Timely ServSafe Food Manager Guide To Preventing A Halloween Nightmare

Jill Anderson

Vampires, goblins, zombies, the ghost under the bed, and peanuts: Halloween is coming, and these terrifying evils will be everywhere. We all love a good scare this time of year, but no costumed ghoul frightens parents more than hidden allergens in Halloween treats. Let’s do a ServSafe food manager review for lurking Halloween allergens.

 ServSafe Food Manager Guide to Preventing a Halloween Nightmare
Image credit: Jill Anderson via Flickr

ServSafe Food Manager Tips For Allergy-Safe Halloween Activities

Parents are picky when it comes to where their kids trick or treat—especially those parents with children with severe food allergies. Halloween is one of the biggest holidays for ServSafe food managers to attract children and families to their facilities. Halloween parties are frequently held in school cafeterias or banquet halls. Our challenge is ensuring we don’t inadvertently serve items that could cause a reaction. Here are a few ideas:

  • Identify potential allergens used in your facility
  • Provide an ingredient list for all treats
  • Serve only pre-packaged food from reliable sources

It helps to ease parent’s minds when they know what their kids are putting in their bodies. If you have food allergies, have kids with food allergies, or know someone who does, then you probably have felt that sense of panic when someone you know could have a severe allergic reaction. The feeling is incredibly intense when ingesting something with unknown ingredients is possible. Knowledge and full disclosure help ensure little goblins choose allergen-free Halloween snacks.

The first step for a ServSafe food manager considering a Halloween event should be to post if your facility processes or uses common allergens such as peanuts, shellfish, wheat, and dairy. Following this up with posted ingredients for each item served will allow parents to make good choices in finding allergen-free Halloween treats. You don’t necessarily have to give away all your recipes and baking secrets. Simply informing party attendees of the ingredients used prevents accidental ingestion of allergens during a ServSafe food manager Halloween event.

The Safest Option

Finally, serving prepackaged Halloween treats from reliable sources with clearly labeled ingredients can be the safest way to host a Halloween event and minimize the risk of guests coming into contact with allergens. We know that many restaurants and other outlets use Halloween to expose as many people as possible to their product or menu items, but sometimes playing it safe and providing prewrapped candy and allergen-safe Halloween treats will show parents that you’re looking out for their children’s health. They may return to sample your cuisine another time.

Do you host Halloween events, and if so, what steps do you, as a ServSafe food manager, take to serve items free from allergens?

The Horrors of Allergens and the MN Certified Food Manager

The Horrors of Allergens and the MN Certified Food Manager

The MN certified food manager’s biggest Halloween nightmare isn’t the monster under the bed or the boogieman hiding in the closet, it’s seeing a young guest sickened by contact with an allergen such as peanuts. On Halloween, many food-service outlets pass out treats to costumed children as trick-or-treating moves to popular business centers and local shops.

The Horrors of Allergens and the MN Certified Food Manager
Photo Credit: Josh Hallett via Flickr

Preventing Allergic Reaction to Peanuts During Halloween Events

If you plan on handing out candy, a couple of steps will prevent any possibility of serving peanuts to children with allergies. Do some research and find candies that come from facilities where no peanuts are processed. This may take a little time, but it will be worth it to prevent even one accidental allergy attack.

Peanuts are not the only issue to worry about. Many children cannot consume wheat, dairy or soy. Numerous candy manufacturers produce products without these ingredients. Having an alternate supply of candy for these children will result in happy super heroes, ghosts and princesses this October 31st.

Finally, make sure that all candy you pass out is factory sealed. We know you love the opportunity to show off what your restaurant can do, but many families will only take factory sealed candies and treats. Serving factory sealed treats prevents any possible cross contamination that can occur after costumed guests have collected their bounty from your establishment. If you’re looking for an opportunity to gain guests from this event, consider handing out coupons or menus with candy rather than attempt to entice families in with freshly prepared treats.

Do you do anything special for your guests and trick-or-treaters to celebrate the fall holidays?