No. This product is not Alpha-Gal friendly as it lists 5 ingredients that do not comply and 7 ingredients that may not comply.

Is OREO COOKIES & CREAM VANILLA WITH OREO COOKIE PIECES FROZEN DAIRY DESSERT, OREO COOKIES & CREAM Alpha-Gal?

No. This product is not Alpha-Gal friendly as it lists 5 ingredients that do not comply and 7 ingredients that may not comply.

Description

Smooth vanilla base studded with chocolate cookie pieces delivers a contrast of creamy and crunchy textures. Commonly scooped into bowls, cones, or blended into shakes, it is used as a standalone dessert or topping for cakes. Customer reviews note satisfying cookie distribution, rich vanilla flavor, and occasional variations in chunk size.

Ingredients

Frozen Dairy Dessert (Milk, Sugar, Corn Syrup, Cream, Whey, Mono And Diglycerides, Carob Bean Gum, Guar Gum, Natural Flavor, Carrageenan, Vitamin A Palmitate, Tara Gum), Oreo Cookie Pieces (Sugar, Unbleached Enriched Flour (Wheat Flour, Niacin, Reduced Iron, Thiamine Mononitrate (Vitamin B1), Riboflavin (Vitamin B2), Folic Acid), High Oleic Canola Oil And/or Palm Oil And/or Canola Oil And/or Soybean Oil, Cocoa (Processed With Alkali), High Fructose Corn Syrup, Cornstarch, Leavening (Baking Soda And/or Calcium Phosphate), Salt, Soy Lecithin, Vanillin - An Artificial Flavor, Chocolate)

Spoonful app interface

Stop Searching. Start Scanning.

Get instant results with our mobile app

Instant barcode scanning

No typing needed

Multiple diet tracking

Combine as many as you need

Favorite products & lists

Save time on every shop

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Join 500,000+ happy shoppers

Download on App StoreGet it on Google Play

Free to download • No credit card required

What is a Alpha-Gal diet?

An Alpha-Gal diet eliminates mammalian meat and products containing mammalian-derived ingredients to prevent allergic reactions in people with alpha-gal syndrome. This includes beef, pork, lamb, dairy products, gelatin, and certain medications derived from mammals. The condition involves a specific sugar molecule found in most mammals, often triggered after a tick bite. People may experience delayed allergic reactions 3-6 hours after consuming trigger foods. The diet focuses on safe alternatives like poultry, fish, and plant-based proteins. When followed carefully, often with guidance from an allergist or dietitian, it can prevent serious reactions while maintaining adequate nutrition.