Corn Allergy
Always red the ingredients on a product label to be sure they don't contain a substance you are allergic or sensitive to. When complete ingredients are not available, use the information here as a general guide.
The following is a list of products that contain corn:
A major portion of this list comes from Doris J. Rapp, MD, Is This Your Child? William Morrow, New York, 1991.
The following is a list of products that contain corn:
- adhesives (envelopes, labels, stickers, tapes, stamps)
- Any products that contain cornmeal, corn flour, corn oil, cornstarch, corn sugar, corn syrup or sorbitol.
- aspirin
- bacon
- baking powder (most)
- bath or body powder
- beer, ale, gin, whisky
- biscuits
- Bisquick
- breads (commercial)
- brown sugar
- cake, pancake and pie mixes
- candied fruits (sweetened)
- canned or bottled juice drinks
- capsules
- carob (CaraCoa)
- cereals (presweetened)
- coffee (instant)
- Coffee Rich
- confectioner's sugar
- cookies
- corn kernels
- corn cereal
- corn chips
- cornmeal
- corn oil and anything fried in it
- cornstarch
- corn sugar
- corn syrup
- cottage cheese (thickened)
- cranberry juice (some)
- custards
- doughnuts
- dried fruits (sweetened)
- Fritos
- frostings
- frozen fruits (sweetened)
- fruit desserts
- graham crackers
- gravies
- ham (cured)
- hominy
- hot dogs
- ice cream
- infant formulas (Enfamil, Similac, Advance, Portagen Lofenalac, Isomil, Prosobee, Nursoy powder [not liquid], Soyalac [not I-Soyalac], Pedialyte, Hydrolyzed casein, Nutramigen, Progestimil)
- jellies and gelatin mixes
- luncheon meats
- maize
- milk in paper containers
- monosodium glutamate (MSG)
- ointments
- oleomargarine
- orange fruit (some frozen or sweetened)
- paper cups, cartons, plates and any liquids contained in them
- peanut butter (commercial sweetened)
- pie fillings
- plastic food wrappers (some)
- popcorn
- puddings
- sandwich spreads
- sauces that have been thickened but are transparent (e.g. Chinese style)
- sausages
- sherbet
- sticky portion of envelopes and stamps
- sorbitol
- succotash
- suppositories
- tablets (most medicinal)
- tea (instant)
- toothpastes/powders
- vitamins (some)
- yogurt (thickened or sweetened)
- Zest soap
A major portion of this list comes from Doris J. Rapp, MD, Is This Your Child? William Morrow, New York, 1991.