When Your Child Has a Food Allergy: Milk
When a child has a milk allergy, even a small amount of milk can cause a life-threatening reaction. For that reason, your child must stay away from dairy products and any foods likely to contain milk.
When a child has a milk allergy, even a small amount of milk can cause a serious reaction. Therefore, your child must stay away from dairy products and any foods likely to contain milk. Make sure you know:
About milk allergy
What foods to stay away from
What to look for on food labels
How to prepare dairy-free meals
Choices for feeding a baby with a milk allergy
Foods to stay away from
Children with milk allergies should not eat any dairy foods, including:
Butter. Also some margarines, butter substitutes, and spreads. Some "nondairy" spreads, including margarine, contain whey, a milk protein.
Cheese. Cheese made from rice or soy may also contain casein, a milk protein.
Cream, sour cream, half-and-half, and some "nondairy" creamers
Ice cream, frozen yogurt, and sherbet
Milk. This includes whole, low-fat, skim, evaporated, condensed, powdered, buttermilk, and goat's milk.
Yogurt
Some children with milk allergy are able to eat baked goods with milk. Talk with your child's healthcare provider to find out if baked milk is safe for your child. The following foods often contain milk.
Desserts
Baked goods, such as cakes, muffins, and some cookies and pies
Puddings, custards, and cream sauces
Eggnog, milkshakes, and malts
Candy made with milk, such as fudge, caramel, and nougat
Meats, other meat dishes
Meatloaf, breaded meats, and deli meats containing casein, a milk protein
Many processed meats, including hot dogs, sausages, and luncheon meats
Canned tuna containing casein
Cream soups, bisques, and chowders
Pizza
Starches
Pancakes, waffles, and french toast
Some boxed cereals or precooked cereals
Some breads
Vegetables
Frozen vegetables in sauce
Buttered, creamed, scalloped, or au gratin vegetables
Mashed, au gratin, creamed, and scalloped potatoes. Some french fries may contain lactose, a milk sugar.
Other foods
Salad dressings or mayonnaise containing milk, milk solids, or milk products
Caesar salad and Caesar dressing. These often have Parmesan cheese.
Some high-protein flours and protein powders
Medicines
Vitamins and medicine in pill form. Pills often contain lactose as a filler.
Some dry-powder inhalers used to treat asthma
What to look for on labels
Food labels can be misleading. “Nondairy” foods often contain milk proteins, such as casein and whey. These will be on the ingredients list. Kosher foods labeled “pareve” may have traces of milk from processing. Pareve means the food doesn't contain meat or dairy products. Foods that contain milk are required to have the word "milk" on the ingredients label. Sometimes the label will have an allergy statement, such as "contains milk." Read labels carefully, and stay away from products that contain:
Casein or caseinates
Hydrolysates
Lactalbumin or lactalbumin phosphate
Lactoglobulin
Lactose
Rennet casein
Whey or whey protein
Some foods and products don't have to state if they contain milk. These include:
Foods not regulated by the FDA
Cosmetics and personal care items
Prescription and over-the-counter medicines and supplements
Toys and crafts
Pet food
Allowed foods
These foods are usually safe for children with milk allergies:
Boxed pastas, such as macaroni and spaghetti
Breads made without milk
Fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables
Fresh, frozen, or canned fruit and vegetable juices
Grains, such as rice, wheat, barley, and oats
Meat, chicken, and fish cooked without butter or other milk products. Precooked meats, such as ham, may contain lactose.
Noncream soups
Peanut butter and other nut butters made without milk solids
Rice, soy, and nut milks.
Sauces that don’t contain milk or cream, such as spaghetti sauce
Tofu and other soy products
Vegetable oils
White or sweet potatoes cooked and served without butter or milk
Cooking without milk
Try these tips for making your favorite recipes without dairy products:
In baking, substitute equal amounts of water, fruit juice, rice milk, or soy milk for cow’s milk.
Use three-quarter cup applesauce for every cup of butter called for in baked goods, or use a butter substitute made from soy.
Use chicken broth for cream in sauces and soups, or puree foods for a creamy texture.
Dress potatoes, vegetables, and grains with olive oil, vegetable oil, or soy lecithin spread instead of butter.
Your child needs calcium
Ask your healthcare provider about calcium or vitamin D supplements for your child. Be aware some will contain milk, so be sure to read the labels. These foods are good sources of calcium:
Calcium-fortified orange juice
Canned salmon (with bones) and sardines
Cooked dried beans
Enriched soy milk and rice milk
Soy yogurt
Tofu
Turnip greens, kale, broccoli, and cabbage
If your baby has a milk allergy
Your child's healthcare provider can help you make a plan for feeding your baby. It may include:
Breastfeeding. Breastmilk provides very good nutrition for babies. The healthcare provider may advise that you stop eating the food your child is allergic to. This is because some food proteins can pass through breastmilk and cause symptoms in your baby.
Formula. Your child's healthcare provider can help you know what formula to feed your baby. This may be an extensively hydrolyzed formula or an amino acid-based formula. These special formulas are better digested by babies with a milk allergy. Other types of formula may contain milk. These aren't recommended for babies with a milk allergy. Don't make your own formula. If you need help affording formula, ask your child's healthcare team about resources. These include the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) or Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Health insurance may pay for special formula that is medically necessary.
If your child has any of the symptoms listed below, act quickly!
If an epinephrine auto-injector has been prescribed, use it right away. Then call
Trouble breathing or a cough that won’t stop
Swelling of the mouth or face
Dizziness or fainting
Vomiting or severe diarrhea