Recalls and Alerts: February 20, 2012

Here is today’s list of food safety recalls, product withdrawals, allergy alerts and miscellaneous compliance issues. The live links will take you directly to the official recall notices and company news releases that contain detailed information for each recall and alert.

If you would like to receive automatic email alerts for all new articles posted on eFoodAlert, please submit your request using the sidebar link.

United States

  • Food Safety Recall: Schnuck Markets Inc. (Bloomington, IL) recalls selected varieties of beef cuts sold between noon and 5:30pm on Saturday, February 18th at its Bloomington, IL store located at 1701 East Empire Street, after metal shavings were discovered on the saw at the store. The recall includes Sirloin steak, Rib Eye steak, Round steak, Chuck roast and Chuck steaks.
  • Food Safety Recall: Lemon-X Corporation (Huntington Station, NY) recalls Thirster Brand Iced Tea bag-in-the box concentrates (all current dates), due to a slight change in the final pH of the product that shortened the product’s overall shelf life. The recall includes the following four products, which were distributed to foodservice outlets across the U.S. since the summer of 2011: TEA BASE, ICED 11:1 BAG-IN-BOX CAFFEINATED SHELF STABLE; TEA BASE, ICED SWEETENED 11:1 BAG-IN-BOX CAFFEINATED SHELF STABLE; TEA BASE, ICED UNSWEETENED 5:1 BAG-IN-BOX CAFFEINATED SHELF STABLE; and TEA BASE, ICED CHARLESTON UNSWEETENED 5:1 BAG-IN-BOX CAFFEINATED SHELF STABLE.

Canada

  • Allergy Alert: Délices Érabeille (Mascouche, QC) recalls Sauce gingembre, tamari et wasabi/Ginger, tamari and wasabi sauce (All codes/dates), due to the presence of undeclared wheat.

Europe

  • Allergy Alert: Asda recalls Asda Frozen Extra Special (twin packs) Cheesecake White Chocolate and Raspberry (230g; Best before end September 2012), due to the presence of undeclared egg and sulphur dioxide.
  • Allergy Alert: Delight Foods withdraws Periyar Fish Pickle (400g; All date codes) and Periyar Prawn Pickle (400g; All date codes), due to incorrect labeling. The products contain sesame oil, which has been listed as gingelly oil (an uncommon name for sesame oil).
  • Food Safety Recall (Denmark): Hilton Foods A/S recalls Minced pork butcher 8-12% (500g; Batch #400260703A; Expiry 14/2-2012), after Salmonella was found in a sample of the product. The recalled pork was sold in Kvickly, SuperBrugsen, Da Facts and shops throughout Denmark.
  • Medical Device Safety Recall (France): Bionime Taiwan recalls mylife™ Pura® Glucose Test Strips (100/container; Distributed by Ypsomed France and sold in pharmacies between October 2010 and December 6, 2011), because some of the containers were not sealed. If exposed to air, the test strips could produce abnormally elevated test results, leading to inappropriate treatment decisions. Please refer to the downloadable list of affected lot codes.

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

  • Food Safety Enforcement (Abu Dhabi): Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority (ADFCA) conducted a one-day inspection campaign, covering 80 food establishments in Al Zayani area. The inspections resulted in 25 warnings to suppliers, and 36 warnings and 4 fines to retailers. Fifteen of the 80 establishments were found to meet ADFCA food safety requirements.

Some supermarket chains post recall notices on their web sites for the convenience of customers. To see whether a recalled food was carried by your favorite supermarket, follow the live link to the supermarket’s recall web site.

*The Kroger umbrella encompasses numerous supermarket, marketplace and convenience store chains, listed on the Kroger corporate home page.
**Includes Safeway, Vons, Pavilions, Dominick’s, Genuardi’s, Randalls, Tom Thumb, Carrs and Pak N’ Save.

FDA and Stealth Recalls

Stealth – the act or characteristic of moving with extreme care and quietness, especially so as to avoid detection

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003

About 10 days ago, I complained about an unpublicized Class I recall, which was described in FDA’s Weekly Enforcement Report dated February 8, 2012. The recall involved 114 tons of cut leaf “curly” spinach from Tiro Tres Farms, Eagle Pass, TX. The offending spinach was recalled by the manufacturer after the product was found to be contaminated with E. coli O157:H7.

I received some comments – and some flak – about my article, so I decided to see whether this was a one-time incident or whether there have been other Class I recalls about which we consumers were never informed. The following recalls were gleaned from FDA Weekly Enforcement Reports dated on or after November 2, 2011.

  • Nicho Produce Co., Inc. (Edinburg, TX): A CUT ABOVE produce items. Thirty-three (33) different items, including shredded, cut, sliced, diced or cubed salad greens, vegetables and fruits, most of them packed in 5-lb bags. Products were recalled due to potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes. This was an FDA-initiated Class I recall, announced by letters dated December 9th and 19th, 2011, and involved 9,829.5 “pieces” distributed in Texas.
  • River Ranch Fresh Foods LLC, (Salinas, CA): River Ranch and Hy-Vee bagged salads and coleslaw with Best if Used by date of 4 NOV 2011. Product was recalled after FDA found two environmental sub samples positive for Listeria monocytogenes. This was an FDA-initiated Class I recall that was subsequent to an earlier public recall of Farmers Market and Hy-Vee brands of bagged salads, also produced by River Ranch. This stealth recall involved 588 cases of bagged salads, which were distributed to Indiana, Iowa and Canada.
  • Rio Queen Citrus, Inc. (Mission, TX): TexRio Tomatoes, packed in 20-lb bulk boxes, imported from Mexico. Notification of the company-initiated Class I recall was by telephone on November 25, 2011. Two hundred forty-three (243) boxes were recalled because the tomatoes were potentially contaminated with Salmonella. Distributed to Texas and Missouri.
  • Four Seasons Produce, Inc. (Ephrata, PA): Farm Wey labeled cantaloupes, Lot #32773301 & 32773302, manufactured by Farm-Wey Produce, Inc. (Lakeland, FL). Four Seasons recalled 1,064 cases (15/case) on November 19th by email, telephone and fax after being informed by New York State that the melons were potentially contaminated with Salmonella. The recalled cantaloupes were distributed to New York, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico and Bermuda.
  • Combs Produce, LP (Dallas, TX): Natures Harvest Grape Tomatoes, recalled by email on November 25, 2011 due to potential contamination with Salmonella. Approximately 400 cases were distributed to Oklahoma and Texas.
  • Supreme Protein (Manasquan, NJ): Supreme Protein Chocolate Caramel Cookie Crunch (0.71 oz/20g bars; Lot B11272A October 2012), manufactured by Belmont Confections Inc. (Youngstown, OH). The firm initiated a recall by email, letter and telephone on October 11, 2012 of 473 bars, because the product was potentially contaminated with Salmonella. The recalled bars were distributed nationwide.

These are just a few examples from less than 4 months’ worth of FDA Enforcement Reports. For brevity and simplicity, I limited myself to Class I microbiological hazards, and did not include undeclared allergens, foreign material contamination (i.e., metal, glass, etc) or undeclared/unapproved additives.

I was taken to task for my February 9th stealth recall ‘rant’ by Jim Prevor of the Perishable Pundit in his February 15th item “Food Safety, Recalls And Why Consumers Don’t Always Need Notification.” What were his gripes, and how do they stack up in light of what I have found?

Prevor theorized that the E. coli O157:H7-contaminated spinach was not destined for direct retail sale; therefore, he concluded, there was “…no need to notify consumers.”

But, USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service routinely publicizes recalls of products that are destined strictly for the institutional market. Why should FDA not do likewise?

Prevor also suggests that the recall was not publicized to avoid worrying or confusing consumers, who would not differentiate between the recalled (curly) spinach from Texas and the unaffected (flat leaf) baby spinach from California and Arizona. He concludes that avoiding a public announcement was the responsible path, to prevent crushing “countless farmers and processors”.

Sorry, Jim, but how does that justification extrapolate to the “Branded” products I’ve cited above – especially those that were sold in retail-sized packaging bearing lot number identification and/or expiration dates?

Finally, Prevor ends his article with the following statement:

One suspects that the decision to not announce recalls when the announcement would not enhance public health is motivated by the desire to protect another value: Maintaining viable farms, industries, jobs, etc.

Interesting. I always thought that the primary responsibility of FDA was to protect public health.

FDA relies on consumers and consumer advocates to help it carry out its broad mandate. The agency has no choice – it cannot afford to inspect more than a tiny fraction of food producers and processors in the USA. But, like it or not, the flip side of this dependency is the need to keep consumers informed. Naive consumers, or those who are ignorant of existing recalls, are more likely to become casualties than collaborators.

When President Obama took office, he promised “transparency” in his administration. I grant that the workings of FDA, USDA and other US agencies are more open than those in many – perhaps most – other countries. Nevertheless, the President’s promise raised the bar for FDA. At the very least, there should be a consistent – and transparent – policy guiding the agency’s decisions on when and how to release information about recalls. This is especially true for FDA-initiated recalls.

Speaking as a consumer, and as a food safety microbiologist with more than 30 years of experience – several of them with Canada’s food safety regulatory agency – I strongly believe that all Class I recalls should be posted promptly on the government’s food safety website.

Consumers deserve – and should demand – no less.

Recalls and Alerts: February 17, 2012

Here is today’s list of food safety recalls, product withdrawals, allergy alerts and miscellaneous compliance issues. The live links will take you directly to the official recall notices and company news releases that contain detailed information for each recall and alert.

If you would like to receive automatic email alerts for all new articles posted on eFoodAlert, please submit your request using the sidebar link.

United States

  • OTC Pharmaceutical Product Recall: McNeil Consumer Healthcare recalls Infants’ TYLENOL® Oral Suspension, 1 oz Grape (UPC 300450122308; Lot Nos. BIL0U00, BIL0V00, BIL3500, BJL2D00, BJL2E00, BJL2T00, BJL2U00) after receiving a small number of complaints from consumers who reported difficulty using the Infants’ TYLENOL® SimpleMeasure™ dosing system. SimpleMeasure™ includes a dosing syringe, which a parent or caregiver inserts into a protective cover, or “flow restrictor,” at the top of the bottle to measure the proper dose. In some cases, the flow restrictor was pushed into the bottle when inserting the syringe. Children’s TYLENOL® products are intended for children two years of age and older and remain available. Please go to the Tylenol website for additional information and instructions.

Canada

  • Allergy Alert: Ilana Robyn Foods Ltd. (Toronto, ON) recalls Sweets From The Earth Spiced Carrot Cake (100g; UPC 855144001037; Best before dates up to and including Feb 27, 2012), because the product contains undeclared milk. The recalled product was distributed in Quebec and Ontario.
  • Allergy Alert: I.M.U.R. Chef (Saint-Laurent, QC) recalls Bean & Barley Soup, Cabbage Soup, Pea Soup, Matza Ball Soup, and Chicken Soup, due to the presence of undeclared wheat. The Matza Ball Soup and Chicken Soup also contain undeclared egg.
  • Outbreak Alert: Peel County (Ontario) Public Health is warning patrons of Harvey’s restaurant at 6430 Erin Mills Parkway, Mississauga that an employee working at that location was diagnosed with Hepatitis A. Consumers who purchased food from this Harvey’s outlet on January 28th or 29th, or February 4th or 5th may have been exposed to Hepatitis A.

Europe

  • Allergy Alert (Denmark): Rieber & Son Denmark A/S recalls Rema1000 Remoulade (400g, Lot #L33; Expiry 1/6-2012), due to inadvertent mislabeling, which does not declared the presence of onions, cabbage and spices.
  • Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Vitaline SA recalls CEVAL Healthfood brand Fibryn Biscuits au son sans sucre (Lot #118011; Best if used by 30/08/2012), due to visible mold growth.
  • Food Safety Recall (Denmark): Nordic Egg Ltd. recalls Whole Eggs, Grade A, Medium (53-63g; Product of Poland; Expiry 28/2-2012; individual eggs stamped with the code 3PL30221304), because Salmonella enteritidis was found in a sample of the eggs.
  • Food Safety Recall (Germany): Messrs. Hans Adler OHG recalls Black Forest Garlic Sausage (approx 900g ring; Best before 03/11/2012), due to the presence of a metallic foreign body.
  • Food Safety Alert (Greece): Evrofarma SA announces the temporary suspension of production of Promel yogurt, to allow for investigation of complaints of mold growth in Promel 2% yogurt. The company is cooperating with EFET to determine and correct the source of the problem.
  • Dietary Supplement Safety Recall (Denmark): Abigo Pharma A/S recalls Bronikyl Food Supplement, produced by Propharma A/S (250ml; Best before 12-2012), because the supplement contains non-permitted paraben preservatives.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0249): Salmonella typhimurium in chilled chicken from France; distributed to France and the United Kingdom.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0250): Imazalil in oranges from Morocco; distributed to Sweden.
  • Dietary Supplement Safety Notification (EU #2012.0253): Unauthorized sildenafil thiono analogue in food supplement from Greece; distributed to Spain.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0255): Escherichia coli in frozen pangasius fillets from Vietnam; distributed to Italy.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0256): Salmonella Weltevreden in fresh pre-packed acacia from Thailand; distributed to the United Kingdom.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0257): Norovirus in oysters from France; distributed to Denmark.
  • Allergy Alert Notification (EU #2012.0260): Excessive sulphite in frozen shrimps from China, via Italy; distributed to Malta.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0261): Absence of health mark on loose smoked whole chickens from the United Kingdom; distributed to Ireland.
  • Pet Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0262): Salmonella Soerenga in processed animal protein from Belgium; distributed to Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands.
  • Food Safety Notification (EU #2012.0263): Listeria monocytogenes in smoked trout fillet from Turkey; distributed to the Netherlands.

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

  • Cosmetic Product Safety Alert (Philippines): The Philippines Department of Health warns the public that some lipsticks may contain excessive levels of lead.
  • Outbreak Alert (Hong Kong): The Centre for Health Protection is investigating an acute gastroenteritis outbreak that has affected 22 children at a residential child care center in Wan Chai. The outbreak victims range in age from 3 to 20 months. A one-year-old boy required hospitalization, but has since been discharged.
  • Outbreak Alert (India): At least 100 people who attended a wedding party in Baba Hari Dass Nagar (Southwest Delhi) were hospitalized with food poisoning symptoms. The victims complained of vomiting, headache and stomachache.

Australia and New Zealand

  • Allergy Alert (Australia): Coles Supermarkets Ltd. recalls Coles Deli Spicy Capsicum Dip (200g plastic container; Use by 19 MAR 12), due to the presence of undeclared sesame and tree nuts. The recalled product was sold in the Deli section of Coles and Bi-Lo supermarkets in NSW, ACT, TAS and VIC.
  • Food Safety Recall (Australia): S&B Gourmet Foods (Aust) Pty Ltd., trading as Salad Servers, recalls Chickpeas with Roast Pumpkin Salad (500g and 350g; Use by 23/02/12), due to contamination with Listeria monocytogenes. The recalled product was sold at IGA, Supabarn and Thomas Dux Supermarkets in New South Wales and Victoria.

Some supermarket chains post recall notices on their web sites for the convenience of customers. To see whether a recalled food was carried by your favorite supermarket, follow the live link to the supermarket’s recall web site.

*The Kroger umbrella encompasses numerous supermarket, marketplace and convenience store chains, listed on the Kroger corporate home page.
**Includes Safeway, Vons, Pavilions, Dominick’s, Genuardi’s, Randalls, Tom Thumb, Carrs and Pak N’ Save.