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Dietary Requirements and Allergens in Catering | KOM Catering & Events
Dietary requirements and allergens in catering by KOM Catering & Events. The 14 legal EU allergens, practical tips for collecting dietary requirements, and how a professional caterer prevents cross-contamination. For corporate events, dinners and drinks receptions in The Hague, Delft, Rotterdam and the wider South Holland region.

Dietary requirements and allergens in catering

What you need to know as an organiser about the 14 legal allergens, how to collect dietary requirements and what you can expect from your caterer.

The 14 legal allergens

EU Regulation 1169/2011 requires every caterer to inform guests about the presence of 14 allergenic substances. This applies to both packaged and unpackaged products, including buffets, walking dinners and served dinners.

1 Gluten-containing cereals (wheat, rye, barley, oats)
2 Crustaceans (prawns, lobster, crab)
3 Eggs
4 Fish
5 Peanuts
6 Soya
7 Milk (including lactose)
8 Nuts (almond, hazelnut, walnut, cashew, pecan, Brazil nut, pistachio, macadamia)
9 Celery
10 Mustard
11 Sesame seeds
12 Sulphites (above 10 mg/kg or mg/l)
13 Lupin
14 Molluscs (mussels, oysters, squid)

These fourteen substances together account for approximately 90% of all allergic reactions to food. With some allergens, such as peanuts and nuts, even a tiny amount can trigger a serious reaction. That is why the ingredient list alone is not enough — the risk of cross-contamination matters just as much.

Allergy versus intolerance

The distinction is medically significant and determines how strict your measures need to be. An allergy is an immune system response. With a serious allergy, such as to peanuts or nuts, even a trace of the allergen can trigger anaphylaxis, a life-threatening reaction. Cross-contamination is a genuine danger here.

An intolerance, such as lactose or gluten intolerance, causes symptoms like stomach ache, bloating or fatigue. Unpleasant, but not acutely dangerous. The guest wants to avoid the allergen, but a trace of it is not a medical emergency.

As an organiser, this means: do not just ask what someone cannot eat, but also how serious it is. That helps your caterer take the right measures.

Collecting dietary requirements

The most common mistake when organising an event: asking about dietary requirements and allergies too late. A good collection process starts at the invitation stage.

What to ask

Be specific. Not "do you have any dietary requirements?" but a structured input field with options: vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, nut allergy, halal, other. Include an open text field alongside for specific additions. The more structured the question, the more useful the answers.

When to ask

At the invitation or registration stage, with a deadline of at least seven working days before the event. For larger events (100 or more guests) or complex menus, ten working days is better. That gives the caterer time to adapt the menu and source ingredients.

What to pass on to your caterer

Not just the numbers ("three vegetarians, one nut allergy"), but also the severity. A mild preference for plant-based food is very different from a serious nut allergy where cross-contamination must be ruled out entirely. That distinction determines whether your caterer prepares a separate dish or sets up a fully segregated preparation process.

Rule of thumb: Ask at the invitation stage, deadline 7 working days before the event, pass severity and specifics on to your caterer. The earlier and more precise you are, the better the menu.

What a good caterer takes care of

Allergens are not a detail you sort out on the day. A professional caterer has a complete allergen overview for every dish, recorded in a matrix in line with food safety authority guidelines. At KOM we maintain allergen records per product, which we share with clients and have available on site.

For serious allergies we prepare dishes through a fully separated process: dedicated equipment, separate storage, individual portioning and labelling. That may sound obvious, but the difference lies in the execution. At a busy event with 200 guests, the serving staff need to know exactly which dish goes to which guest and why.

We label dishes at the buffet or service point with clear allergen indicators. At served dinners we mark individual plates. At walking dinners we use colour coding on napkins or dish labels. The aim is for guests with an allergy to eat safely without it being noticeable or uncomfortable.

Common dietary requirements at events

Vegetarian and vegan

At corporate events, between 15 and 25 per cent of guests are vegetarian or vegan. That figure rises every year. Make sure vegetarian and vegan options are proper dishes in their own right, not an afterthought. Nobody wants to be the only person eating a salad while everyone else has a three-course dinner.

Gluten-free

Around 1 in 100 people in the Netherlands has coeliac disease. A growing number also choose gluten-free by preference. At a buffet or walking dinner this means separate bread rolls, crackers or sauces without wheat. Watch out for hidden sources of gluten such as soy sauce, some stocks and breadcrumb coatings.

Dairy-free

Lactose intolerance affects around 5 per cent of people in the Netherlands, but among guests with Asian, African or Middle Eastern backgrounds that figure is considerably higher. At international events this is a standard consideration.

Halal

At government events, ministries and international gatherings, halal catering is almost standard. It is not just about the choice of meat, but also the preparation method and the avoidance of alcohol in sauces and marinades.

Nut allergy

One of the most serious allergies. Even a tiny trace of nuts can trigger an anaphylactic reaction. For a guest with a severe nut allergy, cross-contamination is the primary concern. This requires complete separation in preparation, storage and service. Always notify your caterer explicitly and well in advance.

Frequently asked questions

For luxury catering, fine dining and walking dinners, we want every adapted menu to be polished and equivalent. A guest with dietary requirements does not receive a stripped-back version of what everyone else is having, but a dish that matches in composition, flavour and presentation. Good catering stands out for what is excellent, not for what is different.

Which 14 allergens must legally be declared in catering?
EU Regulation 1169/2011 requires declaration of: gluten-containing cereals, crustaceans, eggs, fish, peanuts, soya, milk (including lactose), nuts, celery, mustard, sesame seeds, sulphites, lupin and molluscs. This applies to unpackaged products in catering and hospitality as well.
How do I collect dietary requirements for my event?
Ask about allergies and dietary requirements at the invitation or registration stage. Use a structured input field, not an open text box. Set a deadline and pass that information on to your caterer at least one week before the event. The earlier you do this, the better the menu can be adapted.
Is a caterer legally required to provide allergen information?
Yes. Every caterer is legally required to inform guests about the presence of the 14 EU allergens in dishes. This can be done in writing, via the menu, or verbally through staff. Allergen information must be established in advance and be verifiable.
What is the difference between a food allergy and an intolerance?
An allergy is an immune system response and can be life-threatening, as with peanut or nut allergies. An intolerance, such as lactose intolerance, causes symptoms like stomach ache or fatigue but is not acutely dangerous. Both require menu adaptation, but with an allergy, cross-contamination is a real risk.
How does a caterer prevent cross-contamination?
By using separate preparation areas or times, dedicated chopping boards and utensils, and physically separated ingredient storage. For serious allergies we prepare dishes separately and label individual portions. This is part of the HACCP protocol.
Can KOM Catering accommodate multiple allergies at once?
Yes. We work daily with combinations of allergies and dietary requirements, whether that means gluten-free and dairy-free, or a nut allergy within a vegan menu. We align the menu in advance and label dishes on site, so guests can eat safely without it being noticeable.
How does personalised catering work with dietary requirements and preferences?
For every enquiry we establish which dietary requirements apply (allergy, intolerance, vegetarian, vegan, halal, gluten-free, dairy-free). For each guest we determine what fits within the menu or put together an alternative that is equivalent in composition, flavour and presentation. On site, modified dishes are marked so the team knows which dish goes to which guest.
Can you adapt a luxury menu to allergens or dietary requirements?
Yes. An adapted dish need not be a second-rate alternative. For fine dining and walking dinners we develop the replacement dish to the same standard as the rest of the menu, with the same attention to flavour, composition and presentation. For a seated dinner or multi-course menu, adapted dishes simply follow the same pace as the table.
How do you handle dietary requirements at a corporate dinner, gala or walking dinner?
Three things help: collect dietary requirements in advance using structured input fields (no open text), set a deadline at least one week before the event, and provide a guest list with name and dietary requirement. At a gala or walking dinner we use marked dishes or subtle buffet cards. Anything that comes in unexpectedly we handle on the spot, but the standard process ensures it is planned well in advance so it is invisible on the night.
Can guests with dietary requirements have the same culinary experience as everyone else?
That is our starting point. A guest with a vegan, gluten-free or other dietary requirement does not receive a standard fallback option, but a dish that matches the rest of the menu in composition, flavour and presentation. At a walking dinner we ensure adapted dishes match the rest of the round in appearance and timing. Good catering stands out for what is excellent, not for what is different.

Event with allergies or dietary requirements?

Send us your guest list with requirements and we will put together a menu that works for everyone. No hassle, no risk.

Request a quote (085) 060 1678
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