Category Archives: Food Toxin

New Zealand – Surti brand Paneer – E.coli

MPI

Surti brand Paneer

18 May 2021: Surti Indian Samosa Limited is recalling a specific batch of Surti brand Paneer due to the possible presence of E.coli.

Surti brand Paneer (various weights).
Product identification

Product type

 Cheese

Name of product (size)

 Surti brand Paneer (various weights)

Date marking

Best before 30JUN21

Package size and description

The product is sold in plastic packaging of various weights of approximately 200g to 500g.

Distribution

The product is sold at ethnic retail stores throughout New Zealand.

Auckland

  • Angels Spice and Superette, 284 Blockhouse Bay Road, Avondale, Auckland
  • Arjun Supermarket, 5 Rankin Avenue, New Lynn Auckland
  • ARKH Food and Spices Limited, 1/222 Swanson Road, Auckland
  • Bikanervala, 2 White Swan Road, Mount Roskill, Auckland
  • Bombay Chinese, Queens Court, 368 Queen Street, Auckland
  • Chevalier Produce, 34 Fremlin Place, Avondale, Auckland
  • Continental Halal Meats and Spices, 57G Cavendish Drive, Manukau, Auckland
  • Get Fresh Mangere, 99 Westney Road, Mangere, Auckland
  • Get Fresh Otahuhu, 81 Station Road, Otahuhu, Auckland
  • Jay’s Fresh Mart Auckland, 59 Shirley Road, Papatoetoe, Auckland
  • Kelvin Fruit and Vege Shop Auckland, 8 Mahia Road, Manuwera, Auckland
  • Lotus Supermarket, 43B Cavendish Drive, Manukau, Auckland
  • Lotus Supermarket, 64 Stoddard Road, Mount Roskill, Auckland
  • Madinah Halal Meats, 1/16 Lambie Drive, Auckland
  • Massey Fruit and Vege, 1/2 Triangle Road, Massey, Auckland
  • Namaste Delhi Limited, 89 Great South Road, Epsom, Auckland
  • Om Sai Foods & Spices, 3A/7 Reeves Road, Pakuranga, Auckland
  • Patel Brothers Supermarket, 26 Carr Road, Mount Roskill, Auckland
  • Point Chev Fresh, 1104/D Great North Road, Point Chevalier, Auckland 1
  • Puhinui Superette, 202 Puhinui Road, Papatoetoe, Auckland
  • Raavi Foods And Spices Trading Limited, 421 Richardson Road, Mount Roskill Auckland
  • Saffron Foods Henderson, 214 Universal Drive, Henderson, Auckland
  • Spice Corner, 691 Manukau Road, Royal Oak, Auckland
  • Vege Oasis Mangere, 376 Massey Road, Mangere East, Auckland
  • Volt Convenience Store CBD, 107 Mayoral Drive, Auckland
  • Yogiji’s Food Mart, 7/251 Lincoln Road, Henderson, Auckland
  • Younus Halal Meat and Spices Limited, 1482B Dominion Road, Mount Roskill, Auckland

Christchurch

  • Krazy Price Mart Limited, 429 Tuam Street, Philipstown

Wellington

  • Indian Stores Limited, 218A Riddiford Street, Newtown

Notes

This recall does not affect any other Surti brand products.

Consumer advice

Customers are asked to check the date mark printed on the back of the product packaging.

Affected product should not be consumed unless it is cooked thoroughly (piping hot all the way through). There have been no reports of associated illness. However, if you have consumed any of this product and have any concerns about your health, seek medical advice.

Customers should return the product to their retailer for a full refund or cook thoroughly (piping hot all the way through).

Escherichia coli (E.coli) is a bacterium that normally lives in the intestines of people and other warm-blooded animals. Although most strains of E.coli are harmless, some types can cause serious illness, with severe diarrhoea and stomach cramps.

Who to contact

If you have questions, contact Surti Indian Samosa Limited.

  • Phone: 09 273 4164
  • Address: 1 Newsome Street, Onehunga, Auckland.

France – Product recall: Thaëron France Pavilion shellfish Thaëron 300g tray -ASP Toxins

Oulah

Product recall: Thaëron France Pavilion shellfish Thaëron 300g tray

ENCOUNTERED PROBLEM

Possible presence of ASP toxins

PROPOSED SOLUTION

Do not consume and return to the point of sale for reimbursement.

These shells come from a fishing area contaminated by a toxin-producing algae. In the event of the appearance of gastrointestinal and / or neurological symptoms, consult your doctor, telling him that you have consumed shellfish contaminated with ASP phycotoxins.

FURTHER INFORMATION

▸ Barcode
3661737004869


▸ Lot
13221


▸ DLC – DDM
05/19/2021


▸ Start date / End of marketing
since 05/13/2021


▸ Health mark
FR 29 236 500 CE


▸ Source
https://www.supercasino.fr/

Kenya – Kenya can’t regulate its way out of aflatoxin menace

Standard Media

Enforcement of food safety regulations is necessary but insufficient to solve this problem. Aflatoxin contamination must be addressed at its root, during production and on-farm storage.

Research by International Food Policy Research Institute and others points to some solutions including education, incentivising farmers and removing the middleman. Educating farmers about how to prevent aflatoxin leads to better practices, which can also improve the quality of grain.

Kenya must also make aflatoxin prevention technologies affordable. Most farmers dry their maize on old woven sisal bags, through which mold spores can permeate. Upgrading to impermeable tarps or drying sheets is a highly cost-effective approach to aflatoxin control, but still costs farmers more than used bags. The new KEBS standard for tarps used in agriculture, which is expected to increase the availability of lower-cost tarps, is an important step forward.

RASFF Alerts – STEC E.coli – Beef Meat – Organic Beef Meat

RASFF

E. Coli STEC (O26) in bovine fresh meat from New Zealand in the Netherlands

RASFF

Shigatoxin-producing Escherichia coli (in 1 out of 5 samples /25g) in organic bovine meat from Spain in Italy

RASFF Alert – Ochratoxin A – Nutmeg

RASFF

Ochratoxin-A in nutmeg from Indonesia in the Netherlands

USA – FDA to Implement Sampling Effort for Lettuce Grown in Salinas Valley, California

FDA

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will be collecting and testing samples of lettuce grown in California’s Salinas Valley from local commercial coolers from May through November 2021. The agency will test the samples for Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), including E. coli O157:H7, and Salmonella spp. as part of ongoing surveillance efforts following reoccurring outbreaks linked to this region, including most recently in the fall of 2020.

The FDA assignment will direct sampling to be conducted at commercial cooling and cold storage facilities where field heat is removed from harvested lettuce and where product is cold-stored before processing. Sampling may include pre-cooled product (preferred) or post-cooled product. Sample collection at commercial coolers helps the FDA efficiently obtain samples from multiple farms at centralized locations and facilitates prompt traceback and follow-up if contamination is detected.

The agency plans to collect and test a total of approximately 500 post-harvest samples of iceberg, leaf and romaine lettuce. Each sample will consist of 10 subsamples, each made up of one head of lettuce (trimmed, cored and possibly wrapped), or in the case of romaine lettuce, loose leaves or one package of hearts.  FDA laboratories will conduct all testing.

During this sampling assignment, the FDA will take extra precautions to help ensure the safety of agency investigators and firm employees during the COVID-19 pandemic. FDA investigators will preannounce their visits to firms per the Agency’s COVID-19 safety practices. They will be outfitted with personal protective equipment (PPE) and will carry out their work while adhering to local, state and applicable CDC guidance.

Helping to ensure the safety of leafy greens remains a high priority of the FDA. This assignment adds to other work underway in collaboration with stakeholders in the California Central Coast growing region to identify where the recurring strain of pathogenic E. coli is persisting and the likely routes of leafy green contamination with STECs.  This includes continued implementation of actions identified in the recently updated Leafy Greens Action Plan, including a multi-year longitudinal  study to assess the environmental factors impacting the presence of foodborne pathogens in this region. Consistent with the action plan, if the FDA detects a pathogen such as E. coli O157:H7, the agency will conduct a follow-up investigation to identify potential sources and routes of contamination. Such investigations are designed to inform what additional preventive measures may be needed to help prevent outbreaks of foodborne illness.

Research – ANSES sets value to protect people from emerging toxin in shellfish

Food Safety News

A French agency has proposed a guideline value to protect consumers of shellfish from a group of marine biotoxins.

The French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety (ANSES) said brevetoxins (BTX) were first detected in mussels in Corsica in 2018. If ingested by humans, these toxins can cause neurological, gastrointestinal or cardiovascular symptoms.

After this finding a few years ago, ANSES was asked by the Directorate General for Food (DGAL) and Directorate General for Health (DGS) to propose a guideline value to protect the health of people who eat shellfish. The agency has published an opinion and report on the subject in French.

Based on reports of food poisoning in other countries, ANSES has set a guideline value to protect consumers of products such as oysters and mussels. This value is 180 µg/kg of shellfish flesh, expressed in BTX-3 equivalents, with BTX-3 being the form of brevetoxin used as the reference.

Denmark – Aflatoxins in buckwheat flour

DVFA

Biogan A / S is recalling a batch of organic gluten-free buckwheat flour, as aflatoxins have been found in the product.

Recalled Foods , Published: May 12, 2021

And

What food:
BOOK WHEAT – gluten free – organic (see picture here )
Net weight: 1000 grams
Best before date: 31/03/2022
Batch No .: B2110657001-U 
Sold in:
Grocery and health food stores across the country
Company recalling:
Biogan A / S, 8520 Lystrup
Cause:
Aflatoxins have been detected in the product.
Risk:
Aflatoxin is a toxin produced by molds and can be carcinogenic.
Advice for consumers:
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration advises consumers to deliver the product back to the store where it was purchased or to discard it.

Luxembourg – UPDATE – RECALL: SPIRELLI DINKEL VOLLKORN, BANDNUDELN DINKEL-VOLLKORN AND PENNE DINKEL-VOLLKORN FROM THE NATURATA BRAND – Mycotoxins – Ergot Alkaloids

SAP

Presence of ergot alkaloids in too large a quantity

The Luxembourg food safety authorities are recalling the following products:

Last name Spirelli Dinkel Vollkorn
Mark Naturata
Unit 500 g
Bar code 4024297060444
Use by date (DLC) 28.10.2022
Last name Bandnudeln Dinkel-Vollkorn
Mark Naturata
Unit 500 g
Date of Minimum Durability (DDM) 10/28/22
Last name Penne Dinkel-Vollkorn
Mark Naturata
Unit 500 g
Date of Minimum Durability (DDM) 10/27/22

Danger: presence of ergot alkaloids in too large a quantity

Ergot alkaloids are toxins produced by a fungus (Claviceps purpurea) that mainly contaminate rye, wheat, triticale, oats, millet and barley. Too much of them can cause nausea, headaches, hypertension, hallucinations, cramps, and even breathing problems.

Sale in Luxembourg by: De Biobuttek

A sale by other operators cannot be excluded.

Source of information: De Biobuttek and BIOGROS recall notification

Hong Kong – Not to consume a kind of French raw milk goat’s cheese suspected to be contaminated with Salmonella

CFS

Food Alerts / Allergy Alerts

Not to consume a kind of French raw milk goat’s cheese suspected to be contaminated with salmonella

Issue Date 7.5.2021
Source of Information Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) of the European Commission
Food Product A kind of raw milk goat’s cheese imported from France
Product Name and Description Product name: Picodon Aop
Brand: Janier
Batch numbers: 12260610, 13260610, 14260610, 15260610, 16260610
Place of origin: France
Importer: Le Quinze Vins Limited
Reason For Issuing Alert
  • The Centre for Food Safety (CFS) received a notification from the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) of the European Commission that the above-mentioned raw milk goat’s cheese sample was found by the French manufacturer to have been contaminated with salmonella. The manufacturer concerned has initiated a recall locally.
  • According to the information provided by the RASFF, some of the affected products have been imported into Hong Kong.
Action Taken by the Centre for Food Safety
  • Upon learning of the incident, the CFS immediately contacted the local importer concerned for follow-up.
  • A preliminary investigation found that the above-mentioned importer had imported the above batches of the product, and some of them were sold. Upon notification by the exporter concerned earlier, the importer has already stopped sale of the affected product, initiated a recall and destroyed the remaining product.
  • The CFS has alerted the trade to the incident, will continue to follow up and take appropriate action.
Advice to the Trade Stop using or selling the product concerned immediately if they possess it.
Advice to Consumers Not to consume the affected batches of the product if they have bought any.
Further Information The CFS press release

Members of the public may call the importer’s hotline at 2329 8028 during office hours for enquiries about the recall.

Centre for Food Safety
Food and Environmental Hygiene Department
2021-5-7