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Date: | Tue, 10 Aug 2004 12:53:57 -0400 |
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Hello--
I am gluten intolerant and cannot eat dairy products either. I
looked up malt, as I have always thought it comes from barley and
so I do not eat it. Here are the definitions I found:
malt (môlt)
n.
1.. Grain, usually barley, that has been allowed to sprout,
used chiefly in brewing and distilling.
2.. An alcoholic beverage, such as beer or ale, brewed from
malt.
3.. See malted milk (sense 2).
v., malt·ed, malt·ing, malts.
v.tr.
1.. To process (grain) into malt.
2.. To treat or mix with malt or a malt extract.
and
malt·ed milk (môl'tid)
n.
1.. A soluble powder made of dried milk, malted barley, and
wheat flour.
2.. A beverage made by mixing milk with this powder and adding
ice cream and flavoring. Also called malt, malted.
Fran
> I would not trust malt, though I don't have a scientific
explanation why.
> Several people on this list have websites, etc. that may be of
help.
> Christy
>
> > Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2004 22:33:24 -0500
> > From: Greg <[log in to unmask]>
> > Subject: malt-no milk?
> >
> > I have a question about pretzels and malt. We have our son on
a no milk
> diet.
> > We have seen good results but sometimes things sneak by us.
On a recent
> > trip, he had some pretzels that had malt in them. We saw a
huge change in
> > his behavior after he ate them. We have not removed gluten as
we dont see
> a
> > problem with that. Is the malt in pretzels in any way a dairy
product? We
> > were told by his OT therapist that malt extract is a dairy
product.
> Thanks,
> > Greg
> >
> > ------------------------------
> >
> > End of NO-MILK Digest - 5 Jul 2004 to 4 Aug 2004 (#2004-70)
> > ***********************************************************
> >
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