Hi,
My wife has a gluten allergy and I was puzzled when I saw both "starch" as well as "wheat starch" and "corn starch" listed on labels.
If it said just plain "starch", could it, in fact, be wheat starch?
I live in France, so I wrote to the European Food Safety Authority in Parma and was informed that if the word "starch" is not qualified then, thanks to EU regulations, it is necessarily a type that can be consumed by people who are gluten intolerant
I only bring this up because I am also confused by wording such as "truffle aroma" or "truffle flavoring" on lists of ingredients. If this is artificial, must it say so?
Obviously, in most instances natural flavorings are more expensive, and I'd like to think better.
So, when I buy, for instance, a small jar of truffle oïl, how to know if this is made with the real thing, or a chemical additive?
Of course, I realize that laws vary from one country to another, but I would be interested to know what it's like where you live.
Best regards,
Alex R.
My wife has a gluten allergy and I was puzzled when I saw both "starch" as well as "wheat starch" and "corn starch" listed on labels.
If it said just plain "starch", could it, in fact, be wheat starch?
I live in France, so I wrote to the European Food Safety Authority in Parma and was informed that if the word "starch" is not qualified then, thanks to EU regulations, it is necessarily a type that can be consumed by people who are gluten intolerant
I only bring this up because I am also confused by wording such as "truffle aroma" or "truffle flavoring" on lists of ingredients. If this is artificial, must it say so?
Obviously, in most instances natural flavorings are more expensive, and I'd like to think better.
So, when I buy, for instance, a small jar of truffle oïl, how to know if this is made with the real thing, or a chemical additive?
Of course, I realize that laws vary from one country to another, but I would be interested to know what it's like where you live.
Best regards,
Alex R.