YoDadio
New member
My apologies if this has already been addressed, all of my searches keep circling back to the wood and not the nuts themselves.
My daughter has tree nut allergies so I want to be safe with my smoker, particularly in regards to potential residue left from smoking almonds. In searching the web there are no shortage of people saying one shouldn't even use "nut" woods (hickory, oak, pecan, almond, etc.) when there are nut allergies in play. Which honestly never occurred to me and seems like overkill, but I am not a doctor nor do I play one on TV. Fortunately we have not had any issues thus far despite using hickory...
Is there anything to worry about? If so, do I just say "no" to almonds, cook it off/re-season, or deep clean following all almond smokes?
I thank you in advance for your input.
My daughter has tree nut allergies so I want to be safe with my smoker, particularly in regards to potential residue left from smoking almonds. In searching the web there are no shortage of people saying one shouldn't even use "nut" woods (hickory, oak, pecan, almond, etc.) when there are nut allergies in play. Which honestly never occurred to me and seems like overkill, but I am not a doctor nor do I play one on TV. Fortunately we have not had any issues thus far despite using hickory...
Is there anything to worry about? If so, do I just say "no" to almonds, cook it off/re-season, or deep clean following all almond smokes?
I thank you in advance for your input.

I would ask the allergist/doctor, but I pretty much guarantee they will tell you not to use nut wood, or smoke nuts, or anything remotely related to nuts...because of potential lawsuits. I'd be really interested if anyone finds out any reliable, real world, and unbiased information on smoking with nut woods.