After a warning from the Pesticide Alert Network about excessive levels of pesticides on vegetables sold in markets, Secretary General of the FDA, dr. Wanchai Sattayawuthipong Tuesday stated that the FDA has been continuously inspecting and monitoring mar
Operators of two New York food processing companies agreed to stop preparing foods until they can comply with federal food safety laws and regulations.
Smithfield Packaged Meats, doing business as Stefano Foods of Charlotte, North Carolina, is recalling about 24,048 pounds of pepperoni five cheese calzone that may be contaminated with foreign materials.
ALDI is voluntary recalling AnnaSea Wasabi Ahi Poke Hawaiian Poke Kits and Lime Ahi Poke Hawaiian Poke Kits because they were stored at incorrect temperature at retail store locations in North Carolina, Ohio, and Maryland/Virginia.
The Pictsweet Company has recalled 960 cases of Pictsweet Farms 12-ounce Steam’ables Baby Brussels Sprouts because they may contain undeclared milk and soy allergens.
In Oppenau on Friday morning, police and firefighters were called, as in a post office several employees and a customer had respiratory problems because of an unknown gas.
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture is issuing a consumer advisory for ice cream mix distributed by Autumnwood Farm of Forest Lake, Minnesota because the product was inadequately pasteurized.
Two products have been recalled. Ready-to-eat and raw beef and pork products are recalled for lack of inspection, the other salads for undeclared peanuts.
The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) has received confirmation of approximately 90 cases of cyclosporiasis, an intestinal illness caused by the microscopic Cyclospora parasite.
On Friday, it was announced that the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) had linked the deaths of nine Europeans to the listeria contamination in one of Greenyard's Hungarian factories.
Both USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration oversee food product recalls—the removal of risky food products from the U.S. marketplace.
Tea towels, or kitchen towels, can cause cross-contamination in the kitchen, leading to food poisoning, according to a study posted in ASN Microbe 2018.