Orzo is not gluten-free. It's wheat pasta shaped like a grain of rice, so it's unsafe for people with celiac disease.
No. Despite looking like rice, orzo is pasta made from semolina (durum wheat), so it contains gluten and isn't safe for celiac disease. It's especially sneaky because it hides in soups, salads, and 'rice' pilafs where you might not expect pasta. Gluten-free orzo does exist, made from corn and rice, but it must say gluten-free on the package. Plain rice is the simplest naturally gluten-free swap.
Orzo trips people up because it looks exactly like a grain of rice, small, oval, and innocent. But orzo isn’t rice or a grain at all. It’s pasta.
That means orzo is made from wheat and contains gluten, and it tends to hide in dishes where you’d never think to look for pasta. Here’s why orzo isn’t gluten-free and the swaps that work.
Why Orzo Isn’t Gluten-Free
Orzo (also called risoni) is short-cut pasta made from semolina, coarsely ground durum wheat, the same base as spaghetti and penne. It’s simply shaped to resemble rice. Because the foundation is wheat, orzo contains gluten.
Under the FDA’s gluten-free labeling rule (21 CFR 101.91), wheat is a gluten-containing grain, so a wheat-semolina pasta like orzo cannot be labeled gluten-free and isn’t safe for celiac disease. The Celiac Disease Foundation lists orzo among gluten-containing foods, and notes that rice pilaf often contains orzo, which makes it a common hidden source of gluten.
Where Orzo Hides
Orzo’s rice-like look makes it easy to miss. Watch for it in:
- “Rice” pilafs: many restaurant and boxed pilafs mix orzo in with the rice.
- Soups: orzo is a common pasta in chicken soups, minestrone, and avgolemono.
- Pasta salads and grain bowls: orzo salad looks like a rice or couscous salad.
- Stuffed peppers and casseroles: orzo is often the “rice-looking” filler.
Cross-Contamination Risk
- This isn’t cross-contact, orzo is wheat-semolina pasta.
- It looks like rice but is made from durum wheat.
- No cooking method removes the gluten.
- Orzo hides in “rice” pilafs, soups, and salads.
- Shared pasta pots and water cross-contaminate gluten-free foods.
- Ask specifically whether a rice dish contains orzo.
- Orzo is wheat by recipe, keep it out of gluten-free meals.
- Use clean pots and colanders not shared with wheat pasta.
- Store any gluten-free orzo separately and clearly labeled.
Gluten-Free Swaps for Orzo
Whether you want the same shape or just a stand-in, here are gluten-free options.
| Alternative | Base | Gluten-Free Status | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rice (white or brown) | Grain | ✓ Naturally gluten-free | The simplest swap in soups and pilafs |
| Gluten-free orzo (corn/rice) | Corn and rice | ✓ Labeled gluten-free | Same shape; confirm the GF label |
| Quinoa | Seed (pseudo-cereal) | ✓ Naturally gluten-free | Salads and grain bowls |
| Riced cauliflower | Vegetable | ✓ Naturally gluten-free | Low-carb stand-in; check frozen blends |
| Short rice-pasta shapes | Rice | ✓ Labeled gluten-free | Soups and pasta salads |
What to Look For or Avoid
- Plain rice or quinoa as a naturally gluten-free swap
- A gluten-free orzo made from corn or rice, clearly labeled
- A clean pot and colander not shared with wheat pasta
- Restaurant “rice” dishes confirmed to contain no orzo
- Semolina, durum, or wheat in the ingredients (orzo is wheat)
- “Rice” pilafs or salads that may secretly contain orzo
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to the questions people ask most about orzo and gluten. The short version: orzo is wheat pasta, not rice, but gluten-free versions and simple swaps make it easy.
Is orzo gluten-free?
No. Orzo is pasta made from semolina (durum wheat), shaped to look like rice. Because it’s wheat, it contains gluten and is not safe for people with celiac disease. Gluten-free orzo made from corn and rice exists, but it must be labeled gluten-free; plain rice is the easiest naturally gluten-free swap.
Isn't orzo a type of rice?
No. That’s the common confusion. Orzo looks like a grain of rice but it’s actually pasta made from wheat. It’s sometimes called risoni (“big rice”) for its shape, but it has nothing to do with rice and does contain gluten.
Why is orzo a hidden source of gluten?
Because it looks like rice, orzo often appears in “rice” pilafs, soups, and salads where you wouldn’t expect pasta. The Celiac Disease Foundation specifically notes that rice pilaf often contains orzo. Always ask whether a rice dish has orzo in it before assuming it’s gluten-free.
Is there a gluten-free orzo?
Yes. Several brands make gluten-free orzo from corn and rice instead of wheat. It mimics the shape and works in the same recipes, but you must confirm the package is labeled gluten-free, traditional orzo is always wheat.
What can I use instead of orzo?
Plain rice is the simplest swap in soups and pilafs. For salads, try quinoa; for a low-carb option, riced cauliflower; and for the same shape, a gluten-free orzo or a short rice-pasta shape. Cook any swap in a clean pot not shared with wheat pasta.
Is orzo in chicken soup gluten-free?
Not if it’s traditional orzo, which is wheat. Many chicken and vegetable soups use orzo as the pasta, making them unsafe for celiacs. To make a gluten-free version, use rice or a gluten-free pasta and a gluten-free broth.
Can people with celiac disease eat orzo?
No, not traditional orzo, which is wheat pasta and contains gluten. People with celiac disease should choose plain rice, quinoa, or a clearly labeled gluten-free orzo instead, and watch for orzo hidden in rice dishes and soups.