How to Eat Street Food Without Getting Sick

street food without getting sick

In my decade of nomadic travel, one of the of the most frequent questions from readers was a very straightforward one: how can I try delicious food from around the world without getting sick? I’ve received this question from readers all over, and often about street food. It’s part of what led me to write a longer form book about that very topic.

I did not grow up obsessed with food, which is a surprise to many who read this site. People I meet nowadays laugh when I tell them that I used to see food as a simple necessity, not a joy. In my early 20s, however, I was diagnosed with celiac disease, which meant that I had to start paying attention to each ingredient as I ate. While traveling, this led to interacting differently with food vendors since I needed to ask many more questions in order to eat safely. What started as an obligation to keep me safe morphed not long thereafter into my present obsession with eating the world.

My food journey may have begun with restrictions on eating, but it inhabits a wide open space of curiosity. Food is the most intensive and rewarding lens I used to learn about a new place, and staying curious about why dishes are prepared a certain way, or how ingredients are used, led me to experience destinations differently.

While I always enjoyed my travels prior to eating my way through them, the feel of those years is less intense and colourful than what I feel about traveling through food. Street food, too, is such an integral part of why I travel, and a wonderful way to soak in the sights and sounds of the places I’m visiting. And even if eating obsessively isn’t your jam, it’s still important to make sure you try foods as safely as possible.

Which is why I finally sat down to write the post you have all been asking me for.

My tips for eating street food without getting sick

My pre-trip research for food simply consisted of reading a book called How to Shit Around the World, which I highly recommend doing on a crowded subway trip. The book has entertaining vignettes, practical advice, and a lot of tips about eating abroad. Despite consuming the book from start to finish, I went to South America and promptly ate a lukewarm llama empañada, and then threw up for 4 days straight as I crawled my way through the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia.

“Ok,” I said to myself, “rule number 1 is do not eat your favourite animal when you eat street food.”

An acquaintance got sick in Chiang Mai recently and said, “but I didn’t even eat the street meat”. I shook my head in dismay. “That’s probably why you got sick.” He went to a tourist restaurant during off-peak hours. Two strikes against his stomach right there. Even years later, I still hear people saying this, “oh, I don’t know how I got sick when I didn’t even eat the street food!”.

how to eat street food without getting sick
Hu tieu nam vang from a street stall in Saigon, Vietnam

In my years of travel, I have fallen off a motorbike when a truck full of cabbages and pineapples rained vegetables down on me, gotten bronchitis, lung damage, a broken toe, and dengue fever. Not all at once, mind you. But they were difficult challenges, even when spaced out.

Food poisoning, however, was very rare. Since quitting my job as a lawyer in 2008 to travel, I got sick only a few times. The most recent one was when I ate a yoghurt at the 7-11 in Thailand in 2011, a full 12 years ago.

That’s right, I have not gotten food poisoning since 2011 despite eating street food all the time. This includes street food in India during my 2013 trip there, and many delicious curbside meals in Oaxaca, Mexico, where I lived from 2015-2017. I realize people are worried about food poisoning, and the advice out there does seem to suggest restaurants are safer. As you’ll read below, though, I respectfully disagree — though as noted in this piece, there are some caveats.

Once you know what to look for, pay attention to what locals eat and when, then you are on your way to delicious meals that serve as experiences as well as dinner, and hopefully don’t have you hugging the toilet bowl later. No advice is a fail-proof method, of course.

This is what has worked for me in my decade of eating the world.

1. Check out the length of the lineups.

how to eat street food without getting sick
Mexico City food stalls at lunchtime

Everyone tells you to eat at the stalls with the longest line of locals. This is still good advice! But I always add that it’s important to look at who is in line. I know my stomach is potentially less resilient than that of a taxi driver used to quick street meats, so I try to opt for street stalls with both women and children in line.

More variety in the customer base usually means the stall has been vetted enough that it’s safe for everyone. Yes, it’s still better to choose a long lineup of men over crickets and an empty stall, but given the choice, women and children in line is where you want to go.

2. Go back to school at lunchtime.

For a cheap lunch, go to the local university and find a place nearby to eat. Students are a hungry bunch, and often some of the fun variations of east meets west pop up here. In Saigon, “pho burgers” were present but so were cheap stalls that served local favorites to a rotating cast of students. It won’t be the best meal of your life, but it will be local, fast, cheap, and usually delicious. Not recommended for dinnertime, however, as the meals will have sat out for the afternoon.

3. Take advantage of a transparent kitchen: street stalls!

As I said in the introduction, I feel like I have more control with a street stall because I can see how the food and the money is handled. If someone is touching the money and then the raw ingredients, I don’t eat there. If there are plastic gloves for the food-making and then they are kept on for handling money? Same – it’s a miss. For two-party stalls often one person will be in charge of the cash and cooking, and the other preparation. This is a good bet, since they are kept separate.

Basically, avail yourself of your senses when choosing where to eat.

That’s not to say that I avoid restaurants entirely! But where there is a culture of street food (like Mexico City or Saigon or Bangkok) I will usually eat all of my meals on the street.

If you are heading to Saigon, my Saigon Street Food Guide will give you a good overview of where to eat in the city.

4. Detailed translation cards for those with food allergies or restrictions.

I have celiac disease, and another reason I eat on the street is that I can modify the meal as it is cooked, instead of relying on pre-made sauces that might get me sick. I made my own translation cards because the ones I bought or downloaded still got me sick because they were insufficiently detailed. For example, many vendors don’t realize that soy sauce, hoisin sauce, and oyster sauce all contain wheat flour. Each card goes through two sets of translations and is researched by a celiac who loves to eat.

You can find my celiac restaurants cards and accompanying long guides for countries around the world here.

Friends with peanut allergies also carry translation cards, and of course due diligence is needed to know what ingredients have to be avoided. If you’re looking for nut allergy or shellfish allergy cards, you can head to Select Wisely or Equal Eats.

These cards go a long way toward getting your point across — certainly more so than my initial “gesture feverishly while mimicking getting ill over food” — and Select Wisely has a strongly worded option for those with more life-threatening allergies. You could also bring a Point It Dictionary if you’re concerned about eating food you can’t place. Also fun for trading words in your respective language when on a long train ride. I am also in the process of building my own celiac cards with highly detailed notes tailored to specific countries.

5. Cutlery as culprit for getting sick on the road.

how to eat street food without getting sick - somtam salad in Asia
Watching how the cutlery is washed is important.

Cutlery can be a source of bacteria even if the food is safe and fresh. I carry baby wipes with me for older wooden chopsticks that look like they need a wipedown, or for utensils that don’t seem well-washed. It will get you some weird looks but it can be helpful to ensure the cutlery is clean. Alternatively, cute portable chopsticks will do the trick. I carry these ones at all times.

I rarely make use of this extra cleaning-or-chopsticks system but have found it really useful to have the option, especially when outside of urban centers. A bonus: if you need to use the washroom and forgot toilet paper you always have your baby wipes!

6. Morning markets are a great way to start the day.

morning street food starts your day off right
Hue’s Dong Ba market in the morning.

When readers write about where to start with street food, I always suggest they head to a busy local produce market. Be it the many rotating markets around Inle Lake in Myanmar to morning food markets in Mexico City, or on a side trip to a small village — if it has a produce market, it usually has some freshly cooked food. Because these stalls are set up to feed the hungry shoppers, there is quick turnover. I’ve found that a way to experience a daunting new food spectrum is to start at these markets and try the foods one by one.

Plus, many people opt for hotels with breakfasts included, or for a more Western breakfast of yoghurt and fruit. While that may be an option, I’d highly recommend dining at a market instead. If you love the food you try, you can ask the vendor where they are during the day, or if they don’t serve that food elsewhere, where they would suggest you try it instead.

All in all, markets are an excellent way to kickstart your tastebuds and all of your other senses.

I am not a morning person, but on my travels I become one because these markets are one of the most memorable, tasty, and interesting ways to spend a few hours of my time.

7. What time do locals eat? That’s when you want to be eating.

street food in asia without getting sick
Street stalls move around as people do; eat when the locals eat!

One of the pieces of advice I give to tourists, especially European ones who eat a bit later than North Americans, is to try to mimic the local food times for their meals. I realize that 6pm dinners or 11am lunches don’t fit the usual meal patterns for most, but it can be very helpful for your stomach if that’s when locals eat.

This is especially important when dishes are cooked and set out buffet style, as you’d want to eat them when they are fresh and before bacteria can form as the food cools. For me, this means shifting my meal times somewhat but it is worth it because the food is piping hot, newly cooked, and doesn’t get me sick.

8. Fully cooked food is safest, always.

Remember my llama empañada? Yup, I disregarded this advice entirely. The center of the snack was cold and I still finished it off. DON’T BE ME. If it’s not fully cooked and it’s supposed to be a hot meal, ask for it to be cooked a bit more.

I’ve gotten more adventurous over the years, eating raw shrimp dishes in Thailand and fresh herbs in places where I don’t know the water source. This has been a product of my own risks and my understanding of what my stomach can handle. Happily, even in North India I didn’t get sick, despite eating street food. Why? I made sure it was fully cooked, freshly made, and my mum and I also decided to stick to the meal times of locals. (I have to say I was a bit surprised as I anticipated getting sick at least once given the stories of my friends but happily I did not!)

9. Beware of ice or fruit shakes where water may be contaminated.

street food in asia without getting food poisoning
Paying attention to how fruit shakes are made goes a long way! Mrs. Pa in Chiang Mai uses safe water and safe ice.

I order drinks with ice in Saigon or Bangkok, where filtered water is subsidized and available cheaply for the general population. I’ve also spent quite a bit of time in both cities and have never gotten sick from the water or ice. That said, when I travel outside the cities I try to avoid ice or fruit shakes with ice because I do not know how the ice was made. If there’s an easy thing to cut out where the water isn’t safe, ice is the first to go. Fruit shakes in Laos downed quite a few of my friends because the ice was not made from distilled water. Best to be sure, especially if you’re frequently on the move.

In Mexico, it was the same thing. If it’s not piping hot, I’m going to ask if they’re using filtered water to make the drink. If in doubt, I’ll use my own water to chase down my meal.

10. In some destinations, sticking to vegetarian dishes may be helpful.

In some destinations, I avoid meat if I am really concerned about food poisoning. When I took my mum to India, we ate street food but stuck to vegetarian eats for the most part. The times we did eat meat we were told we were taking a risk, but we decided to regardless because we were excited about the food. Even the most carnivore of friends tend to temporarily avoid meat in places where water is extremely contaminated.

11. Peel your fruit—or don’t eat it.

food safety: eating fruit while you travel
Rambutan, the “hairy fruit”, in Vietnam. These are easy to peel and great as a snack.

Unless you are used to a new place and its bacteria, I would only eat peelable fruit. Bananas, papaya, mango, rambutan, mangoesteens and more — there is no shortage of delicious fruit that has a peel, and your stomach will thank you. Avoid lettuce, or fruit with skin you eat (like apples).  Strawberries, while tempting, ought to be avoided in countries with high pollution and a questionable water system.

12. Sauces can be a problem, especially if left unrefrigerated.

I love a good table condiment, but occasionally the sauces are what causes travelers some distress. The reason is that in many destinations they are kept at room temperature, meaning they can breed bacteria over time. I tend to gauge my sauce usage on the amount of consumption from other diners: if it’s a food where condiments are used liberally (e.g. bun rieu soup in Vietnam, where it would be blasphemous to skip adding wet chili paste), I go for it. If I can see crust on the side of the sauce, or a few drops are used at a time, I will take my time trying the salsas or sauces to ensure they are not unrefrigerated indefinitely.

I am currently in Oaxaca, Mexico, and I have eaten sauces for all my meals thus far without issue. I have also chosen places teeming with people and families, and watched almost everyone scoop liberal amounts onto their food.

What to do if you get food poisoning?

The tips above are not guarantees and even the most iron cast stomachs can be felled occasionally by a food misadventure. It is part and parcel of the risk inherent in traveling.

If you get food poisoning or a stomach illness, then a visit to a local doctor might be in order. Many of them are familiar with traveler’s diarrhea but also with any lingering viruses circulating in the region. I do not take Imodium unless and until I have an absolute emergency in the form of a long bus ride plus food poisoning.

I would caution against trying to rehydrate immediately with sweetened sport electrolyte drinks because I’ve found the high levels of sugar in those drinks actually make me feel worse if the bacteria are still in my system. Instead, I stick to a steady diet of oral rehydration salts, rice (bread is a substitute if you are not gluten-intolerant) and bananas. Hydrate as much as possible.

Trioral oral rehydration salts are recommended by the World Health Organization, but in the event you don’t have them I have never found a pharmacy in my years of travel that won’t stock a version of these tablets in their stores. They don’t taste great but they are important if you do get sick.

For more tips for packing on your travel, see my World Travel Resources Page

What do I pack to make my stomach feel better?

Here are some items I keep in my bag, no matter the destination.

Probiotics for Travel

I would also recommend traveling with probiotics that don’t need refrigerating. They have helped me get back on track the times I have been sick, and I feel better when I take them. For years, I used the extremely compact Hyperbiotics Pro-15 probiotics, time release pearl capsules that have accompanied me for years. They include some of the strains I wanted to be sure I got in my body.  I realize not everyone is sold on probiotics and that’s fair, but as always I am sharing my experiences.

For people with allergies or mast cell activation disorder or histamine intolerance, I highly recommend this D-Lactate free shelf-stable formula. There are some probiotics strains that increase histamine, and others that reduce it. In a new environment, you want a reducer and this is a good blend.

Activated Charcoal: a Traveler’s Best Friend

I use activated charcoal when I feel a bit queasy, if I’ve got a hangover, and if I ate gluten by mistake and want to do what I can to mitigate. It has helped me tremendously and I don’t leave home without it, even in North America.

You can get these on Amazon, at the 7-11 in Thailand, or at most natural health stores. I’ve picked more up in Mexico, Vietnam, Laos, and many other countries.

They’re very reasonably priced.

Digestive Enzymes for Travel

I find these useful for me as a celiac, but friends carry them also despite not having any food restrictions.  I use this product because it has DPP-IV (Dipeptidyl Peptidase IV) in it, which helps break down gluten and casein. To be clear, I use these NOT to eat gluten but for times I mistakenly eat gluten and feel very sick. (It is essentially an emergency tool for me; there is no fix for the disease). For non-celiacs a general digestive enzyme like this would normally suffice.

Fresh Ginger Tea for Stomach Upset

You can almost always find fresh ginger as you travel, but just in case I bring a few of these ginger root teabags with me to take when my stomach feels a bit off. They are soothing and as a bonus the warm tea helps calm me just before bed.

Ultimately, when I am sick is when I feel loneliest as a solo traveler, so I am very grateful for technology that lets me chat with friends no matter where I am!

Do you have awful jet lag when you travel? See my long piece about circadian rhythms and body clocks, including my detailed protocol for jet lag so you can beat it for once and for all. 

Resources & Inspiration For Food Lovers

I wanted to end this post with some of the books and sites I’ve gone to over and over again to further fuel my love of food. The first is practical, the rest are suggested for the beauty of the scenes they conjure in prose and photos.

Books to Read for Food Lovers

  • How to Shit Around the World: a doctor’s advice about staying healthy as you travel, food and otherwise. Written with humor and joy, from someone who has been around the world.
  • Eating Vietnam: a new book from Graham Holliday, famous for his delightful Noodle Pie blog, on his many incredible meals on the streets of Vietnam. As someone who loves Vietnamese food, especially eating it on those tiny blue stools on the side of the road, this book was just wonderful to read.
  • Lucky Peach’s Street Food issue: covering Chiang Mai, Mexico City, Mumbai, and Buenos Aires.
  • The World’s Best Street Food: A large food book from Lonely Planet that doubles as a guide. It talks about the kinds of foods in each street food mecca, how they are made, and their primary ingredients and underlying story, and then provides recipes so you can make them at home.
  • Heat: I read this book years ago but it remains a huge fave, one of those books I was sad came to an end. It follows Bill Buford’s adventures when he decides to apprentice in Mario Batali’s kitchen, then learns how to be a line cook, a pasta-maker, and an apprentice to a Dante-quoting butcher in Tuscany.
  • Shark’s Fin and Sichuan Pepper: Fuchsia Dunlop’s memoir of her time eating in China was so lovingly crafted that I could not concentrate until I finished the book. A great insight into not just her travels but also Chinese culture as seen from outside eyes.
  • Spice: The History of a Temptation: Written by Jack Turner, a Brit with a great sense of humor, this history of spices and the spice trade takes you through the ages and into the minds and palates of explorers from hundreds of years ago to present day.
  • Salt: A World History: Essential reading from Mark Kurlansky about the history of the world’s most overlooked white powder, and how its use changed the way we function in the world and how much we were able to explore it by sea.

Cookbooks I Love

  • Latin American Street Food: The best flavors from the markets and beaches and roadside stands in Latin America, from Mexico down to Argentina, in recipes you can make at home.
  • David Thompson’s Thai Street Food: A bible for those who love to eat Thai food, this cookbook combined with travelogue is a must for your shelf. It’s heavy, but you’ll enjoy it.
  • Burma: Rivers of Flavor: I’ve gifted this book to friends and family alike because Naomi Duguid beautifully captures the colors, flavors, and fascinating history from her many months in Burma (Myanmar).

Food Sites and Podcasts to Learn From

There’s nothing more satisfying to me than learning about the stories and history behind the foods on my plate. Here are a few websites that I turn to time and time again as starting points for these culinary explorations:

Hopefully with this guide you will not shy away from street food entirely, but instead pick judiciously and enjoy not just the explosion of tastes on your tongue but also the glorious chaos of sitting on the street and surveying the scene as you eat.

Bon appetit!

-Jodi

171 thoughts on “How to Eat Street Food Without Getting Sick”

  1. This is a great writeup that I’ll have to revisit next time I’m abroad. In my last visit in Mexico City, I avoided the street food (reluctantly!), and STILL came back with common bacteria. A good friend living in Guatemala told me that the best bet for parasites is to go for the local doctors, since they know what to look for. Unfortunately, I got nailed on my last day in Mexico and had to take care of it at home. Lucky that Cipro was all I needed.

  2. Wonderful tips! We are sticklers for street food during our trips, and some of them taste better and more authentic than those served in restaurants.

  3. What a great list of tips to keep in mind! I actually got really sick in India, and I didn’t even eat the street food. I stuck to restaurants in all of the touristy places that “looked” clean from the outside. But I guess that goes to show you that – as you pointed out above – these places can sometimes be just as risky (if not more). Next time, I’ll be keeping a closer eye on the kitchen and checking out the cutlery before I dig in!

    1. In my experience they have been but of course one can get sick anywhere, even in North America (I certainly have!). Hopefully these tips take some of the fear away and people can experiment within their comfort levels.

      1. Jodi, great article. And I have to agree, you can get food poisoning anywhere, so take note of the establishment carefully. My last bout with food poisoning was at a nice little brasserie in Paris. It’s pretty much the last city in which you might expect to get food poisoning, but I spent a night hugging the toilet all night. As a final note, be aware that TripAdvisor reports on such experiences sometimes disappear. My report on the Paris experience, which was very fairly written and was not full of accusations, it simply reported what happened – ate the duck, got violently ill – is now gone.

        All that said, travel is as much about the food as anything else. Always find a safe way to experience that part of the culture you are visiting.

  4. Jodi, this is such a helpful practical post – thank you for going beyond simply saying “Eat where other people are!”

  5. I have always been warned about street food and used to completely stay away from it, but this post is extremely helpful! Thank you for the advice.

  6. Thank you Jodi! this is exactly the kind of resource I’ve been searching for!! I’m about to head to South East Asia and am keen om devouring plenty of street food options, but was nervous prior to reading your post! I now feel confident in making safe food choices! Thanks so much!!!! :)

  7. Great article with great advice. Only time I fell sick was because I ignored my own knowledge and ate an outdoor buffet in Luang Probang. Otherwise it’s been fine across 5 continents.

    1. Pretty sure I know EXACTLY the buffet of which you speak ;) I ended up going one street over for grilled pork with nowhere to sit but locals were stopping on their motorbikes to get some, so I figured it was safe. Friends were felled by that buffet street also so you’re not alone. Not that it’s a comfort but figured I would throw it out there. Safe travels to you sir!

  8. I thankfully have only had one bout of sickness on the road while in India (and it kicked in the second I touched down in Europe!). I consider it a side effect of enjoying as much as I could like a local, but will definitely keep these tricks in mind.

  9. Great tips, Jodi! I’ll definitely bear these in mind in the future.

    People are always amused when I tell them that I got food poisoning at a restaurant in Singapore (which I guess they deem as ‘safe’ when it comes to food hygiene) and yet ate my way through food stalls in India, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia without any trouble. I should have stuck to the street food ;-)

  10. Really good advice. Thanks for taking the time to publish this.
    Food intolerances and dietary destrictions make the world much harder to travel for some people

  11. This is such a helpful post, though I have eaten lots of street food in Southeast Asia I am a little apprehensive about my first trip to India this year. I will be sure to take your advice and hopefully avoid too many mishaps.

    1. Thanks Emma! I’d be sad if you missed out on the street food experience. In India, I ate mostly dosa masala, and cooked chickpea snacks (as you can see from the India post I linked to about food). I can’t eat pani puri because they are wheat-based but friends did warn against them as the liquid that fills them can sometimes be made from contaminated water. So when you test out your stomach ‘legs’ for India, perhaps don’t start there! Dosa FTW.

  12. Super-handy post, especially as I am going to South East Asia soon and I intend to eat street food for the most part. Incidentally, I got the worst cases of food poisoning in Mexico, and both times it was at a restaurant (a posh one!) and the food wasn’t cooked through. Once it was a stupid chicken caesar salad and the chicken was still a bit raw, and another it was tacos and the pork wasn’t cooked properly. I knew as I bit it and saw it that I’d be sick the day after. And as you say, not even the various gatorade etc helped. Good thing I always travel with health insurance!!

  13. This is such a useful post–definitely tucking it away for later. I’m especially keen to check out the book you’ve mentioned, which sounds amusing if nothing else!

  14. Wow! This post is really informative and helpful. I have a super sensitive stomach, so I generally get sick no matter what I eat, but maybe it will help to keep your tips in mind!

    1. I’m sorry to hear that! Have you taken probiotics as you travel? I find my stomach is far less tolerant when my gut bacteria is out of whack. I’ve started bringing probiotics with me now. I will add this to my resources page as I realize I did not!

  15. I am so happy that you wrote this! K & I love street food and feel like it really is the best way to get to know a place and its people. But we get a lot of questions and concerns from friends and family who are nervous about eating on the street. Forwarding this to all of them!

  16. In all our travels, we’ve only been felled twice, once by drinking unsafe water in Ecuador (our fault for not paying attention) and once from eating a salad at a tourist restaurant in Thailand. We’ve never gotten sick from street food, and we eat it all the time. It’s also a great place to pick up on what’s happening in the area and upcoming events and festivals.

    I’m so happy to have your list to pass on to friends who are nervous about trying street food in their travels. Thanks so much for putting it together, Jodi, and enjoy all that delicious food in Mexico!

  17. This is such an informative post Jodi. Very useful!
    I have a nut allegy and when we went to Thailand 2 years ago, I found it was safest for me when we went to the market and had street food ‘cos as you say, I can see what’s in the food and how they make it! Of course, I like nice restaurants too but you can’t imagine how many times I specified “no nuts” and I was given coconut flakes sprinkled over my food with a peanut sauce!

    I’ve been to India too and the place that I got the worst “Delhi-Belly” in my life was at breakfast in a 5-star resturant ‘cos the “fried eggs” were rotten. I’m dark-skinned and the Swiss girl I was travelling with said that I actually turned grey!
    I still can’t eat half-boiled or runny eggs lol!

  18. The tip that stands out to me the most is to look at who is standing in line when it comes to eating at street stalls. It’s nearly a given that it’s a-okay if both women and children are in the line. Thanks!

  19. Thanks for writing this all in consolidated form! My girlfriend and I spent 2014 overseas and ended up enjoying street food in large part because we read your blog & ‘How to Shit’. Blue stool meals in Taipei and morning markets in Laos are some of my favorite memories from the whole trip and they wouldn’t have happened without you.

    Only got sick twice, to boot. Once on a Greek ferry (not so many options) and once in Nepal when we broke the rules.

    1. Thank you so much for this kind comment. I’m honoured that you trusted my advice and glad that it served you well! I hope your bouts of sickness did not last long. The rare times I’ve gotten sick were also breaking the rules and in a way it’s a good thing for me, as I try to see it as a reminder not to be too complacent while moving around and eating ;) Safe travels!

  20. Jodi your advice overlaps with what Carl Franz developed traveling in Mexico in the 1970’s:

    http://www.amazon.com/Peoples-Guide-Mexico-Carl-Franz/dp/1598809601/

    I lived in Oaxaca for 2 months just before the troubles started and only got sick the two times I didn’t follow his instructions. His additions to your approach are:

    – avoid very greasy/fatty meals
    – use citrus juice, hot peppers, raw garlic, and other natural anti-biotics liberally on the surface of foods your aren’t sure about
    – take pepto-bismol before each meal

    The last step may be a hard sell or have negative effects if followed for months.

    Thanks for the delightful writing,
    Sam

    1. Thanks for the detailed note, Sam! In Vietnam, locals often wipe down their chopsticks with the lime wedge they’ve squeezed out into their soup, and I started doing the same. Not sure if it actually helps but it was part of the ritual of my meals by the time I left!

      I don’t think I can do the Pepto before each meal — it actually turns my tongue black (apparently this is a thing for some people!) but given how much of my life involves street eats I think I’d need to be on it full time, which isn’t feasible.

      Will take a look at Carl Franz’ book — appreciate the reco!

    1. Hi Cindy, I avoid it treats symptoms, not the actual cause of the travel sickness/food poisoning. I am not a doctor, so of course override me with your own doctor/ medical care, but I’d prefer to let it ride out unless I absolutely have to.

  21. Brilliant post-thank you! I have been hesitant to eat street food in some countries, but now I’m inspired to be more adventurous with my taste buds (and stomach). Currently dreaming of eating my way through Mexico City…

  22. Nice Post !
    Most of time street foods harm our health which is not good, but if we follow some steps before eating street food and eat after proper investigation it is better for health, so before eating please check it is fresh or not.
    Your information is too good and i hope it helps everyone, who read your article.

    Thanks :)

    Mary

  23. It’s such a good idea to carry baby wipes for chopsticks! I knew to avoid ice but there was quite a lot of advice that was new to me here like looking for children and women queuing

  24. I also learned the basics from Carl Franz years ago in his People’s Guide To Mexico books. The old adage is easy to remember, and it sums up what every traveler should remember:
    “Boil it, peel it, or forget it”

    1. A second vote for Carl Franz’ book — will definitely check it out! I definitely eat quite a bit of fresh herbs in Vietnam and elsewhere but I think we can all push the dial on our personal scales as we get used to a place and habits. For any new place, I agree with his advice wholeheartedly.

  25. While spending time in the Amazon I met two doctors from New Zealand who had been traveling around the world for several years. They told me the best way to stay healthy–other than doing what you have advised about being choosey with food–is to begin taking very heavy duty probiotics a month before travel, and start eating fermented foods like kimchi and kefir.

    While spending some time in Guatemala and escorting my daughter and her friends, one of the teen girls became seriously ill due to food poisoning. She could not stop vomiting and we missed the flight because she was taken in an ambulance to the local hospital. There, she was put on an intravenous IV for dehydration, but more importantly, she was started immediately on a course of Florastor (available all over the world!) , which is the Saccharomyces boulardii lyo probiotic. This particular probiotic somehow restores gut flora and decreases harmful bacteria in the gut. There are some scientific studies done among African children that demonstrate high effectiveness.

    1. Hi Kimmie, Thank you for a great comment. Today I went to a health food store in Oaxaca and they make their own Kefir with that probiotic in it, but I hadn’t heard of the name before and fortuitously your comment came in as I came home! I have definitely found a difference when taking probiotics, but as I am not a doctor I did not want to simply advise people to do the same. Appreciate your added input to the post. Safe travels to you!

  26. I was in Chiang Mai for Thai new year (Songkran). I was watching a parade, and it was insanely hot and a kindly man offered me a drink of what looked to be water. (Yeah, I know, my mom told me not to take food from strangers). So I drank like half of the glass before realizing it was moonshine or something more dire. He laughed and I laughed. End of story? No. About half an hour later, on my way to my hostel, I realized there was a fierce battle going on in my belly. I was miserable (no details needed) for the next 24 hours, but I lost 10 pounds. I should go back and thank the man.

    I was also in Mongolia in 1995 before the food got better. I was so bored with the boiled meat that I lost 10 pounds (do we see a pattern here?) So I’m at a street market, and I see eclairs (unrefrigerated! sitting out in the sun!) for sale, and I ate one. Big, big mistake.

    These are great suggestions. I would also encourage bananas if someone is dumb enough to replicate my mistakes. Also, plenty of water. You really can get dangerously dehydrated in these situations. Plus, additional salt, even if you’re not a salt lover like I am.

    But the bottom line? Don’t worry so much about getting sick. It happens sometimes, and it’s not fun, but life is too short to be hyper-vigilant.

    1. Jim, if I could frame your comment I would. Thanks for the well told stories and the advice. Agree with bananas, though it seems like we’re in a banana crisis also (bye bye Cavendish bananas) so hopefully they find a replacement before this fungus takes hold. Thank you for reading!

      1. I’m in Nicaragua right now (suffering from food poisoning- from a restaurant, not street food which I agree, I trust more as I can see it being cooked!!) And we’ve got a whole lot of bananas here. I’ve seen them growing all over. Come get some! :)

    2. My brother (an executive chef) ate an eclair in a Paul’s restaurant in a busy, fancy mall in Dubai. Sick as a dog after. It happens everywhere sadly and even to professionals:)

  27. Some excellent advice for travelers Jodi!

    So far, knock on wood, I’ve been very lucky in my travels and do enjoy street food as well. We recently returned from Vietnam with no stomach issues at all. Using common sense and taking a few extra precautions along the way, certainly does make a difference. As you mentioned, staying away from questionable water and ice cubes, making sure your food is well cooked and so on.

    You always run the risk of catching something undesirable when traveling abroad, but you can certainly reduce the risk as you mentioned as well.

    1. Yes I think that’s as accurate as it gets: there’s a risk, but if you’re mindful of the factors that lead to food illnesses generally, hopefully you can avoid it for the most part. It would be unrealistic to hope for no sickness as all but with it kept to a minimum I think well worth the efforts! I have actually gotten more sick from food in N America than in my years of travel. My friends thought it was funny that I’d come home and get food poisoning but be fine in Thailand or Vietnam :-)

  28. In the event that you do get food poisoning or other digestive distress, I discovered Carbotural when I was in Mexico. It is basically a compressed carbon tablet that you swallow. Carbon absorbs all kinds of bad stuff, helps neutralize acid, and calms your whole digestive system down. I am not sure if it is available in other countries or not, but these days I never travel without it.

    1. Thanks Ian! I don’t travel with charcoal as it’s readily available anywhere I’ve been but agree that it’s a great tool when you start to feel queasy. I’ve consistently found it in pharmacies around the world in one form or another (powder or pills) so if you run out in a pinch you should be fine.

  29. Jodi….found your post via “View From the Wing”. Great suggestions!

    My story: I’ve been traveling to all parts of Asia…from India eastward to Japan; Mongolia, south to Borneo since 1993 (plus Europe and S. America). Trips are usually several times a year, for up to four/six weeks at a time. I’ve only gotten sick twice in all that time. Once was at a 5-star rated hotel in Jaipur eating pasta with tomato sauce (veg, go figure) and at a busy Chinese restaurant in Bangkok….it was a soup that did me in.

    From my various readings, you are correct to delay the Imodium as you want all the bad bacteria to leave your system as quickly as possible. Pepto is recommended as it helps to coat the digestive track so the bacteria “sticks” less. Imodium is for those times when one has to travel and facilities are problematic.

    Glad you fell into the joy of discovering food. Wish my hubby would do the same but alas, that is one “trick” he will never learn.

    1. Thank you for sharing your stories! I am one of those strange people whose tongue turns black when I have Pepto in tablet or liquid form. First time it happened it freaked me out but I’ve tried to avoid it since if I can. Charcoal instead; might as well just start with the black chalk instead of waking up to it from Pepto! Hopefully you find food friends who want to share in the joys of street eats with you, and perhaps they can even convince your husband :)

  30. Wow, thank you for this super in depth article! I love street food because I think it’s always your most delicious option when traveling (not to mention quick and cheap!), but you’ve reminded me of some things I should look out for to keep healthy! Thanks…and btw I also couldn’t get enough of the food in Oaxaca, just wow!

  31. Great tips so now I can feel free to eat street food and not to be afraid of getting sick. Thank you for the tip, very helpful specially for travelers who maybe interested in going to destinations where street food is very common. Thanks

  32. I thought this was excellent. Many clever ideas here that I hadn’t considered (including the transparent kitchen section). My stomach is thanking you in advance!

  33. I love street food! And it’s true that restaurants aren’t always safer and cleaner. People who’ve worked in one can attest to that. Open kitchen and transparency is key.

  34. Ugh. Make sure you have travel insurance if you take the street food route CSA travel protection helped us with meds in Thailand.

  35. Hi Jodi, Thanks for the great post and for the tips! We bought your food travelers handbook and have been following your advice successfully on our food quest. We got “lightly” sick once in Cusco possibly due to cutlery (as you point it out in your post) or salad not having been washed properly. But we recovered and we continue to enjoy street food. Actually to recover from the food poisoning we found great natural medicine in the streets of Peru called Emoliente. We wrote about it here: http://authenticfoodquest.com/cusco-market-and-its-natural-medicine/
    Do you know any equivalent to Emoliente in Asia or elsewhere?
    Thanks!

    1. Hi Claire! I don’t know of an equivalent drink with the same herbs, but something that has really helped me is oregano tincture, which is anti bacterial and I use it when my stomach is upset or I’m feeling run down. I put it in drinking water a few times a day. It’s been great! Perhaps that’s something you can look into? For India, you can buy herbal Pudin Hara tablets to take before meals also — great for digestion. See my “Celiac’s Guide to Northern India” for more about them.

  36. Good article, good tips. I’ll look for stalls with women and children in line! One hygiene problem that always stops us from buying street food is a basin of dirty dishes and no visible source of fresh water. How can they serve their food on clean plates? A pile of styrofoam or cardboard plates or bowls is encouraging, but we don’t always see it.

    1. Hi Brooke, thank you for the comment. In my experience, there is usually a giant plate of stacked clean plates as well as a jug of clean water that they use to clean on the fly. But often the big stack of dirty plates are lugged away and washed with clean water. I agree if I saw someone simply wiping down dirty plates and re-serving them, I would skip that stall! This evening in Oaxaca, for example, I got quesadillas and a woman was serving while another cleaned plates with a big vat of distilled water (in the blue see-through jugs).

  37. What an amazing resource!! I will be keeping it close at hand. We are headed to Peru later this year with the kids. I’ve read typhoid is a concern. What is your opinion on vaccinations?

    1. Please see my travel resources page for the list of vaccinations I obtained before my travels. I did get typhoid, Hep A/B, and quite a few others but did not get rabies vaccine. I think they are important given the risk profiles of diseases elsewhere.

  38. Hi,
    Nice article. You write
    >If you get food poisoning or a stomach illness, then a visit to a local doctor might be in order.
    I did this. They gave me a strong anti-biotic and I suffered with IBS for five years. This could have been avoided (maybe?) if I’d been more careful with my diet immediately after taking the anti-biotic. Any chance you could warn your readers?

    1. Hi Oliver,

      I’m sorry you had such a bad experience. I will add a note that any medication given should be researched/googled or checked with a doctor at home if possible, but I do think it is important to see a local doctor because they can perform the diagnostic tests needed for a particular country or destination.

      I hope your stomach is better now!
      -jodi

  39. You have a few really good tips there Jodi. I read your story with a smile… I’ve claimed to be a vegetarian before just to avoid suspicious looking meat :)
    I know how horrible it is to travel and get sick (India, couldn’t move more that a couple meters from my bathroom for almost a week) so being careful but still trying some of the delicious food different countries have to offer is the way to go!

  40. Thanks, Jodi, for writing this article with true insight for those that are new and that have been there already, not simply more advice to “eat where the locals eat”. I’m going to share this, if you don’t mind.

    I might’ve further highlighted the “take it slow” approach. My first time in Mexico City I had some growing pains adjusting to the food, but since then I’ve branched into eating pretty much anything, from tacos with raw cilantro and onions, to smoothies, to tostadas with lettuce on top.

    In the vein of “taking it slow”, I’ve found that avoiding habanero and other really hot peppers keeps my stomach in shape, though often I can’t help myself.

  41. I have eaten street food liberally around the world and have yet to get seriously sick. The one time I did get sick that sticks out in my memory was when I ate a Beef Dip Sandwich at Boston Pizza for lunch, and broke out in a cold sweat and the shakes a mere six hours later. Funny how the developing world wins on this count!

    1. You’re definitely not the only one who had worse experiences in North America with food poisoning! Thanks for sharing your anecdote and here’s to many more delicious street meals in your future!

  42. What a solid guide! I have to admit I’m a little fearless when it comes to street food. I stick with a single rule, and that’s if a lot of people are in line, it has to be safe and good. I thank the girl at Sprouts (a farmer’s market in the US) that gave me a supplement just before I moved to China five years ago. I’ve had an iron stomach ever since! If I ever remember the name of the supplement I’ll come back and share. Aloe vera juice is supposed to work really well also!

  43. I love this Post, excellent advice on various foods around the world. I definitely agree about the iced shakes. Thanks for the info and I will be referring back to this on travels :D

  44. Wow! This is an incredibly helpful article. I have been working my way through Southeast Asia eating all the street food I can get my hands on, but I’m still learning as I go along. I’m headed to New Delhi next and I know I won’t be able to resist all that delicious street food…so thank you for you advice about opting for veggies instead of meat when you’re uncertain. ;-) In Saigon, I actually experienced a serious case of food poisoning from eating a salad at a french restaurant. Yet, I never had an issues from eating food at street stalls (and I ate a lot of crazy stuff). Thanks again for sharing your knowledge and travel antidotes!

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