten to be labeled as “gluten-free.” Because TTB is concerned about the potential health consequences associated with the consumption of gluten by individuals with celiac disease and, because there are currently no scientifically valid testing methods available to accurately measure the gluten content of fermented products, we will only allow these products to be labeled with a statement that they were processed to remove gluten but that the product may still contain gluten."

If a beer is made with gluten containing ingredients, the following warning is required for consumers:

"Product fermented from grains containing gluten and [processed or treated or crafted] to remove gluten. The gluten content of this product cannot be verified, and this product may contain gluten."

Harvester’s decision over three years ago to make gluten-free beer without barley, wheat, or rye means that their ales do not require this warning. In Harvester’s dedicated facility no gluten-containing ingredients are ever used at any point in the production process, enabling testing for gluten allergens before fermentation occurs using proven testing methods. As testing regimens evolve we are in continued contact with certification groups, independent labs, test manufacturers, and industry professionals regarding the state-of-the-art in gluten testing.

More information can be obtained in the full TTB press release and ruling, available online:
TTB Press Release:
http://www.ttb.gov/press/fy12/press-release12-4.pdf
TTB Full Ruling:
http://www.ttb.gov/rulings/2012-2.pdf

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