Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

World

Florida brewery faces backlash for its 'Epi Pen' peanut-flavoured beer

A brewery in Florida is facing backlash over its peanut-flavouredbeer. Not because of the ingredients, but because of its name: Epi Pen Peanut Butter Ale.

Advocates say making light of allergies isn't funny it's dangerous

Stacks of beer cans called Epi Pen
Playalinda Brewing Company advertises its Epi Pen peanut butter ale in a 2022 Instagram post. The brewing company located in Titusville, Fla., has come under backlash by allergy advocates. (Playalinda Brewing Company/Instagram)

A brewery in Florida is facing backlash over its peanut-flavouredbeer. Not because of the ingredients or the flavour, but because of its name: Epi Pen Peanut Butter Ale.

"Peanut butter weekstarts today," an employee of Playalinda Brewing Companyin Titusville, Fla., says in an Instagram reel posted five days ago. In the video, he leans on a case of Epi Pen beer.

EpiPenis the trade name for a type of auto-injector used by people with severe allergies such as peanuts during an anaphylactic reaction, which can be deadly. It's estimated that about six per cent of Canadian children and three-to-four per cent of Canadian adults have food allergies, according to Health Canada. Peanuts are one of the mostcommon allergens.

Earlier this year, a dancer with a severe peanut allergy died after eating an incorrectly labelled cookie in New YorkCity, even after using her EpiPen. Last October, a doctor with severe nut and dairy allergies diedafter eatingat a Disney Springs restaurant in Disney World, also after using her EpiPen.

Playalinda Brewing Company could not immediately be reached for comment.

They're not thefirst company to come under fire formakinglight of food allergies. Earlier this year,Uber Eatsremoved a scene from its Super Bowl ad that depicteda man having an allergic reaction to peanut butter, following backlash from some consumers and food allergy advocates.

A man with a swollen eye and hives breaking out on his forward reads the label of a peanut butter jar.
A SuperBowl commercial for Uber Eats shows a man having an anaphylactic reaction after forgetting that peanuts are the main ingredient in peanut butter. After backlash from food allergy advocates, the company said it will remove the scene from its ad when the spot airs during the SuperBowl on Sunday. (Uber Eats/YouTube)

"These kind of actions alienate individuals with food allergy. But the realharm is the fact that it's reducing the perception of the seriousness of life-threatening food allergywith the broader community," Jennifer Gerdts, the executive director of Food Allergy Canada, told CBCNews.

"It's basically reinforcing that it's OK to makefun of a potentially life-threatening condition."

Making light of allergies common, potentially dangerous

Playalinda BrewingCompany's posts about its Peanut Butter Weekand EpiPenale appear to go back several years. While the beer isn't currently listed on its website and at least one Facebook post promotingit appears to have been takendown, its online Peanut Butter Week menu still listed Epi Pen Peanut Butter aleas itstop beer as of Wednesday morning.

"I get the world will have peanut butter liquor andbeers oneof my greatest fears with my son going off to college next year but naming a beer 'Epi-Pen' is inappropriate at best encouraging humour which often leads to those with allergies being treated poorly or laughed at,"Lianne Mandelbaum, who runs the website The No-Nut Traveler, wrote in a Facebook postover the weekend.

"Calling a beer 'Epi-Pen,' especially if it's peanut-flavoured, is absurd and insensitive. It downplays the life-saving role of EpiPens," the Elijah-Alavi Foundation wrote in a post on X. The foundation is run by the family of Elijah Silvera, a three-year-old boy who died of an allergic reaction to a dairy product in 2017.

"In settings like college, this kind of humour harms more than it amuses, eroding empathy for those with life-threatening allergic conditions," the post continued.

Food allergies are often the butt of jokes inmedia and movies. For instance, the 2022film Puss in Boots: The Last Wishdepicts the cat losing one of its nine lives to a shellfish allergy.

The comedy Monster-in-Law shows Jennifer Lopez's character have a severe reaction to almonds after her mother-in-law sneaks them into her meal the night before the wedding.

And people are often victims of allergy bullying, where they are sometimes exposed to their allergens. A case in Texas recently made headlines after a football player's teammates filled his locker with peanuts, knowing he was allergic to them.

Research shows that making fun of any medical condition is dangerous because it diminishes its perceived seriousness, Gerdt said. And the allergy communityrelies on having an informedcommunity to support navigating safe food choices and avoid havingpotentially life-threatening reactions.

"Sometimes people will say, 'Can't you take a joke?' Iget it, but when you look at the broader implications around the community taking it less seriously, that is counter to what the community needs."

WATCH | Some schools are lifting nut bans:

Some schools are allowing nuts again despite allergy risks

8 months ago
Duration 3:11
Canadian researchers found that restricting foods, such as nuts and peanuts, at schools isn't the best way to protect kids from life-threatening allergic reactions. CBCs Deana Sumanac-Johnson breaks down the change.