Latest news with #GreekPastaSalad
Yahoo
02-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Product recalls you may have missed: Beef stew, deli salads, kitchen faucets, more
A number of consumer products were recalled last week due to potential safety issues. These recalls span a range of concerns including undeclared allergens, lead poisioning and and choking hazards. It's important for consumers to be aware of these recalls and take appropriate action. Please review the following notices for details on affected products and recommended steps. Hormel Foods Corporation is recalling more than 250,000 pounds of food that may contain pieces of wood, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) notice. The recall, shared by FSIS on May 28, includes 20-ounce metal cans of "Dinty Moore Beef Stew" shipped to retail locations nationwide. The cans, which have "best buy" dates of Feb 2028, lot code 02045, and establishment number EST 199G, may contain fragments of "foreign material," specifically wood. The 17,080 cases of recalled canned beef stew were produced on February 4, 2025, according to FSIS and Hormel Foods. — Mary Walrath-Holdridge, USA Today Isabelle's Kitchen, Inc. is recalling 946 cases of refrigerated deli salads due to potential Salmonella contamination from fresh cucumbers. Salmonella can cause serious infections, especially in vulnerable individuals, leading to symptoms like fever, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. These recalled salads were sold to foodservice distributors and local supermarkets in New Hampshire, Florida, Maryland, South Carolina, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Virginia. ▶ Salads, salsas recalled due to Salmonella; Linked to cucumber recall Products are packed in white plastic containers within white or brown boxes, sold under the brands 'Isabelle's Kitchen,' 'Maple Avenue Foods,' or 'Kings.' Identify them by the Item Number (top right of label) and Julian code date (right side of "Use-By" sticker). Item #4605 Kings Kings Greek Pasta Salad Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: June 1, 2025 Item #5002B IKI Greek Pasta Salad Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: June 1, 2025 Item #5002B IKI Greek Pasta Salad Mfg date Julian code 135 Use by: June 2, 2025 Item #5007B MAF Mediterranean Pasta Salad Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: May 30, 2025 Item #5007B MAF Mediterranean Pasta Salad Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: May 31, 2025 Item #8015B MAF Crunchy Wheatberry Salad Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: June 1, 2025 Item #8031 MAF Quinoa Tabouli Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: May 30, 2025 Item #8031 MAF Quinoa Tabouli Mfg date Julian code 135 Use by: May 31, 2025 Item #8103KT Powerhouse Wheatberry Salad Kit Mfg date Julian code 134 Use by: May 27, 2025 Item #8103KT Powerhouse Wheatberry Salad Kit Mfg date Julian code 135 Use by: May 28, 2025 Item #8103KT Powerhouse Wheatberry Salad Kit Mfg date Julian code 136 Use by: May 29, 2025 The Step2 Company is recalling approximately 30,800 My First Snowman toys (plus 692 sold in Canada) due to a choking hazard. The snowman's top hat can break into small pieces, posing a risk of serious injury or death to young children. Immediately stop using the toy snowman and remove the top hat, keeping it away from children. Contact The Step2 Company for instructions on how to dispose of the hat and to receive a free replacement. The Step2 Company is directly notifying all known purchasers. For more information, visit their website at email step2-company@ or call 800-347-8372. Approximately 29,000 VFAUOSIT brand kitchen faucets, sold on by Whisper08, are being recalled due to a dangerous lead exposure hazard, particularly to infants and young children. Testing revealed these faucets can leach lead and other contaminants into water at harmful levels. Lead ingestion can cause serious neurological effects in young children, including behavioral problems, decreased cognitive performance, and lower IQ. Immediately stop using these faucets. Contact Whisper08 for disposal instructions and a refund; you'll need to provide a photograph of disposal and your order number. Whisper08 is directly contacting all known purchasers. Until faucets can be replaced, consumers should run the water for 15 seconds before consumption. For more information, email customerservice@ Approximately 50,000 KICIMPRO brand kitchen faucets, sold on by Kicimpro, are being recalled due to a dangerous lead exposure hazard, particularly to infants and young children. Testing revealed these faucets can leach lead into water at harmful levels. Lead ingestion can cause serious neurological effects in young children, including behavioral problems, decreased cognitive performance, and lower IQ. Immediately stop using these faucets. Contact Kicimpro for disposal instructions and a refund; you'll need to provide a photograph of disposal and your order number. Kicimpro is directly contacting all known purchasers. Until faucets can be replaced, consumers should run the water for 15 seconds before consumption. For more information, email support@ Approximately 24,000 BASDEHEN brand kitchen faucets, sold on by Chenfeng Store, are being recalled due to a dangerous lead exposure hazard, particularly to infants and young children. Testing revealed these faucets can leach lead and other contaminants into water at harmful levels. Lead ingestion can cause serious neurological effects in young children, including behavioral problems, decreased cognitive performance, and lower IQ. Immediately stop using these faucets. Contact Chenfeng Store for disposal instructions and a refund; you'll need to provide a photograph of disposal. Amazon is directly contacting all known purchasers. Until faucets can be replaced, consumers should run the water for 15 seconds before consumption. For more information, email ChenfengStoreF@ Approximately 94,800 WeHwupe Adult Portable Bed Rails, sold on and by WeHwupe Store, are being recalled due to a risk of serious injury or death from entrapment and asphyxiation hazards. These bed rails violate federal regulations for adult portable bed rails and lack required hazard warning labels. Users can become entrapped within the bed rail or between the bed rail and the mattress. Immediately stop using the recalled bed rails. Contact WeHwupe Store to obtain a free replacement and follow these disposal steps: Remove the upper rail, connecting rails, bottom rail, and legs (if present). Write "RECALLED" on the upper and bottom rails with a permanent marker. Using scissors, cut the black fabric mesh bag off the upper rail and cut the black safety strap in half (if present). Write the buyer's name on a piece of paper next to the disassembled product. Take a photo and upload it online at Dispose of the recalled product in accordance with local requirements. If you have difficulty with any disposal step or need additional instruction, contact WeHwupe Store. WeHwupe Store is also contacting all known purchasers directly. For more information, visit email wehwupestore@ or call 888-438-3220. This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: Recalls issued for kitchen faucets sold on Amazon, Dinty Moore stew


Miami Herald
29-05-2025
- Health
- Miami Herald
Florida farm's cucumber recalls hit Walmart, Publix, others over salmonella
Ripple recalls from yet another salmonella outbreak traced to a Florida grower's cucumbers are washing over Kroger, Walmart, BJ's Wholesale Club, Weis Markets, Tops and various brands. Delray Beach's Bedner Growers did the cucumber growing, Delray's Fresh Start Produce did the cucumber distributing and, now, multiple companies are doing the recalling after an outbreak that the FDA and CDC say has reached 15 states. READ MORE: Palm Beach grower linked again to cucumber salmonella outbreak in several states The Publix-related recalls ▪ Whole cucumbers, sold May 14-20. ▪ Whole cucumbers with Tajin, sold May 17-23. ▪ Watermelon Onion Feta, sold May 17-23. ▪ Watermelon Feta Berry, sold May 17-23. ▪ Spinach Salad, regular and large, sold May 17-23. ▪ Garden Salad, regular and large, sold May 17-23. Though Bedner Growers and Fresh Start Produce are based in Publix's home state of Florida, this involves Publix stores only in North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. READ MORE: 204,900 cans of beef stew recalled after customers unexpectedly got wood The Kroger-related recalls On Monday, Supreme Service Solutions recalled 16 of its Supreme Produce brand products sold in grab-and-go plastic containers at Kroger stores and Kroger-owned stores ( Ralphs, Harris Teeter, Dillons, King Soopers, Fred Meyer) from May 8 through May 21. For a full list of salads, trays and bowls, check out Supreme's FDA-posted recall notice. These went to stores in Missouri, Kentucky, Mississippi, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee, Arkansas and Michigan. Whole cucumbers, Deli Spring Mix Salad Trays, Deli Fresh Vegetable Trays, BRHD Hummus Vegetable Platters, small and medium, got recalled last week from Kroger and Kroger-related stores in Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas and Western Kentucky. MORE: Silence on an E. Coli outbreak shows how changes under Trump affect food safety The Deli salad recalls Pennsylvania-based Isabelle's Kitchen recalled 946 cases of deli salads with Bedner cucumbers, salads that went to Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Virginia. ▪ Kings: Greek Pasta Salad, Julian code 134, use by June 1. ▪ Isabelle's Kitchen Inc: Greek Pasta Salad, Julian code 134, use by June 1; Julian code 135, use by June 2. ▪ Maple Avenue Foods: Mediterranean Pasta Salad, Julian code 134, use by May 30; Julian code 134, use by May 31; Cruncy Wheatberry Salad, Julian code 134, use by June 1; Quinoa Tabouli, Julian code 134, use by May 30; Julian code 135, use by May 31; and Powerhouse Wheatberry Salad Kit, Julian code 134, use by May 27; Julian code 135, use by May 28; Julian code 136, use by May 29. Direct questions about this recall to Isabelle's at 800-355-7252 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Eastern time. The Walmart-related recalls Whole cucumbers sold from April 29 through May 14 in Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Missouri, Kentucky, Georgia, Texas, Pennsylvania, Mississippi, Illinois, Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and Puerto Rico Marketside Fresh Cut Cucumber slices in 1.5-pound containers, all date codes up to May 24, went to certain Texas stores from May 13 through May 20. If you're not sure whether or not you bought what's been recalled, contact Walmart either through its online customer help or 800-925- 6278. Other brands or chain-linked products recalled The Coastal Companies made the below products, which were distributed by Maryland's East Coast Fresh and Hearn Kirkwood from May 6 through May 21 in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington, D.C. All lot numbers of each product have been recalled. Tops: 1-pound containers of hot and mild salsa sold under the store brand for the New York, Pennsylvania and Vermont chain. Wellsley Farms: Mild salsa sold under BJ's Warehouse Club's house brand. Weis Markets: Mild salsa sold under Weis' store brand. Giant: Salsa and Salsa Hot sold under the chain's store brand. East Cost Fresh: 1-pound container of salsa. Jack and Olive: 8-ounce containers of The House Salad Spring and Sprout: 8-ounce containers of The House Salad Created Fresh: The House Salad, Mini Garden Salad, Chicken Salad on Everything Ficelle, Tuna Salad on Everything Ficelle and Southwestern Breakfast Bowls. Questions about these recalls can be sent to ECFCCustomers@ or call 410-133-8000. What is salmonella? Salmonella is one of the most common foodborne diseases, infecting about 1.35 million people in the United States each year, according to the CDC. About 26,000 of those people get hospitalized and 420 die. Salmonella outbreak sickness counts tend to be inaccurate on the low side because the vast majority of people recover without hospitalization. Usually, salmonella means four to seven days of diarrhea, fever and stomachaches, starting anywhere from six hours to six days after eating something with salmonella.