Nut-Free Recipes
8,731 recipes

Tex-Mex Chicken and Rice Soup with Fire Roasted Tomatoes

Teriyaki Orange Glazed Roast Chicken with Butternut Squash

Sheet Pan Teriyaki Chicken and Pineapple Stir Fry

Slow-Cooker BBQ Bacon Chicken Cheddar Penne Pasta

Slow-Cooker Bacon and Mushroom Risotto

Slow-Cooker Asian Turkey and Vegetables with Teriyaki

Slow Cooker Asian Pork Stew with Hoisin Sauce and Rice

Slow-Cooker Apple-Cranberry Dump Cake with Cinnamon

Slow-Cooker Alfredo Chicken Biscuit Pot Pie

Easy Turkey Sausage Hash Brown Breakfast Bake with Cheese

Skinny Garlic Shrimp Pasta with Cherry Tomatoes and Spinach

Creamy Chicken and Rice Casserole with Cheese and Crackers

Singapore-Style Curry Rice Noodles with Chicken and Vegetables

Crispy Baked Shrimp and Grits Bites with Bacon

Slow-Cooker Chipotle BBQ Beef Brisket

Sheet-Pan Kielbasa and Vegetables with Dijon Dressing

Sheet-Pan Ham and Egg Hash with Crispy Hash Browns

Sheet Pan Gnocchi with Sausage and Pesto

One-Pan Roasted Chicken with Potatoes and Cauliflower

Seasoned Grilled New Potatoes with Garlic Butter

Scalloped Potatoes with Roasted Cherry Tomatoes

Oriental Scallop Stir-Fry with Ramen Noodles

Italian Sausage White Bean Kale Soup with Fire Roasted Tomatoes

Sausage and Cranberry Baked Stuffing with French Bread
Cooking nut-free means avoiding all tree nuts and peanuts, which show up in more places than you might think. Tree nuts include almonds, cashews, walnuts, pecans, pistachios, macadamias, Brazil nuts, and hazelnuts. Peanuts are technically legumes but get grouped with tree nuts for allergy purposes. People following a nut-free diet check labels for hidden sources like almond extract, marzipan, praline, and nut oils. Cross-contamination matters too. Many chocolate chips, granolas, and baked goods are processed on equipment that also handles nuts. Look for products labeled "processed in a nut-free facility" when it matters. The good news is that seeds like sunflower, pumpkin, and sesame are usually safe alternatives. Sunflower seed butter works as a 1:1 swap for peanut butter in most recipes. Tahini replaces almond butter in sauces and dressings. For baking, replace almond flour with oat flour using a 1.25:1 ratio, or use coconut flour at a 1:4 ratio plus extra liquid. Common hidden sources include pesto (often contains pine nuts or walnuts), some barbecue sauces, Asian dishes that use peanut oil or ground peanuts, and granola bars. Restaurant desserts frequently contain almonds or hazelnuts even when not listed on the menu. Breakfast cereals, crackers, and cookies often have trace amounts from shared equipment. Your kitchen becomes simpler without nut butters and nut flours taking up space. Stock up on seeds, coconut products, and dairy-based proteins instead. Most traditional baking recipes work perfectly without nuts. Classic chocolate chip cookies, vanilla cakes, and fruit pies are naturally nut-free. For protein, focus on eggs, dairy, beans, and meat. A dozen eggs costs under $4 and provides quick meals all week. Greek yogurt packs 20g protein per cup. Coconut products add richness without nuts. Coconut milk works in curries and smoothies. Shredded coconut replaces chopped nuts in granola or cookies. Coconut oil substitutes for recipes calling for walnut or almond oil.
Quick Start
Start with sunflower seed butter as your peanut butter replacement. SunButter and other brands taste similar and work identically in recipes. Keep pepitas and sunflower seeds on hand for snacking and salad toppings. Buy them raw in bulk for $4-6 per pound and roast small batches at 350°F for 8-10 minutes. Learn to read labels for hidden nuts. Words like "natural flavoring" can include nut extracts. Call manufacturers when labels say "produced in a facility that also processes tree nuts" to understand their cleaning protocols. Make your own trail mix with 2 cups mixed seeds, 1 cup raisins, 1/2 cup coconut flakes, and 1/2 cup dairy-free chocolate chips for a safe portable snack.
Pantry Staples
Direct 1:1 replacement for peanut butter in sandwiches, smoothies, and baking. Stores 6 months in pantry, 9 months refrigerated.
Sesame seed paste for hummus, dressings, and sauces. Replaces almond butter in many recipes. Keeps 12 months unopened.
Use 1/4 cup coconut flour for every 1 cup almond flour, plus add 1 extra egg per 1/4 cup. Absorbs liquid fast.
Make your own by grinding rolled oats 60 seconds in a blender. Use 1.25 cups to replace 1 cup almond flour.
Raw or roasted for snacking, salads, granola. Toast 5 minutes at 350°F. Store 6 months in airtight container.
3 tablespoons provides 10g protein. Sprinkle on yogurt, oatmeal, salads. Refrigerate after opening, use within 3 months.
Solid below 76°F, liquid above. Replaces nut oils in baking and cooking. Virgin has coconut flavor, refined is neutral.
Safe alternative to nut-containing granolas. Check that brand processes in nut-free facility. Use in bars, toppings, snack mixes.
High protein flour for pancakes, fritters, batters. Mix 1:1 with water for egg substitute in vegan baking. Keeps 8 months sealed.
Look for mixes with just seeds, dried fruit, and chocolate chips. Make your own with 2 cups seeds, 1 cup raisins, 1/2 cup mini chocolate chips.
Full-fat canned for curries and desserts. Light version for smoothies. Shake can before opening. Refrigerate unused portion 4 days.
Pure vanilla extract is nut-free. Avoid almond extract or blends. Check imitation vanilla for nut-derived ingredients.
Watch Out For
Includes almonds, cashews, walnuts, pecans, pistachios, macadamias, Brazil nuts, hazelnuts, pine nuts. Even tiny amounts can cause reactions.
Peanut oil, almond oil, walnut oil, hazelnut oil, and all nut butters contain proteins that trigger allergies.
Made from ground almonds and sugar. Common in European desserts, holiday cookies, and cake decorations.
Traditional pesto contains pine nuts, many versions use walnuts or cashews. Make your own with just basil, garlic, olive oil, and parmesan.
Praline contains pecans or almonds. Nougat often has almonds, pistachios, or hazelnuts mixed in.
Even products without visible nuts often have traces from shared equipment. Read labels for "may contain" warnings.
Almond flour, cashew flour, and hazelnut flour are ground nuts. Replace with oat, coconut, or rice flour.
Almond extract, Amaretto, Frangelico, and some coffee flavorings contain nut proteins. Pure vanilla and lemon extracts are safe.
FAQ
Can people with nut allergies eat coconut?
Coconut is technically a fruit, not a tree nut. The FDA classifies it as a tree nut for labeling, but most people with tree nut allergies can safely eat coconut. About 1 in 40 people with tree nut allergies also react to coconut. Ask your allergist about testing. Start with small amounts like 1 teaspoon coconut oil or 2 tablespoons shredded coconut if trying for the first time.
What seeds are safe alternatives to nuts?
Sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds (pepitas), hemp hearts, chia seeds, flax seeds, and sesame seeds are all safe. Sunflower and pumpkin seeds work best for snacking and replace nuts in recipes at a 1:1 ratio. Hemp hearts add 10g protein per 3 tablespoons. Chia seeds absorb 10x their weight in liquid. Ground flax mixed with 3 parts water replaces eggs in baking.
How do I replace nut flours in baking?
For every 1 cup almond flour, use 1.25 cups oat flour, or 1 cup all-purpose flour minus 2 tablespoons, or 1/4 cup coconut flour plus 1 extra egg and 1/4 cup more liquid. Oat flour keeps the moist texture. All-purpose flour makes things lighter but drier. Coconut flour needs the extra moisture because it absorbs 4x more liquid than almond flour. Test your substitution with a small batch first.
Are seeds processed on the same equipment as nuts?
Major seed companies like Bob's Red Mill and Gerbs process seeds in dedicated nut-free facilities. Generic store brands often share equipment. Look for "processed in a peanut and tree nut free facility" on the package. Whole Foods 365 brand and Trader Joe's label their seed products clearly. When buying bulk bins, ask staff about their allergen protocols since nuts and seeds often sit in adjacent bins with shared scoops.