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27 answers

Carrots, almond butter, fruit, cheese with crackers, pretzels, plain yogurt mixed with avocado, fruit yogurt, jello, pudding (all kinds of stuff!)

2006-08-27 11:42:36 · answer #1 · answered by Elizabeth L 5 · 1 2

Granola very often has peanuts traces in it, depending on the allergy this can become very serious. Make sure you check the labels, more things than not contain traces of peanuts and peanut oil.
You can use traditional recipes and just use your imagination to substitute (ants on a log- instead of peanut butter use cream cheese and add food coloring to make it brown).
Try this website: http://www.kidswithfoodallergies.org/recipes.html

2006-08-27 17:42:33 · answer #2 · answered by Krispy 6 · 0 0

Carrots stick, Rice Crackers, look for a symbol on some granola bars that have the no peanut label on them, fruit snacks, fruit like strawberries, fruit cups and apple sauce.

2006-08-27 15:16:20 · answer #3 · answered by Gail M 4 · 0 0

Hi ~ I would start by discovering the complete make-up of peanuts so I would know what to avoid in other foods, and from there the child's blood type. At this junction I would stick with the foods I could provide as snacks from the books; Eat right for your type {type meaning blood type} and cook right for your type by Dr. Peter J. D'Adama. Easy to understand and works for whole family. Keep it Groovy and best of luck.

2006-08-27 11:53:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I know this doesn't answer your exact question but it does shed more light on peanut allergies. These links have excellent info. The final page (3rd) of the 1st link has particularly good information.

2006-08-27 11:49:57 · answer #5 · answered by Leemo 4 · 0 0

These are all things I had sent my preschooler out to school with. He didn't like peanut buter...
yougurt.
fruit cups. applesauce.
graham crackers.
little cream cheese sandwiches.trim crusts. cut shapes with cookie cutter. This is a fun treat .
pretzels/ pretzel sticks.
pudding. jello.
crackers with little cheese cubes.
raisins. (but dried fruit sticks to teeth allowing cavities)
pre peeled oranage/ tangerine/ clelmentine in a ziplock baggie.

2006-08-27 18:15:35 · answer #6 · answered by git along gal 3 · 1 0

How about saltines and cheese slices (pepperoni too, maybe)? Just break or cut the cheese slices into four even pieces, and let the kiddo make cracker sandwiches! A twist on this idea: cream cheese and jelly or jam....but then you'll have to put them together (probably).

Hope it helps!

2006-08-27 11:44:58 · answer #7 · answered by Crystal L ™ 2 · 0 0

Fresh fruits and veggies. Another thing is, ask the parents what they feed their child with peanut allergies, they will be able to tell you what their child can and can't have.

2006-08-27 11:42:37 · answer #8 · answered by HappyCat 7 · 1 0

Granola bars, goldfish, bananas, apples, grapes. toddler carrots, applesauce in serving length cups, cheese sticks, and crackers.Smartfood popcorn is yummy! Dry cereal is a robust snack,

2016-11-05 22:04:54 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Fruits, cheese, crackers, jelly beans, tuna sandwiches, Mcnuggets, potato chips, mashed potatoes,

2006-08-27 14:07:05 · answer #10 · answered by Totoru 5 · 0 0

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