Traveling with a Nut Allergy in Southeast Asia

2 min read
Food Allergies AbroadFood AllergiesAsiaNut AllergyTravel Safety
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The Lucy Team

We're the team behind Ask Lucy — travellers, food lovers, and language enthusiasts building an AI companion that helps you explore the world with confidence.

Traveling with a Nut Allergy in Southeast Asia

Why Southeast Asia Is High Risk for Nut Allergies

Peanuts and tree nuts are foundational ingredients across Southeast Asian cuisine. Peanut oil is a common cooking medium. Ground peanuts appear in sauces, salads, and garnishes. Coconut (technically a tree nut for some allergy sufferers) is in virtually every curry. The risk is real but manageable with preparation.

Country-by-Country Guide

Thailand: Peanuts are in pad thai, satay sauce, som tam, and many curry pastes. Cashews appear in stir-fries. Always say "mai sai thua lisong" (no peanuts). Carry a Thai-language allergy card.

Vietnam: Peanuts are common as garnishes on noodle dishes, spring rolls, and banh mi. Fish sauce is the bigger concern for most, but crushed peanuts appear unexpectedly.

Malaysia and Indonesia: Satay sauce is peanut-based. Gado-gado features peanut dressing. Many sambals contain ground peanuts. These cuisines require particular vigilance.

Strategies for Safe Eating

  • Carry laminated allergy cards in the local language of every country you visit.

  • Use Lucy to translate menus and flag nut-containing dishes automatically.

  • Eat at restaurants rather than street stalls — it is easier to communicate with restaurant kitchens.

  • Carry your EpiPen at all times and know the local emergency number.

  • Avoid buffets where cross-contamination is common.

Lucy Protects Nut-Allergy Travelers

Tell Lucy about your nut allergy once. Every menu you photograph will have nut-containing dishes flagged automatically. She knows that satay sauce is peanut-based, that many curries contain cashews, and where hidden nuts lurk in Southeast Asian cuisine.

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