Nara’s German manufacturer fails FDA inspection

Milchwerke “Mittelelbe” GmbH, the German manufacturer of Nara Organic’s Whole Milk Infant Formula, has been added to the FDA’s Import Alert 40-05 list after an inspection of the production facility found “serious deviations of the Infant Formula Requirements per 21 CFR Part 106.”

Import Alert 40-05 provides specifically for “Detention Without Physical Examination Of Adulterated And Misbranded Infant Formula.”

The entry for Milchwerke “Mittelelbe” GmbH, dated 06/26/2026, states that “…the firm’s powdered infant formula products processed in the facility are adulterated within the meaning of section 402(a)(4) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, in that they were prepared, packed or held under insanitary conditions whereby they may have been rendered injurious to health.”

The Import Alert cited the lack of a flow diversion valve on the pasteurization system, failure to take corrective action following the detection of Cronobacter sakazakii in a “high-hygiene” zone of the processing facility, inadequate environmental monitoring for Cronobacter sakazakii, failure to maintain the plant in a clean and sanitary condition, and lapses in good personal hygiene practices.

Perhaps the most troubling of these observations is the lack of a flow diversion valve. This valve is designed to monitor the temperature of the milk at the outflow from the holding tube immediately after pasteurization and to divert the milk back into the tank if the temperature at the outflow point is below the required level. The absence of an proper flow diversion valve could result in underpasteurized milk being introduced into the spray-drying process and, thus, into the infant formula powder.

Coming a close second is the inadequate follow-up on detection of Cronobacter sakazakii in the production environment. After finding the pathogen and conducting a “root cause” analysis to determine the source of the contamination, the company failed to take “appropriate and timely” corrective measures.

The abbreviated inspection report summary included in the Import Alert notification also mentioned “cracked and pitted concrete floors, broken and missing tiles, and damaged grout” in areas where the infant formula is processed.

To be clear, the Nara Organics powdered infant formula batches implicated in the infant botulism outbreak currently under investigtion were not manufactured by Milchwerke “Mittelelbe” GmbH. They were produced, presumably in the USA, using organic whole milk powder produced and processed by the same US supplier that produced the whole milk powder used in ByHeart’s organic infant formula powder.

Nevertheless, the picture painted by the FDA’s Import Alert is very different from Nara’s rosy description of a “state-of-the-art” facility.

According to the FDA’s updated Outbreak Investigation report, the agency is in the process of reviewing corrective responses submitted by Milchwerke “Mittelelbe” GmbH, and also has been in contact with relevant European authorities.


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OPINION: Milk supplier obstructed FDA botulism probe

Organic West Milk, the supplier of whole organic milk to ByHeart and to Nara Organics, provided the FDA with an incomplete customer list during the agency’s investigation of the ByHeart botulism investigation, according to an FDA Outbreak Investigation update released on June 26, 2026.

By doing so, Organic West hid the fact that it had supplied milk to a second infant formula manufacturer. By this sin of omission, Organic West put additional infants at risk of contracting infant botulism.

The unpasteurized whole milk was shipped from Organic West Milk, a California-based company, to Dairy Farmers of America’s Fallon, Nevada facility (DFA) for pasteurization and spray-drying.

The FDA has not revealed whether or not it had also requested a customer list from DFA. Nor has it stated whether any other infant formula manufacturers were listed as customers either of Organic West or DFA.

As of the June 26, 2026 update from the CDC, three babies have been stricken with infant botulism after consuming Nara Organics Whole Milk Organic Infant Formula.

The affected infants live in California, Pennsylvania, and Washington. All three were hospitalized, and have been treated with BabyBIG antitoxin supplied by the State of California. All three are expected to survive.

The infants were between 2 and 5 months of age at the time they began to develop symptoms. All three are male. The three babies became ill on April 20, May 20, and May 31, 2026.

Three different production lots of Nara Organics powdered formula were identified as having been fed to the babies: 709125280E14F2, 709125288E14F2, and 708125174E14F2.

On June 13, 2026, Nara Organics recalled “…all cans of Nara Organics infant formula currently available in the U.S.”

Officials in two of the three states where illnesses were reported have collected leftover infant formula to test for Clostridium botulinum. The FDA has obtained unopened samples of the three lots consumed by the affected babies and is in the process of testing those samples.

Prior to learning of the outbreak, the FDA already had conducted inspections at Milchwerke Mittelelbe GmbH and Advanced Nordic Nutrition, the two European companies involved in the manufacture and packaging of Nara Organics powdered formula.

Those inspections resulted in the identification of “deficiencies” which the companies are in the process of correcting.

Based on US customs records, Nara Organics has received only one shipment of powdered infant formula from its European suppliers. That shipment arrived on April 30, 2026. There is no record of the company having received a shipment from any other off-shore location prior to that date.

It is evident from an examination of the illness dates that the European shipment could not possibly have been the source of the earliest illness, which developed ten days before Nara received the shipment. It is also highly unlikely, given the long incubation period often associated with infant botulism, that the other two victims had been fed the European batch.

One can only conclude that the formula fed to the three infants was produced somewhere in the USA.

The question is, “WHERE?”


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Nara Organics: Manufactured in Germany; Packaged in Denmark

Two separate European companies had a hand in producing Nara Organics Whole Milk Organic Powdered Infant Formula, a product that recently was linked to three cases of infant botulism according to reports from the CDC and the FDA.

The company has recalled all lots of its formula currently on the market.

According to the company’s website, Nara’s whole milk powdered formula is “…made in Germany to meet both U.S. and EU food safety standards.” However, the company declined to reveal the identity of the German manufacturer.

On June 18th, Food Safety News reported that Nara’s infant formula powder is manufactured by Milchwerke Mittelelbe GmbH (also known as “Elb-Milch”), a subsidiary of the Krüger Group located in Stendal, Germany.

eFoodAlert has been able to confirm the Food Safety News report through the website ImportGenius, which tracks US Customs records. According to ImportGenius, Nara Organics received 36 containers of infant formula from Milchwerke Mittelelbe GmbH on April 30, 2026.

Elb-Milch manufactured the formula, but did not package it. The infant formula powder was sent in bulk to a Danish company, Advanced Nordic Nutrition (“ANN”), formerly known as Fipros Nutrition ApS.

ANN’s sole role was to package the bulk powder into cans, according to a spokesperson for the company. ANN’s INSOC Establishment Approval number (DK 6568 EC) appears on the can label.

Both Elb-Milch and ANN have been inspected by the FDA in the past—in 2017 and 2016, respectively. In both cases, the results of the inspection were satisfactory.


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“Reads like a true crime novel” – Food Safety News

Interested in learning more about food safety and the history of foodborne disease outbreaks and investigations?

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Chapter 6. Birth of a Pathogen