If you use this popular vinaigrette on your salad, stop now, the FDA warns
This could lead to a serious or fatal reaction to some consumers.
Salads are a must for lunch and dinner, and they are also a fairly reliable option if you are looking to eat something healthy in a restaurant. With as muchSalad types To choose, it's fun to mix - maybe you order a salted Greek salad or prefer to mix things with a sweet and salty poke salad. You can add or subtract different ingredients depending on your tastes and perhaps your number of calories, but it is unlikely that you will completely jump the vinaigrette. If you deprive a special variety, you will want to take into account a new warning from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Read the rest to discover what the popular vinaigrette is now subject to recall and why the FDA asks you to stop using it.
Read this then:If you have this condiment at home, do not eat it, the FDA warns.
The FDA has issued several reminders for dressings and condiments.
Reminders can be both frightening and annoying, but they are also set up to protect the public from potential health risks. These apply to all foods, and dressings and sauces are no exception. Earlier this year, Conagra Brands has published aVoluntary reminder for hisSish-Bone Mille And large blue cheese cheese cheese, due to the presence of an undeclared allergen - egg. Consumers were invited to throw recalled dressings and report any adverse reaction to a doctor.
The condiments were also under fire, as last week, Rushdi Food Industries announced aVoluntary reminder of its powerful sesame 10.9 oz organic tahini (pressed). Tahini, a condiment made from sesame seeds on the ground, has several uses, including a salad garnish. Tahini products have been drawn due to potential contamination bySalmonellaAnd consumers were invited to "interrupt the use immediately".
Now another dressing faces a meticulous examination, and it is used in one of themore Popular salads.
The recalled products were sold in a grocery store.
Caesar's salad, made of Roman lettuce, croutons, parmesan and traditionally anchovies, is a classic. Interestingly, that has nothing to do with the famous Roman dictatorJulius Caesar, but wasin fact the name of Italian chiefCaesar Cardini, who first concocted and served the salad in Tijuana, Mexico, in 1924. And if you are a César salad lover, you know that he is not complete without his César Signature vinaigrette.
You may prefer to do your dressing from zero, but if you buy it at the grocery store instead, there is a special variety that you will have to avoid.
August 26, Van Law Food Products Inc.made a voluntary reminder From its whole food market 365 Biological creamy vinaigrette, according to an opinion published by the FDA. The vinaigrette was packed in glass bottles of 12 ounces and sold in the department of products or dairy products on Whole Foods markets across the United States.
The recalled products were distributed in Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgie, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Sud Caroline, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
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The dressing can make some people sick.
Caesar vinaigrette products were recalled after learning that they contained soy and wheat, which are both known (and currents) of allergens.
None of the allergens was listed on the vinaigrette label, which means that allergic people or sensitivities could buy and consume these products without knowing it. This could then lead to a "serious or fatal allergic reaction", indicates the notice of recall.
An investigation into the labeling misadventure revealed that the problem had been caused "when the rear label of another product was wrongly put in the recalled product".
Throw it in the trash if you have it.
To date, there has been no disease report, but the FDA still asks consumers to be cautious. If you bought this Whole Foods vinaigrette, check if your bottle is involved in the recall by looking for the universal product code (UPC) of 99482-49027 and the best on April 6, 2023. AE0FCC31AE342FD3A1346EBB1F342FCB
The FDA educates those who bought the dressing to throw it away and request a refund from the store by providing your receipt.
For questions about the recall, consumers are invited to call Whole Foods Market at 1-844-936-8255 between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. Central standard time (CST).