<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>> I appreciate that in one measure we are dependent on the information of others as to the status of a food product. My thanks to Tom Valinote for summarizing the 20 Responses. However, our opinion doesn't change the reality of the food product. Buckwheat is a member of the rhubarb family and millet branched off on its own tree of the grasses family eons ago so that its protein does not contain the gluten celiacs cannot tolerate. We must distinguish between gluten containing food products derived from wheat, rye, oats, barley and their closely related grains and other food products people have problems with. A basic gluten free diet must NOT contain gluten either directly from the grains or their by-products or cross-contamination in the food manufacturing process. It is very considerate by many people and groups that celiacs are being alerted to other food products that have caused problems. These other (non-gluten) problem foods have nothing to do with the basic nature of celiac disease. We can share our opinions in a poll and it is useful to find out what experience others have had. But this only shows our consensus or our difference on an issue. We know that buckwheat will and cannot cause a celiac reaction. It may cause another reaction because a person cannot digest this protein form. However, if contaminated with one of the offending grains, then the contaminated buckwheat/grain mixture will cause a celiac reaction. Mike (To live with a celiac is to discover a whole new world of pure food and nutritional science)