Monday, August 27, 2018

This Week in Mislabeled Product - Week Ending August 25, 2018

Wrong Meatloaf - Taylor Farms Northwest, LLC, a Kent, Wash. establishment, is recalling approximately 62 pounds of ready-to-eat meatloaf products due to misbranding and undeclared allergens, The problem was discovered on Aug. 20, 2018, when a Taylor Farms Northwest, LLC employee conducted an inventory check and discovered the mislabeling of the Turkey Meatloaf with Kale as Homestyle Meatloaf, which is a beef product.
     
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/recalls-and-public-health-alerts/recall-case-archive/archive/2018/recall-068-2018-release
News Release
Taylor Farms Northwest, LLC Recalls Ready-To-Eat Meatloaf Products Due To Misbranding and Undeclared Allergens 
Class I Recall
068-2018
Health Risk: High
Aug 21, 2018

FSIS Issues a Health Alert Regarding Salmonella Linked to PA Kosher Poultry Establishment

FSIS issued a health alert after a determination was made about a potential link between Empire Kosher brand raw chicken products and Salmonella illness cluster.  The alert is for both raw whole chicken and raw chicken parts.  The illnesses occurred from products that were produced and sold to consumers from September 2017 to June 2018.  While the number of cases were not in the release, it did state that half of affected case-patients have been hospitalized due to illness.

https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/newsroom/news-releases-statements-transcripts/news-release-archives-by-year/archive/2018/pha-08242018-1
FSIS Issues Public Health Alert for Empire Kosher Poultry, Inc. Raw Chicken Products due to Possible Salmonella Contamination

Friday, August 24, 2018

Colorado Establishment Recalls Ground Beef for E. coli O157:H7

Cargill Meat Solutions, a Fort Morgan, Colo. establishment, is recalling approximately 25,288 pounds of ground beef products that may be contaminated with E. coli O157:H7.  The problem was discovered on Aug. 22 by the establishment when they reviewed their records and determined that the product may be associated with product that was presumptive positive for E. coli O157:H7.

https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/recalls-and-public-health-alerts/recall-case-archive/archive/2018/recall-069-2018-release
Cargill Meat Solutions Recalls Ground Beef Products due to Possible E. coli O157:H7 Contamination 
Class I Recall 
069-2018 
Health Risk: High 
Aug 23, 2018 

Amazon Discusses Monitoring for Food Safety Issues and Conducting Recalls

An interesting read in Food Engineering Magazine on how Amazon scans consumer complaints for food safety issues and how the company handles recalls.  

With over 300 million customers worldwide, the company moves a lot of product.  And with that, there will be complaints.  But going through "16 million pieces of customer feedback per week, in more than 40 languages" to find issues is not easy.   In addition, there are postings on social media sites and product reviews. The company employs machine learning computer systems that go beyond keyword identification to understand "context, sentiment, and sentence structure."

For recalls, the company uses emails to contact customers  with instructions for return and if relevant, a refund.  The success rate with emails is stated as 68.8 percent of the messages sent were opened.
The company also quarantines inventory preventing the product from being shipped or reordered.  Then the company also removes inventory from the supply chain by returning or destroying products.

Food Engineering Magazine
https://www.foodengineeringmag.com/articles/97693-how-amazon-handles-food-safety-recalls
How Amazon handles food safety, recalls
Amazon VP Careltt Ooton explains how the company uses Natural Language Processing to scan customer feedback and constantly monitor for food safety issues
August 17, 2018
Crystal Lindell

Sandwich Purveyor Issues Another Recall After FDA Finds Listeria

Lipari Foods is recalling packaged premade sandwiches (turkey and cheese wedge) produced and packaged by the sister company JLM due to potential contamination of Listeria monocytogenes.  "This was brought to our attention by JLM after additional environmental testing initiated by the Food and Drug Administration following a previous recall returned positive test results for potential contamination of Listeria monocytogenes."  This previous recall occurred in July

FDA was probably keeping an eye on this operation after the last outbreak. 

https://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm617762.htm
Lipari Foods Issues Voluntary Recall of Premo Brand Turkey & Cheese Wedge Sandwiches Because of Possible Health Risk
For Immediate Release
August 21, 2018

Monday, August 20, 2018

This Week in Mislabeled Products - Week Ending August 18, 2018

Cookies Recalled After Undeclared Peanuts Found -  Marsee Baking is voluntarily recalling chocolate chip, ginger spice, and oatmeal raisin cookies sold at Café Yumm! restaurants because the cookies may contain undeclared peanuts.  The voluntary recall was initiated after discovering peanuts in a chocolate chip cookie before it was served. The voluntary recall includes all cookies in the event other batches and flavors may contain peanuts.

Ice Cream Recalled After Chocolate Ingredient Recalled for Peanuts - Salt & Straw Ice Cream is voluntarily recalling a limited number of its Chocolate Gooey Brownie pints because it may contain undeclared peanuts. The recall was initiated after receiving notification from the chocolate supplier, Pitch Dark Chocolate, that the chocolate chips used in the Chocolate Gooey Brownie may have had possible cross-contact with a peanut allergen.

https://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm617097.htm
Marsee Baking Issues Allergy Alert On Undeclared Peanuts In Cookies Sold At Café Yumm! Restaurants
For Immediate Release
August 15, 2018

Establishment Selling Smoothies (and "Home" Made Cooked Pork) Responsible for Salmonella Outbreak

Seven people in Washington state were infected with Salmonella after eating at Burien Fresh Smoothies.

A source of the Salmonella has not yet been identified, however, one major violation was observed - "Investigators found that the restaurant was serving cooked pork prepared at the restaurant owner's home, which is not an approved food safety practice. The restaurant was directed to immediately stop serving pork-based food items and to remove them from their menu."

This practice could be responsible if Salmonella was in the pork or on the packaging.  Could be that the smoothies used fresh produce that was not properly washed.  If he brought the pork from home, perhaps he bought the strawberries from Uncle Jimmy, who grew them in his garden fertilized with fresh manure.

King County (WA) Public Health Notice
https://kingcounty.gov/depts/health/communicable-diseases/disease-control/outbreak/burien-fresh-smoothies-2018-Aug.aspx
Salmonella outbreak associated with Burien Fresh Smoothies in Burien

Friday, August 17, 2018

Contamination Found in Cheese, Don't Worry, the Cheese is 15,000 Years Old

Researchers found remnants of cheese in an Egyptian tomb, dating about 13th century BC.  Along with the cheese, they found "peptides in the food sample suggest it was contaminated with Brucella melitensis, a bacterium that causes brucellosis. This potentially deadly disease spreads from animals to people, typically from eating unpasteurized dairy products. If the team’s preliminary analysis is confirmed, the sample would represent the earliest reported biomolecular evidence of the disease."

It is rumored that foodborne illness lawyers have been canvasing locals to see if they had very distant ancestors who may have fallen mysteriously ill as well as rooting through tombs to see if any mummies have the same pathogen markers.

ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: Wed Aug 15 12:58:45 EDT 2018
https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/pressroom/presspacs/2018/acs-presspac-august-15-2018/worlds-oldest-cheese-found-in-egyptian-tomb.html

World’s oldest cheese found in Egyptian tomb

Cause Of Chipotle Outbreak is C. perfringens - Indicating Improper Food Handling Practices

A few weeks back, a Chipotle restaurant in Ohio was the site of a foodborne illness outbreak where 647 people were reported as being affected.  The cause of the outbreak was found to be Clostridium perfringens contamination, based on testing of those who became ill.  Investigators were not however, able to find the exact food source.

The fact it was a Clostridium perfringens outbreak is an indicator of a bad food handling practice.  C. perfringens becomes an issue when cooked food is held at an improper temperature (probably in the  80F and 110 range) for a long time.  For example...beef used in a burrito.  The meat is cooked, but spores of C. perfringnes survive.   Not a problem if meat is cooled rapidly and refrigerated or kept hot (>135F).  But if that meat is left out on the counter over night and then warmed for serving....boom.  The organism grows to high numbers (infectious dose >10E6, infects the person in high numbers, produces toxin in the gut, and then in about 16 hours..it is watery diarrhea and cramps for 12 to 24 hrs.   At that point, you are thinking #@$%! burritos.

When news was released, many thought it was Norovirus, which even a good facility can have an issue when a worker is a carrier but doesnt know..  But C. perfringens...that is just bad food handling practices.  A sign that a restaurant is not keeping an eye on the ball.  And with that many people ill, that means that there was a lot of product that was temperature abused.

The company announced that food workers will be required to do quarterly online training and assessment.  "The test is an "e-learning type module that all employees will be required to complete on a quarterly basis in addition to their daily food safety routines and annual food safety training," Chipotle spokeswoman Laurie Schalow told Business Insider on Thursday. The company also said Thursday it will retrain all employees on top food-safety priorities. The training will begin next week during employees' shifts at restaurants across the United States."

Meatingplace.com
http://www.meatingplace.com/Industry/News/Details/81187
Health officials identify pathogen in Ohio Chipotle outbreak
By Susan Kelly on 8/17/2018