Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Cinnamon Apple Chips Recalled Due to Potential for Salmonella Contamination in Spice

Seneca Snack Company, a Washington Corporation, is recalling its Seneca Cinnamon Apple Chips and Clancy’s Cinnamon Apple Chips after a supplier notified them that a lot of cinnamon ingredient had the potential to be contaminated with Salmonella.   This only affects Clancy’s product sold by ALDI and Seneca products sold nationwide through Amazon and Gemline.  There have been no know reported cases of illness.

https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/seneca-recalls-cinnamon-apple-chips-because-possible-health-risk
Seneca Recalls Cinnamon Apple Chips Because of Possible Health Risk
Summary
Company Announcement Date:  October 02, 2020
FDA Publish Date:  October 05, 2020
Product Type:  Food & Beverages
Reason for Announcement:  Possible Salmonella contamination
Company Name:  Seneca Snack Company
Brand Name:  Seneca, Clancy’s
Product Description:  Seneca Cinnamon Apple Chips and Clancy’s Cinnamon Apple Chips

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Produce Company Expands Listeria-linked Recall

Country Fresh is extending the recall they issued last week to include various containers of fresh cut and/or sliced apples, grapes, mangos, pineapples and cantaloupe distributed by Walmart.  As is often the case with recalls involving Listeria, the recall is expanded when there are no clean lines to separate the initial lot of product recalled from other lots of the same product or different products.  Products processed in the same facility, whether that is on the same equipment or in the same area are also potentially exposed to the same contamination point.

https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/country-fresh-expands-voluntary-recall
Country Fresh Expands Voluntary Recall
Summary
Company Announcement Date: October 03, 2020
FDA Publish Date:  October 03, 2020
Product Type:  Food & Beverages
Reason for Announcement:  Potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes
Company Name:  Country Fresh
Brand Name:  Walmart
Product Description:  Cut or sliced apples, grapes, mangoes, pineapples, and cantaloupe

Friday, October 2, 2020

FDA Releases Proposed Traceability Regulation

As part of the FSMA requirements (FSMA 204(s)(1), FDA is establishing record keeping requirements for certain foods. While there are existing requirements for lot tracking – the requirement to know the immediate source and immediate recipient, or one-up, one back – these FSMA related requirements add to that, specifically for foods the agency has designated as high-risk human foods.
  • The rule only applies to certain food items that are on the list, although FDA would hope that companies would adopt these practices industry wide.  Currently, the list includes:
  1. Cheese, other than hard cheese
  2. Shell eggs
  3. Nut butter
  4. Cucumbers
  5. Fresh herbs
  6. Leafy greens
  7. Melons
  8. Peppers
  9. Sprouts
  10. Tomatoes
  11. Tropical tree fruits
  12. Fresh-cut fruits and vegetables
  13. Finfish and smoked finfish
  14. Crustaceans
  15. Mollusks
  16. RTE deli salads
  • The rule applies to all entitles that manufacture, process, pack, or hold foods that appear on the Food Traceability List. The proposed rule has exemption for small farms, processed produce, food transporters
  • Although the rule does not state that an electronic record is required, it does state that the entity must produce records within 24 hours of FDA request.
  • It applies to the specific foods/ingredients including when those high risk foods are used in making other foods (unless those foods are thermally processed.)
  • Lot numbers must be applied to those ingredients. When product is shipped to another entity, the lot information must be conveyed including description and quantity of product. The rule establishes KDEs, Key Data Elements associated with Critical Tracking Events (CTEs). Basically, important points along the supply chain must keep certain kinds of information. Critical tracking event (CTE) are events in the supply chain of that food involving the growing, receiving (including receipt by a first receiver), transforming, creating, or shipping of the food. (Creating is different than transforming).
  • Those entities receiving product, including retailers, would need to capture that information on a record such as a bill of lading and match it to any outbound records.
  • A distributor who receives these high risk food items would have to be able to link, by lot number, a product in inventory with the immediate previous source of the food, the location, date and time the food was received, and the quantity and unit of measure of the food received.
This will require some further study to find pitfalls, if any.  Really hate to see the creation of additional jargon and all of the areas that can be open for interpretation on who needs to keep what information. 

Cleary much of this falls onto the produce industry, where even a highly sophisticated system may not be able to circumvent all issues faced during an outbreak investigation.  However, standardizing the basics such as uniform lot code usage, capture, and tracking  would certainly be a good start.

https://www.fda.gov/food/food-safety-modernization-act-fsma/fsma-proposed-rule-food-traceability
FSMA Proposed Rule for Food Traceability
9/21/29

This Week in Mislabeled Products Thru October 3, 2020

Mislabeled Pecan Containing Ice Cream - Homestead Creamery of Wirtz, VA is recalling one lot of Homestead Creamery chocolate ice cream quarts, dated 5/13/2021, because it may contain undeclared pecans.   The recall was initiated after it was discovered that product containing the pecans may have been distributed in packaging that did not reveal the presence of pecans.

Mislabeled Salad Dressing - GHSW, LLC. is voluntarily recalling 1512 units of Trader Joe’s Southwest Style Sweet Potato Sauté Bowl due to undeclared milk and egg allergens in the dressing that are not declared on the label.  The recall was initiated after it was discovered that the dressing containing milk and egg was distributed in packaging that did not declare the presence of milk or egg.

Mislabeled Chicken Salad Contains Walnuts Not on Label  - Willow Tree Poultry Farm, Inc., an Attleboro, Mass. establishment is recalling approximately 6,890 pounds of ready-to-eat (RTE) chicken salad products due to undeclared walnuts, a known allergen, which are not declared on the product labels. The RTE chicken salad product labeled as “Classic Chicken Salad” may actually contain “White Meat Cranberry Walnut Chicken Salad” 

Watermelon Chunks Recalled After FDA Finds Listeria on Packing Equipment

Country Fresh is recalling watermelon chunks sold at Walmart and RaceTrac in several southcentral states after FDA found Listeria on packaging equipment.  The testing was conducted as part of an inspection.  There have been no illness reported to date.

Processors of fresh cut produce must have tight controls on Listeria in the processing environment.  At this point, this facility will need to detail clean its operation and conduct a root cause analysis on how the organism was able to get onto the equipment.  We may see additional products recalled after further investigation by FDA.

https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/country-fresh-voluntary-product-recall
Country Fresh Voluntary Product Recall
Summary
Company Announcement Date: October 01, 2020
FDA Publish Date: October 01, 2020
Product Type:  Food & Beverages
Reason for Announcement:  Potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes
Company Name:  Country Fresh
Brand Name:  Walmart  RaceTrac
Product Description:  Watermelon Chunks

FDA Testing of Dark Chocolate Products for Milk Allergens - Verifying the Absence Claims

Dark chocolate should be free from milk, especially when labeled as dairy free.  But can a person with milk allergies count on that?  FDA conducted analysis of 119 samples representing 52 products -  all products being manufactured in the U.S.  bearing a dairy-free or similar claim[ on their package or website, and consisting solely of dark chocolate (e.g., be free of cream or nougat filling, a candy shell, or inclusions such as nuts, fruit, or seeds).  Samples were collected from 2018 to 2019.

"The FDA determined that four of the 52 products tested had potentially hazardous levels of milk allergen. These four products – all dark chocolate bars – were made by three different manufacturers. Together the four products were responsible for 12 positives out of the 119 samples....The agency found the 12 samples from the four products to have milk allergen levels ranging from 600 ppm to 3,100 ppm. The agency determined that, at these levels, the four products held the potential to cause severe reactions in consumers with milk allergy. The FDA took action as warranted to address each of these positives."

"The FDA does not define the terms “dairy free,” “milk free” or other “absence” claims, except for “gluten free.” Absence claims are voluntary statements that indicate a specific ingredient or food component is not present in a product.  Absence claims, when used, must be truthful and not misleading, per the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.  If a product or references to a product on a company website were to bear a dairy-free or similar claim, the FDA would expect there to be no milk allergen in the product given that consumers with milk allergy depend on the accuracy of dairy-free claims for their health. The presence of milk allergen in a product bearing a dairy-free claim may lead the agency to conduct an investigation and to consider enforcement action, depending on the investigational findings."

https://www.fda.gov/food/sampling-protect-food-supply/fy1819-sample-collection-and-analysis-domestically-manufactured-dairy-free-dark-chocolate-products
FY18/19 Sample Collection and Analysis of Domestically Manufactured, Dairy-Free Dark Chocolate Products for Milk Allergen

Monday, September 28, 2020

Imported Dry Dog Food Recalled for Salmonella After State Lab Finds Salmonella in Sample

Real Pet Food Company is voluntarily recalling its dog food, Billy+Margot Wild Kangaroo and Superfoods Recipe 4lb bags, after a state testing lab found Salmonella in a sample.  Yes, this product does contain kangaroo.

Salmonella in dry dog food is often an issue of post process contamination.  

Real Pet Foods is headquartered in Singapore and its dry dog food manufacturing is done in Australia.

https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/real-pet-food-company-phoenix-az-voluntarily-recalls-one-lot-billymargot-wild-kangaroo-and
Real Pet Food Company of Phoenix, AZ Voluntarily Recalls One Lot of Billy+Margot Wild Kangaroo and Superfoods Recipe Dog Food in 4 lb Bags Because of a Possible Salmonella Health Risk (USA)
Summary
Company Announcement Date:  September 22, 2020
FDA Publish Date:  September 22, 2020
Product Type:  Animal & Veterinary  Animal Feed
Reason for Announcement:  Salmonella
Company Name:  Real Pet Food Company
Brand Name:  Billy+Margot Wild Kangaroo and Superfoods Recipe
Product Description:  Dog food

CA Distributor Recalls Imported Wood Ear Mushrooms After Linked to Salmonella Outbreak

CDC and FDA are investing a Salmonella outbreak linked to imported wood ear mushrooms distributed by Wismettac Asian Foods, Inc.  As of September 24, 2020, a total of 41 people infected with the outbreak strain of Salmonella Stanley have been reported from 10 states after eating wood ear mushrooms or ramen noodles containing wood ear mushrooms (aka Black Fungus or Kikurage)

Wismettac Asian Foods, Inc., Santa Fe Springs, CA recalled Shirakiku brand imported Dried Fungus (also known as Black Fungus or Kikurage).  Product was distributed to a multitude of States across the country and Canada.

https://www.cdc.gov/salmonella/stanley-09-20/index.html
Outbreak of Salmonella Stanley Infections Linked to Wood Ear Mushrooms
Updated September 24, 2020 at 5:10 PM ET
At A Glance
Reported Cases: 41
States: 10
Hospitalizations: 4
Deaths: 0
Recall: Yes

Investigation Continues in This Summer's Cyclospora Outbreak Associated with Bagged Salad, CDC Declares Outbreak Over

The CDC has declared that the Cyclospora outbreak associated with Fresh Express Salad products is over.  The outbreak occurred over May through July with 701 total cases with 38 being hospitalized.  Fresh Express did conduct a recall of their branded products as well as store branded products sold at 
ALDI, Giant Eagle, Hy-Vee, Jewel-Osco, ShopRite, and Walmart

FDA has not conclusively found the source of the organism, although canal water is a likely source - "FDA investigated multiple farms identified in the traceback, one of which led to sampling and investigation around a farm in south Florida. FDA continues to work with the state of Florida and the local water district to try to determine the source and impact of Cyclospora that was found in the regional water management canal (C-23), located west of Port St. Lucie, Florida. Given the emerging nature of genetic typing methodologies for this parasite in foods and in environmental samples, the FDA has been unable to determine if the Cyclospora detected in the canal is a genetic match to the clinical cases, therefore, there is currently not enough evidence to conclusively determine the source of this outbreak. However, the presence of Cyclospora in a canal that had previously supplied irrigation water in the region, and specifically to a farm identified in the traceback, suggests the need for a collaborative effort..."


https://www.fda.gov/food/outbreaks-foodborne-illness/outbreak-investigation-cyclospora-bagged-salads-june-2020
Outbreak Investigation of Cyclospora: Bagged Salads (June 2020)
CDC announces the end of the outbreak; FDA continues its investigation.
Case Counts
Total Illnesses: 701
Hospitalizations: 38
Deaths: 0
Illness Onset Date Range: 5/11/2020 – 7/24/2020
States with Cases: GA (1), IL (211), IA (206), KS (5), MA (1), MI (4), MN (86), MO (57), NE (55), 
ND (6), OH (7), PA (2), SD (13), WI (47)