Read every label for peanuts. Also, tell every restaurant that you go to with your child about your child's allergy. Many foods can have hidden peanuts. Take special precautions with foods such as:
- African, Chinese, Indian, Thai, Indonesian, Mexican, or Vietnamese cuisine. These often contain peanuts or have been in contact with peanuts.
- Bakery cakes, cookies, muffins, pies, and sweet rolls. Even if they don't have peanuts in them, they may have had contact with peanuts.
- Prepared chili and pasta sauce. These may use peanut butter or peanut flour as thickener.
- Chocolate candies. These are often in contact with peanuts. Call the food maker's toll-free number listed on the package for more information.
- Crushed nuts in sauces or sprinkled on salads and other foods.
- Granola, muesli, trail mix, and energy bars. These may contain peanuts, peanut flour, or peanut oil.
- Ice cream and frozen yogurt. These may have had contact with peanuts.
- Mixed nuts, artificial nuts, and nut pieces.
- Peanut butter and peanut flour.
- Pesto. This is an Italian sauce that often contains nuts.
- Praline, marzipan, and nougat.
- Some prepared salad dressings.
- Alternative nut butters. They may have had contact with peanuts.
What to look for on labels
U.S. manufacturers of packaged food items must state clearly on the label if it contains peanuts. Always read the whole ingredient label to look for peanuts. Peanut ingredients may be within the list of the ingredients. Or peanuts could be listed in a “contains peanuts" statement under the list of ingredients.
Foods that don't contain peanuts could be contaminated during manufacturing. Unfortunately, labels like "processed in a facility that also processed peanuts" or "made on shared equipment" are not regulated by the FDA. They are voluntary. Talk with your child's doctor about whether your child may eat products with these labels or if your child should stay away from them.
Some foods and products don't have to state that they contain peanuts. These include:
- Foods not regulated by the FDA.
- Cosmetics and personal care items.
- Prescription and over-the-counter medicines and supplements.
- Toys and crafts.
- Pet food.