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Recall alert: Frozen fish balls recalled nationwide including in Mass.

Recall alert: Frozen fish balls recalled nationwide including in Mass.

Yahoo21 hours ago

Thousands of pounds of frozen fish ball products were recalled Thursday, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).
Starway International Group LLC of Maspeth, New York, is recalling around 9,513 pounds of frozen Siluriformes fish ball products imported from Vietnam. This is because the products were not produced by a Vietnamese establishment authorized to export Siluriformes fish to the U.S. and do not have a United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) inspection mark or establishment number.
Starway International Group's 2 kilogram plastic bag packages containing 'Cá Viên Trắng Fried Fish Balls' with item number '81142102' printed on the label.
Starway International Group's 16 ounce plastic bag packages containing 'Cá Viên Trắng White Fish Balls' with item number '81142103' printed on the label.
Starway International Group's 16 ounce plastic bag packages containing 'Cá Viên Trắng Fried Fish Balls' with item number '81142101' printed on the label.
Starway International Group's 2 kilogram plastic bag packages containing 'Cá Viên Trắng Fried Fish Balls' with item number '81142100' printed on the label.
The company is recalling its 16-ounce plastic bags labeled 'Cá Viên Trang White Fish Balls' with item number 81142103, 2-kilogram plastic bags labeled 'Cá Viên Trang White Fish Balls' with item number 81142102, 16-ounce plastic bags labeled 'Cá Viên Chiên Fried Fish Balls' with item number 81142101 and its 2-kilogram plastic bags labeled 'Cá Viên Chiên Fried Fish Balls' with item number 81142100.
No confirmed reports of adverse health effects from eating the fish balls have been made, FSIS added. However, the agency urges consumers who have purchased the products not to eat them and to throw away the food or return it to the place of purchase. Retailers are advised to remove these products from sale 'immediately.'
Read the original article on MassLive.

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