For those who enjoy gluten-free beer but worry whether they can trust the labeling, good news from the United States Department of the Treasury Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB).

On May 24, the TTB announced that beer, wine, and other alcoholic beverages made from ingredients that contain gluten, such as wheat, rye or barley, cannot be labeled as “gluten-free.” Before this ruling, beers that were labeled as gluten-free could still contain small traces of gluten; some brewers use glutenous ingredients to make their beer, then process it later to remove most of the gluten. Since the FDA and TTB haven’t found a test that accurately determines the gluten content of fermented beverages, beers that are made with ingredients that contain gluten must be labeled with either one of the following statements:

  • “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.”
  • “This product was distilled from grains containing gluten, which removed some or all of the gluten. The gluten content of this product cannot be verified, and this product may contain gluten.”

Here’s some even more good news: According to the TTB’s new ruling, New Planet Beer remains gluten-free. Our beer is brewed from 100 percent gluten free ingredients such as sorghum, corn extract, brown rice extract, and gluten-free yeast. Each batch of New Planet Beer is carefully processed to avoid cross-contamination, and then regularly tested to make sure it’s in compliance.

So all you fans of gluten-free, rest assured that New Planet Beer had already set the gluten-free standard before the government action. From the time it’s processed to when it reaches your lips, New Planet Beer has always been guaranteed gluten-free.

10 replies
  1. Krista Bailey Deese
    Krista Bailey Deese says:

    Refrigerate? I have been drinking your beer tonight and just noticed it said please refrigerate…is this just for taste? Its been in my cupboard for quite some time, I just threw it in the fridge yesterday…
    Thanks so much! Its delicious! 🙂

    Reply
    • GFBeer
      GFBeer says:

      It is best to refrigerate before drinking for taste. We don’t recommend refrigerating, then bringing to room temperature, the refrigerating it. So best to keep non-refrigerated and then refrigerate before drinking! If you buy it cold, then best to keep refrigerated. Does that make sense?

      Reply
    • GFBeer
      GFBeer says:

      Tread Lightly Ale and 3R Raspberry Ale do use corn as part of the fermentables. Our Off Grid Pale Ale is made without corn fermentables. However, we did learn that the Caramel Color is derived from corn which we didn’t know when first creating the beer. So we are working with the manufacturer to make a caramel color that is gluten free and not made from corn. So while it is a very small amount, there is a small presence of corn in the Off Grid as well.

      Reply
  2. Carolyn
    Carolyn says:

    Hi, is it common to have corn in gluten-free beers? I’m allergic to corn and wheat so I often have a hard time with gluten-free beers making me sick. Is there an easy way to determine if the beers have corn?

    Thanks!

    Reply

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