Monday, June 26, 2023

Products Containing Pineapple Recalled After Supplier Recall

Sunrise Growers issued a recall of cut pineapple product due to Listeria. This led to Scenic Fruit Company of Oregon to also recall product since they used that as an ingredient in their product.   While there have been no illnesses associated with this, the recall has extended to product sold at many of the top retailers including Walmart, Target, Trader Joe's, and Aldi.

Is Listeria a risk in cut pineapple?  Not overly so.  One study (Huang, etat, 2018) found that Listeria decreased on cut pineapple when stored at various temperatures. "Under chronic temperature abuse, three different pathogen growth patterns emerged on five test products: both S. enterica and L. monocytogenes grew significantly on cut cantaloupe, honeydew and watermelon at 8 and 12 °C; but only survived on cut radish, and even declined in population on cut pineapple under the same conditions."  Another study (Zeigler, etal, 2018) showed similar impact of pineapple on Listeria, but stated that the biggest issue was final product pH, and this can be an issue with a fruit mixture, such as when blended with items like melon or bananas.



https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/scenic-fruit-company-recalls-organic-pineapple-because-possible-health-risk
Scenic Fruit Company Recalls Organic Pineapple Because of Possible Health Risk
Summary
Company Announcement Date: June 22, 2023
FDA Publish Date: June 23, 2023
Product Type: Food & Beverages
Reason for Announcement: Potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes.
Company Name: Scenic Fruit Company
Brand Name: Cadia and Trader Joe’s
Product Description: Organic Frozen Pineapple and Frozen Fruit Blend Containing Organic Frozen Pineapple

Friday, June 23, 2023

USDA Approves Cell Cultivated Meat Product

As seen across the mass media universe this week, USDA approved cell-cultured meat to be made by two "processors".

So a few questions....
"
What does it taste like?  Like chicken, as provided in an AP News article.  According to the article, "The taste was richer than a chicken breast, more like the dark meat of a thigh. And the texture was both tender and chewy, like a well-cooked chicken thigh should be."    More like meat than Beyond Meat sausage and the Impossible Burger.

Who regulates this?  Well, both FDA and USDA.  In FSIS directive 7800.1
  • FDA and FSIS have agreed to jointly oversee the production of cell-cultured meat and poultry food products and to share information necessary to carry out their respective oversight responsibilities in establishments that harvest cells for cell-cultured meat or poultry food products.
  • FDA has jurisdiction over the preharvest production phase of the animal cell culture technology process. During this phase, living cells are collected from species amenable to the Acts and stored. These living cells are later placed in a controlled environment, such as a bioreactor, and introduced to inputs (e.g., amino acids, glucose, and inorganic salts) and other factors that encourage their growth, multiplication, and differentiation into various cell types.
  • Jurisdiction transfers to FSIS at harvest, i.e., when the cell-culture establishment commences the process of removing the cells from the controlled environment, thereby halting their ability to further grow, multiply, or differentiate into various cell types.
  • FSIS also has jurisdiction over the postharvest processing and labeling of cell-cultured meat and poultry food products. Postharvest, establishments that produce cells for cell-cultured meat or poultry food products may distribute the raw harvested cells in commerce or process the harvested cells into finished products that contain ingredients, such as spices, flavorings, binders, or other ingredients. Some of these establishments may send harvested cells to other establishments for further processing, rather than processing these cells at the harvest facility.
  • Ingredients, including processing aids, used in cell-cultured meat or poultry food products postharvest (including substances used preharvest that remain in the harvested cells) must be considered safe and suitable by FSIS and used in accordance with the intended use listed in 9 CFR 424.21(c) or FSIS Directive 7120.1, Safe and Suitable Ingredients Used in the Production of Meat, Poultry, and Egg Products.
Will you be one of the first to try Test Tube Chicken? As for me, no.


ABC News
https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Food/fda-approves-1st-cell-cultivated-meat-upside-foods/story
USDA approves 1st ever 'cell-cultivated meat' for 2 American manufacturers

UPSIDE will cultivate and sell chicken grown from animal cells in bioreactors.

After years of research and rigorous testing, cell-cultivated meat will officially become part of the U.S. food system.

Emeryville, California-based manufacturer UPSIDE Foods, which gave ABC News a look inside its facilities earlier this year, and Good Meat a cultivated meat division of the plant-based egg substitute food technology company Eat Just, are the first U.S. Department of Agriculture-approved cell-cultivated chicken meat producer and has been fully approved by the U.S. government for commercial sales nationwide.

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

USDA FSIS Releases Updated Best Practice Guidance for Listeria Control in Retail Delicatessens

USDA FSIS released an updated guidance document for controlling Listeria in retail delicatessens.

In the document, they point to four Listeria outbreaks that were linked to deli items.
  • A 2022 outbreak in which the majority of ill people reported eating products sliced at the deli counter. The outbreak strain was identified in environmental samples  collected at a retail deli and several open packages of meats sliced at the deli. 
  • A 2020 outbreak where epidemiologic evidence showed that Italian-style deli  meats was the likely source. The majority of ill people reported purchasing prepackaged deli meats and meats sliced at deli counters. Shopper records were used to help confirm these deli meats as the suspect vehicle; 
  • A 2019 outbreak in which the majority of ill people reported eating products sliced  at the deli counter. The outbreak strain was identified in environmental samples  collected at multiple retail deli locations and in meat sliced at the deli; and 
  • A 2018 outbreak associated with RTE ham products. Ham products were recalled by the manufacturer because of potential contamination with Lm. The  products were identified as being sold at retail delis and as the source of Lm illness that led to a recall.
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/sites/default/files/media_file/documents/FSIS-GD-2023-0004.pdf
FSIS Best Practices Guidance for Controlling Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) in Retail Delicatessens
June 2023

FSIS-GD-2023-0004

This guidance document provides information for retail firms. The guidance covers:
  • Actions retailers can take in the delicatessen (deli) area to decrease the potential for Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) growth and cross-contamination;
  • Steps retailers can take to help ensure that deli products are maintained under sanitary conditions that do not allow Lm  adulteration of the product; 
  • Information from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Food Code, scientific literature, other guidance documents, and lessons learned from meat and poultry establishments that retailers can use to control Lm; and
  • Helpful tools that retail firms can use to identify potential gaps in current best practice procedures

Monday, June 19, 2023

Salsa Dip Product Recalled After Incorrect Back Label Applied Resulting in Undeclared Allergen

Frito-Lay today issued a voluntary recall of select 15 oz. Tostitos Avocado Salsa Jar Dips that may contain an undeclared milk allergen.   While the front of the affected jar is correctly labeled as Tostitos Avocado Salsa, the back of the jar is mislabeled with another product’s nutrition information and declarations. As a result, the allergen milk is not declared on the label.  The product covered by this recall was distributed nationwide at retail stores and via e-commerce channels. Consumers would have been able to purchase the jars as early as April 5, 2023.

https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/frito-lay-issues-allergy-alert-undeclared-milk-mislabeled-tostitos-avocado-salsa-jar-dip
Frito-Lay Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Milk in Mislabeled Tostitos Avocado Salsa Jar Dip
Summary
Company Announcement Date:  June 16, 2023
FDA Publish Date:  June 16, 2023
Product Type:  Food & Beverages
Reason for Announcement:  Undeclared milk
Company Name:  Frito-Lay
Brand Name:  Tostitos
Product Description:  Tostitos Avocado Salsa Dip

Imported Mini Fruit Jelly Cups Recalled After Considered a Choking Hazard

RICHIN TRADING INC. OF ALHAMBRA, CA is voluntarily recalling its MINI FRUIT JELLY CUP (35.27oz. and 52.90 oz.) due to the products being a potential choking hazard based off the product size. Small jelly cups have previously been implicated in choking deaths of children.  The potential choking hazard was confirmed after discussion with a representative from the Food and Drug Administration.


https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/richin-trading-inc-voluntarily-recalls-sunwave-brand-mini-fruit-jelly-cup-3527oz5290oz-because
Richin Trading Inc. Voluntarily Recalls Sunwave Brand Mini Fruit Jelly Cup (35.27oz./52.90oz) Because of Potential Choking Hazard June 16, 2023
Summary
Company Announcement Date:  June 16, 2023
FDA Publish Date:  June 16, 2023
Product Type:  Food & Beverages
Reason for Announcement:  Potential Choking Hazard
Company Name:  Richin Trading Inc.
Brand Name:  Sun Wave
Product Description:  Mini Fruit Jelly Cup, multiple flavors

FDA Issues Warning of Oysters Imported from Korea Due to Potential Norovirus Contamination

The FDA is advising consumers not to eat, as well as restaurants along with food retailers not to sell, and to dispose of Dai One Food Co., Ltd., frozen raw half shell, IQF, and block form oysters with harvest dates between 2/10/2022 and 2/24/2022 and between 4/06/2022 and 4/21/2022 due to the potential for Norovirus contamination.  Product was imported from Korea.
The comes after the Hawaii Department of Health notified the FDA of five illnesses from individuals who consumed raw oyster shooters at a restaurant in Hawaii on 5/10/23. Traceback information revealed the source for the implicated raw oysters was from a shipment by Dai One Food Co., Ltd.

https://www.fda.gov/food/alerts-advisories-safety-information/fda-advises-restaurants-and-retailers-not-serve-or-sell-and-consumers-not-eat-certain-raw-oysters?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery
FDA Advises Restaurants and Retailers Not to Serve or Sell and Consumers Not to Eat Certain Raw Oysters from Dai One Food Co., Ltd., and Central Fisheries Co., Ltd., Republic of Korea, Potentially Contaminated with Norovirus

Frozen Shepherd's Pie Dinners Recalled After Complaints Received for Foreign Material - Clear Plastic

Conagra Brands, Inc., a Russellville, Ark. establishment, is recalling approximately 2,717 pounds of frozen beef shepherd’s pie products that may be contaminated with extraneous materials, specifically clear, flexible plastic. The problem was discovered when the firm received consumer complaints reporting pieces of clear, flexible plastic in the product, and notified FSIS of the situation.
These items were shipped to retail customer distribution centers in California, Colorado, Oregon, and Utah, and further distributed nationwide.

https://www.fsis.usda.gov/recalls-alerts/conagra-brands-inc--recalls-frozen-beef-shepherds-pie-products-due-possible-foreign
Conagra Brands, Inc., Recalls Frozen Beef Shepherd’s Pie Products Due to Possible Foreign Matter Contamination

WASHINGTON, June 16, 2023 – Conagra Brands, Inc., a Russellville, Ark. establishment, is recalling approximately 2,717 pounds of frozen beef shepherd’s pie products that may be contaminated with extraneous materials, specifically clear, flexible plastic, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced today.

Friday, June 16, 2023

WI Establishment Recalls Smoked Sausage Meat Products Due to Foreign Material - Black Plastic Fibers

Johnsonville, LLC, a Sheboygan Falls, Wis. establishment, is recalling approximately 42,062 pounds of ready-to-eat (RTE) “Beddar with Cheddar” pork sausage links that may be contaminated with extraneous materials, specifically very thin strands of black plastic fibers.  The problem was discovered after the firm received one consumer complaint about the product containing very thin strands of black plastic fibers.


So what is a beddar?  I have no clue.  As far as I can tell, it is a made up word.  Perhaps to allow the company to add whatever they want into the product...(no standard of identity).  However, if someone knows otherwise, please let me know.
(But you can see it...some marketing type looking for a word that has not formal definition..in English....that can be used for some new concoction.)


https://www.fsis.usda.gov/recalls-alerts/johnsonville-llc-recalls-beddar-cheddar-ready-eat-pork-sausage-links-due-possible
Johnsonville, LLC, Recalls Beddar With Cheddar Ready-to-Eat Pork Sausage Links Due to Possible Foreign Matter Contamination

WASHINGTON, June 15, 2023 – Johnsonville, LLC, a Sheboygan Falls, Wis. establishment, is recalling approximately 42,062 pounds of ready-to-eat (RTE) “Beddar with Cheddar” pork sausage links that may be contaminated with extraneous materials, specifically very thin strands of black plastic fibers, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced today.

Thursday, June 15, 2023

MA Cheese Company Expands Cheese Recall Again, This Time for Potentially Underprocessed Feta Cheese

Cricket Creek Farm of Williamstown, MA is expanding their recall of Sophelise and Tobasi cheeses due to potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes to include one lot of Berkshire Bloom and one lot of Feta cheese because pasteurization records did not illustrate the heating element reached required temperature.  So what is next?
Previous recalls
June 12 - https://pennstatefoodsafety.blogspot.com/2023/06/ma-cheese-company-expands-recall-to.html
May 30 - https://pennstatefoodsafety.blogspot.com/2023/05/ma-dairy-recalls-soft-cheese-product.html

https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/cricket-creek-farm-expands-recall-cheeses-because-potential-listeria-monocytogenes-contamination-and-0
Cricket Creek Farm Expands Recall of Cheeses Because of Potential Listeria Monocytogenes Contamination and Inadequate Pasteurization
Summary
Company Announcement Date: June 15, 2023
FDA Publish Date: June 15, 2023
Product Type: Food & Beverages Cheese/Cheese Product
Reason for Announcement: Potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes
Company Name: Cricket Creek Farm, LLC
Brand Name: Cricket Creek Farm
Product Description: Sophelise, Tobasi, and Berkshire Bloom Cheeses