as informed in foodsafetynews
Trout recall for E. coli blamed on General Mills flour
Trout recall for E. coli blamed on General Mills flourAn "urgent" product recall issued Thursday and encouraging "immediate action" to remove breaded trout from commerce because it contains General Mills flour linked to an E. coli outbreak was still not available on the Food and Drug Administration website Monday afternoon.Clear Springs Foods Inc. of Buhl, ID, sent the recall notice to purchasing officers and distributors Oct. 6, describing it as an "FDA recall for ingredient with E. coli 0121." The most recent information from FDA related to the E. coli outbreak traced to General Mills flour was posted Sept. 29."This notification is to inform you of a product recall requiring isolation of product — Clear Springs Foods, Sun-Dried Tomato & Roasted Garlic Trout — and notification to Clear Springs Foods of remaining inventory of the item," the recall states.
furthermore readingeagle
Short Takes: Spotted lanternfly, Assuring beef quality, Ephrata Cloister, E. coli recall
Short Takes: Spotted lanternfly, Assuring beef quality, Ephrata Cloister, E. coli recallCOLLEGEVILLE - The spotted lanternfly, an invasive insect that continues to expand its territory in the region, will be the subject of a public meeting Oct. 27 from 6 to 8:30 p.m. in the Goodwill Fire Company, Bally.The spotted lanternfly, Lycorma delicatula, which has the potential to destroy high-value crops, including grapes, tree fruits and hardwood lumber, first was discovered in Berks County in September 2014.Representatives from Penn State Extension, the state Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Kutztown University will provide information about eradication efforts to date and answer questions about the quarantine order that covers several municipalities in Berks, Bucks, Chester, Lehigh and Montgomery counties.
let alone foodsafetynews
Steak sandwiches added to ground beef recall for E. coli
Steak sandwiches added to ground beef recall for E. coliA Pennsylvania company has expanded its E. coli-related beff recall 10-fold, adding steak sandwiches to ground beef patties and burgers recalled last week for the pathogen.The exact volume and distribution of the more than 8,000 pounds of beef products from Silver Springs Farms Inc. of Harleysville, PA, is not clear, with some of it having been sent "to a distributor in Virginia and institutional food establishments in New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland" according to the recall notice."This release is being reissued as an expansion of the Sept. 30 (recall), to include additional product produced from and/or commingled with the source material implicated in the original recall," according to the notice posted on the USDA's Food Service and Inspection Service website.
No comments:
Post a Comment