Recalls and Alerts: February 4 – 6, 2021

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.

Interested in learning more about food safety and the history of foodborne disease outbreaks and investigations? Go to TAINTED to download the first couple of chapters of my new book.

United States

Food Safety Recall: Food Evolution recalls approximately 6,806 pounds of ready-to-eat (RTE) dip and salads products containing meat that were produced without the benefit of federal inspection. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Canada

Food Safety Recall:  la poissonnerie Némeau inc. recalls Fumoir St-Antoine brand SAUMON FUMÉ ARTISANAL and  TRUITE FUMÉE ARTISANALE / Smoked salmon and Smoked trout (85g; All product sold up to and including 5 February 2021) due to lack of “Best before” dating on the packages.

Food Safety Recall: Satau Inc. recalls St. Dalfour brand Deluxe Chestnut Spread (225 ml; Expiry date code 2022/JA/16; UPC 0 8438098561 4) due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination.

Food Safety Recall: One Degree Organic Foods Inc. recalls One Degree Organic Foods brand Gluten Free Sprouted Rolled Oats (2.27 kg; All Best By dates up to and including MAR 15,2022; UPC 6 75625 32318 8) due to packaging integrity defects and rancidity.

Europe

Allergy Alert (Italy): GI Gastronomia Italiana recalls King brand Polpettone- preparazione gastronomica in ATM / Meatloaf (200g; Lot #3246670; Best before 18-02-2021) due to undeclared pistachio.

Allergy Alert (Italy): GI Gastronomia Italiana recalls King brand Galantina – Specialita’ Gastronomica a base di tacchino e mortadella / Turkey and mortadella Galantina (200g; Lot #03246664; Best before 24-02-2021) due to undeclared pistachio.

Allergy Alert (Romania): AQUILA PART PROD COM SRL recalls KINDER PINGUI COCOS (4 x 30g; Lots L358XP-3 & L006RP-3; Use by 06.02.2021 & 20.02.2021, respectively) due to undeclared wheat flour.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Albert Heijn recalls several Dixap brand fruit syrups due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Jumbo recalls Covelt Dixap Appel (sirop) / Apple syrup (500 ml; All batch codes and “Best before” dates) and Jumbo Diksap Roodfruit (sirop) / Red fruit syrup (500 ml; All batch codes and “Best before” dates) due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): Boulette et Gros Lapin recalls Boulette et Gros Lapin brand Petits pots bébé (Small glass jars; All varieties; All lot codes; All 2021, 2022 & 2023 Best before dates) due to problems encountered during sterilization.

Food Safety Recall (France): Lidl recalls Sélection du Fromager brand Reblochon / raw milk cheese (Lot #001131612; Best before 28/02/2021) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): Nature & Découvertes recalls Nature & Découvertes brand Calendrier Happy Morning (Reference #61174800) because the jars of jam included with the calendar may contain foreign matter (glass splinters).

Food Safety Recall (Netherlands): Jumbo recalls three Jumbo Diksap brand fruit syrups due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Food Safety Recall (Netherlands): Covelt bv recalls four Covelt Dixap brand fruit syrups due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

Allergy Alert (Israel): The Art of Sweets Ltd. recalls numerous varieties of cakes (500g; All production dates up to and including 28/7/2021) due to undeclared peanuts. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Food Safety Recall (Israel): Mia Food Industries Ltd. recalls Mia brand Sesame (100g bags; Best by 24/01/2022) due to Salmonella contamination.

New report says arsenic, other metals consistently contaminate baby foods

by Coral Beach

A new congressional report has revealed highly dangerous levels of arsenic and other poisons in baby food. It also reveals that Walmart, Campbell Foods, and Sprout Organic Foods refused to cooperate with the subcommittee’s investigation.

“Nurture, Beech-Nut, Hain and Gerber cooperated with the subcommittee’s investigation, despite the fact that doing so exposed their reckless disregard for the health of babies,” says the 59-page report released yesterday by the U.S. House of Representatives. 

“With that in mind, the subcommittee questions why Walmart (Parent’s Choice), Sprout Organic Foods, and Campbell (Plum Organics) would refuse to comply with the investigation. None of them produced testing results or specific testing standards and Sprout never even responded to the Subcommittee’s repeated inquiries. 

“The subcommittee is greatly concerned that these companies might be obscuring the presence of even higher levels of toxic heavy metals in their baby food products than their competitors’ products.”

The report, requested in November 2019, reviewed four toxic heavy metals: inorganic arsenic, lead, cadmium and mercury. The Food and Drug Administration and the World Health Organization have declared them dangerous to human health, particularly to babies and children, who are most vulnerable to their neurotoxic effects. Even low levels of exposure can cause serious and often irreversible damage to brain development, according to the report.

On Nov. 6, 2019, following reports alleging high levels of toxic heavy metals in baby foods, the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy requested internal documents and test results from seven of the largest manufacturers of baby food in the United States, including makers of organic and conventional products. Those manufacturers were:

  • Beech-Nut Nutrition Co.
  • Hain Celestial Group Inc., which sells baby food products under the brand name Earth’s Best Organic
  • Gerber
  • Walmart Inc., which sells baby food products through its private brand Parent’s Choice
  • Sprout Foods Inc. which sells baby food under the name (Sprout Organic Foods”
  • Campbell Soup Co., which sells baby food products under the brand name Plum Organics
  • Nurture Inc., which sells Happy Family Organics, including baby food products under the brand name HappyBABY

Arsenic was present in baby foods made by all responding companies.

Nurture (HappyBABY) sold baby foods after tests showed they contained as much as 180 parts per billion (ppb) inorganic arsenic. Over 25% of the products Nurture tested before sale contained over 100 ppb inorganic arsenic. Nurture’s testing shows that the typical baby food product it sold contained 60 ppb inorganic arsenic.

Hain (Earth’s Best Organic) sold finished baby food products containing as much as 129 ppb inorganic arsenic. Hain typically only tested its ingredients, not finished products. Documents show that Hain used ingredients testing as high as 309 ppb arsenic.

Beech-Nut used ingredients after they tested as high as 913.4 ppb arsenic. Beech-Nut routinely used high-arsenic additives that tested over 300 ppb arsenic to address product characteristics such as “crumb softness.”

Gerber used high-arsenic ingredients, using 67 batches of rice flour that had tested over 90 ppb inorganic arsenic.

The Food and Drug Administration has declared that inorganic arsenic, lead, cadmium, and mercury have “no established health benefit” and “lead to illness, impairment, and in high doses, death.”

“The subcommittee’s investigation proves that commercial baby foods contain dangerous levels of arsenic, lead, mercury, and cadmium. These toxic heavy metals pose serious health risks to babies and toddlers. Manufacturers knowingly sell these products to unsuspecting parents, in spite of internal company standards and test results, and without any warning labeling whatsoever,” says the conclusion section of the report.

The report also concludes the time is now for FDA to determine whether there is any safe exposure level for babies to inorganic arsenic, lead, cadmium, and mercury, to require manufacturers to meet those levels, and to inform consumers through labels.

A failure to release information during the previous presidential administration, the report states, did not help efforts to address the problems:

“Last year, the Trump Administration ignored new information contained in a secret industry presentation to federal regulators about toxic heavy metals in baby foods. On Aug. 1, 2019, FDA received a secret slide presentation from Hain, the maker of Earth’s Best Organic baby food, which revealed that finished baby food products contain even higher levels of toxic heavy metals than estimates based on individual ingredient test results. One heavy metal in particular, inorganic arsenic, was repeatedly found to be present at 28 percent to 93 percent higher levels than estimated.”

Suggestions and conclusions
The report suggests several steps to help resolve the heavy metal issues. One goal is to restore the public’s trust. The burden for that is on the shoulders of industry, according to the report. Manufacturers should immediately reduce the levels of toxic heavy metals in their baby foods to as close to zero as possible. If that is impossible for foods containing certain ingredients, then those ingredients should not be included in baby foods.

According to the report one example of an ingredient that might not be suitable for baby foods is rice. Throughout this report, rice appeared at or near the top of every list of dangerous baby foods.

“If certain ingredients, like rice, are highly tainted, the answer is not to simply lower toxic heavy metal levels as much as possible for those ingredients, the answer is to stop including them in baby foods. The subcommittee urges manufacturers to make this change voluntarily,” the congressional report states.

The subcommittee also recommends the following:

 Mandatory Testing: Only one of the companies reviewed by the Subcommittee routinely tests its finished baby foods, even though the industry is aware that toxic heavy metals levels are higher after food processing. Baby food manufacturers should be required by FDA to test their finished products for toxic heavy metals, not just their ingredients.

• Labeling: Manufacturers should by required by FDA to report levels of toxic heavy metals on food labels.

• Voluntary Phase-Out of Toxic Ingredients: Manufacturers should voluntarily find substitutes for ingredients that are high in toxic heavy metals, or phase out products that have high amounts of ingredients that frequently test high in toxic heavy metals, such as rice.

• FDA Standards: FDA should set maximum levels of inorganic arsenic, lead, cadmium, and mercury permitted in baby foods. One level for each metal should apply across all baby foods. The level should be set to protect babies against the neurological effects of toxic heavy metals.

• Parental Vigilance: Parents should avoid baby food products that contain ingredients testing high in heavy metals, such as rice products. The implementation of recommendations one through four will give parents the information they need to make informed decisions to protect their babies.

Report’s deep dive into the context of arsenic
The subcommittee report says in terms of baby food there are only two FDA regulations for specific products — an unenforceable draft guidance issued in July 2013, but never finalized, recommending an action level of 10 ppb for inorganic arsenic in single-strength (ready-to-drink) apple juice, and an August 2020 final guidance, setting an action level for inorganic arsenic in infant rice cereals at 100 ppb.

Arsenic is ranked number one among substances present in the environment that pose the most significant potential threat to human health, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Studies have concluded that arsenic exposure has a “significant negative effect on neurodevelopment in children.” This negative effect is most pronounced in Full Scale IQ, and more specifically, in verbal and performance domains as well as memory. A study of Maine schoolchildren exposed to arsenic in drinking water found that children exposed to water with an arsenic concentration level greater than 5 parts per billion (ppb) “showed significant reductions in Full Scale IQ, working memory, perceptual reasoning and other functioning.

A study of children in Spain found that increasing arsenic exposure led to a decrease in the children’s global motor, gross motor, and fine motor function scores. Boys in particular were more susceptible to arsenic’s neurotoxicity.

The subcommittee’s investigation showed arsenic was present in baby foods made by all responding companies:

Nurture (HappyBABY) sold baby foods after tests showed they contained as much as 180 parts per billion (ppb) inorganic arsenic. Over 25% of the products Nurture tested before sale contained over 100 ppb inorganic arsenic. Nurture’s testing shows that the typical baby food product it sold contained 60 ppb inorganic arsenic.

Hain (Earth’s Best Organic) sold finished baby food products containing as much as 129 ppb inorganic arsenic. Hain typically only tested its ingredients, not finished products. Documents show that Hain used ingredients testing as high as 309 ppb arsenic.

Beech-Nut used ingredients after they tested as high as 913.4 ppb arsenic. Beech-Nut routinely used high-arsenic additives that tested over 300 ppb arsenic to address product characteristics such as “crumb softness.”

Gerber used high-arsenic ingredients, using 67 batches of rice flour that had tested over 90 ppb inorganic arsenic.

For detailed information on the findings for all four heavy metals, please see the report.

This story by Coral Beach first appeared in Food Safety News, and is reposted here with the author’s permission

Recalls and Alerts: February 1 – 3, 2021

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.

Interested in learning more about food safety and the history of foodborne disease outbreaks and investigations? Go to TAINTED to download the first couple of chapters of my new book.

United States

OUTBREAK INVESTIGATION: CDC is investigating a deadly outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 illnesses in Arkansas (6), New York (1), Oklahoma (5), Virginia (2) and Washington (2). One person has died in Washington state, and nine have been hospitalized in this five-state outbreak, which appears to have begun on December 23, 2020. Three of the outbreak victims have developed hemolytic uremic syndrome. CDC has not yet established what food(s) might be behind these infections. The outbreak strain has previous been associated with various sources, including romaine lettuce, recreational water and ground beef.

OUTBREAK INVESTIGATION UPDATE: FDA continues to investigate the source of two Salmonella outbreaks, including an outbreak of seven Salmonella Potsdam illnesses and 60 Salmonella Miami illnesses. No specific food products have been linked to the illnesses as yet.

Public Health Alert: USDA issues a public health alert because raw beef product (~2-lb trays; Packed dates JAN 28 2021 through JAN 31 2021) produced by Greater Omaha Packing Co. Inc., an Omaha, Neb. establishment, may be contaminated with E. coli O157:H7

Food Safety Recall: Williams Valley Family Farm LLC recalls raw (unpasteurized) milk (1/2 gal and 1 gal sizes; Best By 2/08 through 2/17) due to shigatoxin-producing E. coli contamination.

Canada

Allergy Alert: Aurpal Inc. recalls Rougié brand Duck Foie Gras (80g; Lot 620307002; Expiry 2022MA03) due to undeclared milk.

Food Safety Recall: Les 400 Pieds de champignon inc. recalls Sauce crémeuse aux champignons sans lactose / Lactose-free creamy mushroom sauce (Large; Production dates up to and including 29 January 2021) and Sauce spaghetti aux champignons / Spaghetti sauce with mushrooms (Large; No date indicated) because the items were manufactured and packaged under conditions that may render them unsafe to consume.

Food Safety Recall: Solstice Ciderworks recalls Solstice Ciderworks brand Ciders due to leaking cans. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of recalled products.

Food Safety Recall: Sobeys Inc. recalls Panache brand Sweet Onion Poppy Seed Dressing (350 ml; Best before 2021 OC 16 and 2021 OC 30; UPC 6 23682 1222 9) due to spoilage.

Food Safety Recall: Service traiteur Mi Dunu recalls two pepper products because the items were manufactured and packaged under conditions that may render them unsafe to consume. Please refer to the recall notice for a list of the affected products.

Food Safety Recall: Marché d’alimentation Vallée (Marché Richelieu) recalls Poulet désossé cuit maison / Home-style cooked deboned chicken (500 ml glass jars; Sold up to and including 3 February 2021) due to lack of “Keep refrigerated” label instruction.

Europe

Allergy Alert (Belgium): Colruyt recalls New York Bakery Original Bagel (4 x 85 g; Best before 03/02/2021) due to undeclared sesame seeds.

Allergy Alert (UK): Waitrose recalls Waitrose brand Patisserie Carrot Cake Muffin 2S (Best before 05 February 2021) due to undeclared walnuts.

Allergy Alert (UK): Pasta Evangelists recalls Fresh Basil Pesto (140g; Use by 03 February 2021) due to undeclared pistachios.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Biofresh Belgium recalls Your Organic Nature brand Jus de pommes concentré / Concentrated apple juice (750 ml; Best before 09.2022) due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Denmark): Banin bread recalls Banin brand breads (All breads produced from 22.01.2021 to 27.01.2021) because the products were manufactured under unsanitary conditions.

Food Safety Recall (France): LA TOQUE ANGEVINE recalls Auchan brand Pizza 3 fromages BIO  / Organic 3-cheese pizza (380g; Use by 14/02/2021) due to possible Listeria contamination.

Pet Food Safety Recall (Denmark): Maxi Zoo recalls Multifit kyllingehals til hunde / Chicken necks for dogs (200g; Batch #261020; Best before 28.04.2022) due to Salmonella contamination.

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

Allergy Alert Update (Israel): Hashahar Haole Company recalls Hashahar Haole brand Hazelnut spread with cocoa (350g; All expiry dates up to and including 6.7.22) due to undeclared sesame.

Food Safety Recall Update (Israel): Meir Bagel Co. recalls Classic Grissini Crumbs (200g; Batches 29420 and 29520; Sell by 20/10/2021 and 21/10/2021) due to foreign matter (small plastic chips) contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Israel): Delicious Artisanеl Company Ltd. recalls Chorizo Sausage Stick (Expiry dates 4/06/21 – 13/06/21 inclusive), Rosette Sausage Stick (Expiry dates 4/06/21 – 13/06/21 inclusive) and French Sausage Stick (Expiry dates 4/06/21 – 13/06/21 inclusive) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Israel): Hod Maadan Shem Haorez Textboss Ltd. recalls New York corned beef brand smoked, sliced and spiced beef breast (Expiry date 13.02.2021) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Australia and New Zealand

Food Safety Recall (New Zealand): Delmaine Fine Foods Ltd recalls Delmaine Fine Foods brand Cocktail Onions (400g glass jar; Batch no. 2010041; Best before  03/10/2023) due to foreign matter (pieces of glass) contamination.