Thanks for your comment. We feel they will accommodate her but just wanted to make sure. She's not just allergic to one thing, she's allergic to quite a bit.
Welcome to my LIFE!
My daughter has 51 confirmed allergies, 32 of them are food. None are life threatening, but effects range from mild hives to a sore tummy. She is 12. And the BIGGEST EATER YOU HAVE EVER COME ACROSS! She outeats most adult men and her favorite food is a giant steak!
For our situation, she takes a tums twice a day (for calcium since she won't drink white milk and to chill her tummy). She also takes daily Aerius for allergies, drinks a lot of water, and I let her choose her food. She is a purist, meat with no sauce, plain burgers. Just a huge eater. And skinny as all. I want her metabolism
If the allergies are minor, no biggie. Her allergist said that at her age self control is important. She will eat a little ice cream, but knows what it does to her (ouch!) and stays away from lamb meat (ew!). She stays away from cream sauces and ketchup. Her food allergies that are verified include walleye, halibut, milk, eggs (but REALLY minor - just can't eat them on their own), pork, some food additives, grapefruit, almonds, etc etc etc. I carry chewable Immodium when we go to special events or friends houses. If it was up to her and her allergies she would just eat a giant steak with a giant salad for every meal.
We are sticking mainly to buffet restaurants for her choice. We have a few others that might cause a few minor problems, but her favorite foods are steak and salad I looked at menus and figure I can just order with no sauces on it. "Steak, medium, no sauce on top". Keep that cheese off her salad please. And if we eat at a CS, it can't just have pizza - she actually pulls off the cheese.
If her allergies are very severe, you may want to steer clear of *any* table service restaurants depending on her reactions. The amounts of different foods that little kids have while running around could be a safety concern. If just one allergy is severe, then that is a different story. It really comes down to the epipen question. If she needs one, then a lot of special considerations and plans need to be made.