
Chomps beef and turkey sticks recalled after metal found in products
Chomps is
recalling
beef and turkey sticks produced by Idaho Smokehouse Partners because they may contain metal fragments, the maker of the protein snacks and the USDA said on Thursday.
According to an
announcement
from the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), the recall involves nearly 30,000 pounds of Chomps-branded ready-to-eat meat sticks shipped to stores in California and Illinois.
The problem was discovered after two people reported finding metal fragments in the beef sticks, with no confirmed reports of injury due to consumption of the protein snacks, both Chomps and FSIS said.
The recall affects specific lots of 1.15-ounce Original Beef, sold in 12-count pouches, 8-count pouches and single sticks; and 1.15-ounce Original Turkey Stick singles packaged at one facility between Jan. 16, 2025 and Jan. 23, 2025, Chomps
stated
. Check products on the company's site
here
.
The recalled meat items were produced from January 13 to January 15, 2025 and have the establishment number (EST)"6220A" printed on the package, according to FSIS.
Affected 1.15-ounce vacuum-sealed packages of "Chomps Original Beef Stick Mild" have an expiration date of Feb. 10, 2026, and lot code 25016 printed on the outside label at the bottom off the stick.
FSIS is urging consumers to check their pantries for affected products which, if found, should be tossed in the garbage or returned to the place of purchase.
Consumers with questions about the recall can contact Chomps at 855-636-1150 or Idaho Smokehouse Partners at 208-227-5282.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Measles resurgence highlights the toll of RFK Jr.'s anti-vaccine policies
After the U.S. surpassed 1,000 reported measles cases nationwide, it's clear the Trump administration is failing to protect our health and well-being. The measles outbreak in Texas is now the largest since 2000, when the country eliminated measles. And it's not yet over, threatening to make measles endemic in America again, where the risk of infection comes from within our country. Furthermore, two unvaccinated school-aged children in Texas died from measles, the first American children to die from the viral infection since 2003. Normally, a preventable infection causing avoidable deaths of children would lead to prompt government action. In 1991, I was a medical student with the U.S. Public Health Service in Philadelphia during a large measles outbreak. Over 1,000 people were infected, and nine children died. Government and public health leaders required home visits of infected children, mass immunization, education efforts and even court-mandated vaccinations. The outbreak was stopped. In Dec. 2014, a measles outbreak began at Disneyland and spread in communities with low vaccination rates. Public health action stopped this large outbreak at 125 cases. To prevent further outbreaks in California, I authored Senate Bill 277, which eliminated non-medical exemptions for school vaccines. And with further U.S. measles outbreaks in 2019, I authored Senate Bill 276 to crack down on fraudulent medical exemptions. These laws — championed by California parents demanding safe schools for children — raised statewide vaccination rates and shielded our communities. As Congress waits, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is dismantling decades of public health achievement that will make America sicker. Kennedy reduced vaccine outreach, removed key public health officials, spread disinformation from his official post and suppressed data while elevating conspiracy theorists to top positions. Kennedy and the Department of Government Efficiency fired a quarter of Health and Human Services staff, gutting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and National Institutes of Health teams vital to outbreak response. He installed anti-vaccine extremists as advisors, including David Grier, a discredited researcher disciplined for unethical experiments on children with autism, to 'research' if vaccines cause autism, despite decades of research debunking this myth. The CDC has been muzzled: An analysis showing high rates of measles in low vaccination areas was suppressed, and dozens of Texas vaccination clinics were forced to close. When Kennedy dismantled the CDC's communication team, his former anti-vaccine organization, Children's Health Defense, filled the void with disinformation by publishing a fake CDC-branded vaccine 'safety' website that falsely linked vaccines to autism. The site mimicked official CDC design and branding, deliberately misleading the public. After news reports exposed the deception and forced the site's removal, no federal action has been taken to investigate or prosecute this unlawful impersonation of a federal agency. Furthermore, Dr. Peter Marks, the nation's top vaccine regulator who led President Donald Trump's Operation Warp Speed, refused a demand for false data on brain swelling and death caused by the Measles-Mumps-Rubella vaccine, of which there are no credible cases. Kennedy forced him to resign. In his resignation letter, Marks wrote, 'it has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies.' And what of the dead children from measles? Kennedy dismissed the first measles death, saying 'it's not unusual.' He blamed measles on poor nutrition, called vaccines a 'personal choice' that could cause 'adverse events' and claimed Vitamin A and cod liver oil treated measles. Subsequently, many Texas children hospitalized with measles also had Vitamin A toxicity. At his first Congressional hearing, Kennedy testified, 'I don't think people should be taking medical advice from me.' He then refused to answer whether he would vaccinate a child against polio. As Health and Human Services secretary, he cravenly refuses to save Americans in a public health crisis. How many children must get sick — and even die — before Congress demands that Kennedy and the Trump administration answer for these preventable deaths and the continued spread of a preventable disease? This flu season, as flu vaccination declined, 226 children died from influenza — the highest since the 2009-10 pandemic. Other preventable and deadly diseases, including polio and whooping cough, will also return when vaccination is hampered and discouraged. Our state has made progress in raising vaccination rates, but we are not immune to Kennedy's dangerous vaccine disinformation; California has communities with enough unvaccinated people to fuel a serious outbreak. Measles outbreaks in other states makes it imperative that California strengthen our public health defenses against sparks of infection. And California needs Congress to hold President Donald Trump and Kennedy accountable for not stopping preventable disease in America. Dr. Richard Pan is a pediatrician and former California state senator who authored landmark legislation to eliminate non-medical exemptions to school vaccination requirements in response to major measles outbreaks.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Cucumber recalls expand again amid salmonella outbreak: See list
Even more grocery stores and food retailers have recalled cucumbers and cucumber products linked to a salmonella outbreak across 15 states that has sickened 26 people and hospitalized nine. Cucumbers grown by Florida-based Bedner Growers and distributed by Fresh Start Produce Sales were linked to the outbreak and voluntarily recalled in an initial notice shared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on May 19. This first recall concerned produce sold directly to consumers at Bednar's Farm Fresh Market. Additional recalls have since been initiated by companies that use Bedner Growers cucumbers in their products, or that repackage the cucumbers for resale under different brand names. Some of these are sold at stores like Harris Teeter, Walmart and Kroger, which have since issued their own warnings about impacted salads, veggie plates, sushi, prepared foods and more. Here is the full list of recalled cucumbers, so far. Florida-based PennRose Farms recalled 1,152 cases of cucumbers supplied to them from Fresh Start Produce Sales in a notice on May 21. The cucumbers were repackaged in five-pound mesh bags between May 2 and May 5, with Restaurant Depot and PennRose Farms logos, UPC code 841214101714, and lot numbers (48-122, 48-123, 48-124, 48-125). They were sent to Restaurant Depot distribution centers in New Jersey, Georgia, Florida, Illinois and Ohio. Grocery store chain issued its own recall for the cucumbers themselves and vegetable trays that contain them. Cucumbers with UPC 2040620000, large vegetable trays with UPC 7203689327 and small vegetable trays with UPC 7203689328 are included in the recall. Some products sold at Kroger are also affected, specifically Yummi Sush-branded products, which were recalled with the help of Supreme Service Solutions LLC on May 20. A full list of the about 50 products being recalled, all of which are sushi rolls or platters with veggies, is available on the FDA website. , issued a related recall of cucumber salad products sold at stores including Food Lion Stores in Virginia and North Carolina; Harris Teeter in Williamsburg, Virginia; Kroger stores in Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky; Libbie Market in Richmond, Virginia; and Ukrop's Market Hall in Richmond, Virginia. The recalled products include 16-ounce, 32-ounce and bulk 5-pound packages of marinated cucumber salad with sell-by dates of May 11 through May 26. recalled Marketside cucumber slices produced in select stores in Texas between May 13 and May 20. The recall includes Marketside Fresh Cut Cucumber Slices with UPC 62969 and all date codes up to May 24, 2025. Also included in the recall are Authentic Greek Salad, Readymeals Greek Salad and Greek Salad, with various sell-thru dates from around May 20 to May 24 sold at Albertsons-owned stores(Acme, Balducci's Food Lovers Market, Kings Food Markets, Safeway, Shaw's and Star Market) in Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington, D.C. More details on impacted states, UPC and sell-through dates can be found here. recalled loose cucumbers sold between May 14 and May 20, and Watermelon Onion Feta, Spinach Salads and Garden Salads sold between May 17 and May 23, sold at stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. recalled any made-to-order small sub, large sub, 30' Super Sub, wrap or panini purchased on May 20 or May 21 and sold at 30 locations in Connecticut and Massachusetts. A list of impacted stores can be found here. JFE Franchising, Inc. recalled veggie trays, salads and produce bowls containing fresh-cut cucumber items, as well as sushi products. Recalled products were sold under brand names Snowfruit or Snowfox at Kroger, Roundy's (Pick n Save and Metro Market) and Weis Market retail locations in Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois, Michigan, Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Wisconsin, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and New York. A full list of impacted products can be found on the FDA website. The Coastal Companies recalled 17 salsa, salad and prepared food products distributed between May 6, 2025, and May 21, 2025, to customers in Washington D.C., Ohio, Virginia, Michigan, West Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Vermont and North Carolina. The products were sold under brand names East Coast Fresh, TOPS, Wellsley Farms, WEIS, AHOLD, Jack and Olive, Created Fresh and Spring and Sprout. A full list can be found here. recalled vegetable trays, packs and salads sold at Kroger and its affiliated retail stores in Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Missouri, Arkansas and Michigan between the dates of May 8 to May 21. A full list can be found here. As of May 23, the salmonella outbreak linked to cucumbers has sickened 26 people in the following 15 states: Alabama California Colorado Florida Illinois Kansas Kentucky Michigan North Carolina New York Ohio Pennsylvania South Carolina Tennessee Virginia The FDA advises anyone with cucumbers at home to throw them if they're unsure where they're from. Businesses are advised not to sell the produce and to notify customers who may have consumed it before the recall. Those who purchased recalled products from any of the above-listed grocery stores like Walmart, Kroger and Harris Teeter can bring them back to the store of sale for a refund. Additionally, the FDA recommends that consumers and businesses wash and sanitize surfaces and items that may have touched cucumbers. At home, wash surfaces using hot and soapy water or a dishwasher. According to the FDA, illness usually occurs within 12 to 72 hours after eating food that is contaminated with Salmonella, and the symptoms usually last four to seven days. Symptoms include diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps. Children younger than 5, the elderly, and people with weakened immune systems are more likely to have severe infections, the FDA says. Contact your healthcare provider immediately if you think you may have symptoms of a salmonella infection. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: More cucumbers recalled in salmonella outbreak. See full list.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
A Nationwide Recall Affecting Thousands of Pounds of Beef Tallow Was Just Issued—Here's What to Know
A Nationwide Recall Affecting Thousands of Pounds of Beef Tallow Was Just Issued—Here's What to Know originally appeared on Parade. Beef tallow becoming the hottest food trend was not on my 2025 bingo card, but here we are. Everywhere you look these days, the byproduct of cooked cow's kidney and loin meat is being touted as a miracle fat worthy of both frying the best French fries you've ever had and slathering on your face as part of a game-changing skincare routine. Restaurants are switching to using it in favor of seed oils, and there are even protein bars chock-full of the stuff, but how did we get here? Can it really hydrate your skin better than Tatcha's The Dewy Skin Cream, and is it really better than using seed oils? 😋😋SIGN UP to get delicious recipes, handy kitchen hacks & more in our daily Pop Kitchen newsletter🍳🍔 The jury's still out on both of those claims, but that hasn't stopped influencers and government officials alike from singing its praises as the equivalent of this century's gold rush. Never mind the fact that beef tallow was heavily abandoned during the early 90s due to its high concentration of saturated fat, or the fact that there is no real scientific evidence that suggests that beef tallow has any actual benefits for your skin. Sure, everything is fine in moderation, and you can bet it'll make for some finger-licking good fries, but it probably won't cure your hyperpigmentation, will, however, make you smell like a burger, and if that sounds like a plus, by all means, you do you. Of course, you might second-guess reaching for that giant tub of beef fat when you see that the FDA has issued a nationwide recall on beef tallow and pork lard products due to claims that products distributed across the country were not inspected by the USDA. Sulu Organics, LLC., a distributor in Illinois, issued a recall on 6,166 pounds of its products after several consumer complaints were made to FSIS claiming that the products did not bear the USDA inspection mark. Upon further investigation, FSIS determined that the distributor purchased the products from a regulated facility and repackaged the products into smaller containers that were relabeled without FSIS inspections. Although there have been no reports of illness or adverse reactions, consumers are urged to discard any affected products or return them to the point of purchase for a full refund. You can find the complete list of items affected by the recall here. We think we'll just stick to olive oil.A Nationwide Recall Affecting Thousands of Pounds of Beef Tallow Was Just Issued—Here's What to Know first appeared on Parade on Jun 6, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.