The Company, VR Green Farms, looks to be a vegetable farm that has expanded into numerous product offerings. http://vr-green-farms.myshopify.com/
Their website is not fully functioning, but you can get a sense from their LinkedIn site
Locally grown vegetables delivered within hours of harvest. No Herbicides or Pesticides used. VR Green Farms originated from an idea that was shared by our founder Nic Romano and Bella Collina Towne & Golf Club in San Clemente. Bella Collina provided the land and with the expertise and help from our sister farm in Bell Gardens, Nic transformed the land into a farm. Today VR Green Farms sells weekly vegetable baskets to the local community and wholesales our vegetables to local restaurants who have embraced the concept of buying fresh local produce. In addition we market honey, olive oil, cheese, bread and even eggs all from local sourcesMany have predicted that with so many small entities entering the processed food arena, including through the farmers' market channel, that it was only a matter of time before there would see processing deviations that would result in botulism cases. Although FDA has strict regulations regarding canning foods that include requirements for registering of processes, training, testing, etc., many small entrepreneurs are either ignorant to these regulations, are incapable of implementing them, or choose not to follow.
You can walk through any farmers' market and see the vast array of jarred food items. Are they acidified properly? Have they received the proper thermal treatment? Guarantee these are the same people fighting not to have to follow these 'restrictive government regulations'. But trust us, there is a reason that that those regulations are in place.
Clostridium botulinum is a spore-forming pathogen that produces one of the strongest toxins known. The organism can survive boiling temperatures and if the jarred product does not have any barriers (low pH, preservatives, strict refrigeration), the organism will grow and produce toxin. The toxin, a neurotoxin, travels into the bloodstream to the nerves and it stops neurotransmission to muscles. And so when one ingests this toxin and does not receive quick medical attention, they will die of suffocation. A hell of a way to buy the farm, so to speak.
No doubt, this farm/company will also have a difficult road ahead, from an intensive investigation to lawsuits. That is a huge price to pay for not making the effort to produce safe products (unless the product is not to blame, and it was found to be consumer practices.)
In any event, hopefully this will be the 'shot across the bow' for state and federal officials to begin focusing attention on this developing cottage industry.
Cleveland Plain Dealerhttp://www.cleveland.com/healthfit/index.ssf/2014/08/two_ohio_cases_of_botulism_inv.html
Two Ohio cases of botulism investigated in connection with California jarred sauce recall
By Brie Zeltner, The Plain Dealer The Plain Dealer
on August 04, 2014 at 2:39 PM, updated August 04, 2014 at 2:54 PM
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Two people in Ohio have been hospitalized with botulism that public health officials suspect is connected to a nationwide recall of a California company's jarred sauces, according to the Cincinnati Health Department.