Nut allergies present in vegetable shortening from Frying pecans or does it dissipate?
If you fry nuts in vegetable shortening is there still nut allergy risk
nuts
Related Solutions
Fruit, Vegetable & Nut Allergies Associated with Spring Allergies (due to tree pollen) FRUITS: APPLE family (apple, pear) PLUM family (plum, peach, prune, nectarine, apricot, cherry) KIWI
VEGETABLES: PARSLEY family (carrot, celery, dill, anise, cumin, coriander, caraway) POTATO family (potato, tomato, green pepper)
NUTS: Hazelnut, walnut, almond
LEGUMES: Peas, beans, peanut
SEEDS: Sunflower
Ragweed allergy (which causes hayfever in August and September) can be associated with allergies to raw bananas, and the members of the gourd family (melon, watermelon, honeydew, cantaloupe, zucchini and cucumber).
Grass allergy can be associated with allergies to orange, melon, watermelon, tomato, kiwi, peanut.
Explaining about the allergy and ways of combatting it:
These allergic reactions usually occur only when the food is raw. People who are allergic to the raw food can eat it cooked, canned, microwaved, processed or baked. For example, someone allergic to raw apples can eat apple sauce, apple jelly, apple juice, apple pie and dried apples. However, nuts may cause allergic reactions whether raw or cooked. This problem is usually life long. Allergy tests to these foods may sometimes be negative unless a fresh fruit is used for the test (instead of a commercial allergy extract). The allergic reaction to these foods can occur anytime of the year when eating the foods but can be worse during the pollen season and especially if hayfever is very troublesome that year.
The allergic reaction is not due to pesticides, chemicals or wax on the fruit. Howeve,r because the more allergic part of the fruit may be in the skin, some people allergic to fruits, e.g., peaches, can eat the flesh without reaction if the skin is peeled away. Similarly for apples, some brands of apples cause more allergic reactions than others. Freshly picked apple, e.g., straight from the tree or an unripe apple, may cause fewer allergic reactions than one which is very ripe or one which has been stored for weeks after picking.
To this, I'd like to add that, in The Netherlands at least, the Santana apple is available as a special anti-allergy apple, and, for me at least, it works!
Also, as a technique, (deep)freezing the food may also offer benefits, or cooking the food in acid(ic) substances.
Other alternatives:
Substitute Raw Fruits Berries* (strawberry, blueberry, raspberries, etc.), citrus* (orange, mandarins, etc.), grapes, currants, gooseberries, guava, mango, figs, pineapple, papaya, avocado, persimmon, pomegranates, watermelon*.
Substitute Raw Vegetables MUSTARD family (cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, watercress, radish GOOSEFOOT family (spinach, swiss chard) COMPOSITE family (green onions)
Substitute Nuts Peanut*, cashew, pistachio, brazil, macadamia, pine nut.
*May occasionally cause Oral Allergy Syndrome.
For me, this list indeed works, as I have a milder version of OAS. The substitue nuts work for me as well (walnut and almonds are terrible to me: the above are fine). When using pine nuts, try to use the European version, as the Chinese one can be horrible (which is a general problem with Chinese pine nuts)
If you don't dehydrate the nuts, you'llend up with water and nut oil in your nut butter. This is a bad combination since it is likely to make your nut butter get mouldy very quickly.
Best Answer
Depends on exactly how sensitive the allergic person is, but there is some protein/allergen transfer. So there is an allergy risk. (Depends on the particular person whether it'll cause harm or not—but there are reported cases where it has). To avoid transfer, you need to thoroughly clean out the fryer/pan/etc. and use fresh shortening.
See, for example, http://www.foodallergy.org/file/cross-contact-poster-set2016.pdf