ADVERTISEMENT

Grocery chains including Walmart, Whole Foods, and Trader Joe's are recalling vegetables in a food safety scare

Grocery chains including Walmart, Whole Foods, and Trader Joe's have issued a recall on certain vegetable products that may be contaminated with listeria.

  • A vegetable supplier for major grocery chains issued a recall on certain products after a random test showed listeria contamination.
  • Grocery chains including Whole Foods, Walmart, and Trader Joe's have also issued recalls.
  • Listeria symptoms include "high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea."
ADVERTISEMENT

Grocery chains including Walmart, Whole Foods, and Trader Joe's have issued a recall on certain vegetable products from packaged vegetable supplier Mann Packing.

A random sampling by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency found a single positive result for listeria, leading Mann Packing to issue a recall "out of an abundance of caution" last week.

The recall has led to several follow-up recalls at major grocers across the US.

ADVERTISEMENT

Walmart is recalling certain bagged veggies, including broccoli and cauliflower. Trader Joe's is recalling its Kohlrabi Salad Blend. And, Whole Foods Market is recalling certain salads from 10 stores in California.

Regional grocers have also been impacted. Meijer is recalling a long list of packed produce items. Albertsons, Safeway, Vons, and Pak N' Save are voluntarily recalling certain fresh vegetable trays and cups in eight states. H-E-B recalled certain single-serve soups made with the vegetables.

Listeria is a bacteria that can be extremely dangerous if it infects people with weakened immune systems, such as the elderly and children. According to the FDA, symptoms include "high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea."

At this point, there are no reported illnesses associated with any Mann Packing products.

Pre-cut packaged vegetables are one of the food products most susceptible to food poisoning contamination. Attorney Bill Marler, who specializes in foodborne illness cases, says that he avoids pre-cut and pre-washed fruits and vegetables "like the plague."

FOLLOW BUSINESS INSIDER AFRICA

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Recommended articles

Offshore sportsbooks and best sports betting sites

Offshore sportsbooks and best sports betting sites

Top 5 African cities with the most unaffordable real estate in 2024

Top 5 African cities with the most unaffordable real estate in 2024

US says it is still engaged with West African juntas

US says it is still engaged with West African juntas

Opinion Piece: Accelerating sustainable development goals through better agricultural risk management

Opinion Piece: Accelerating sustainable development goals through better agricultural risk management

Zimbabwe is set to honor Russian victory with a monument

Zimbabwe is set to honor Russian victory with a monument

Top cross-border payment companies in Africa on recent global ranking

Top cross-border payment companies in Africa on recent global ranking

Studio Monkey in collaboration with Worldwide FM and Gilles Peterson launches initiative to support grassroot music communities

Studio Monkey in collaboration with Worldwide FM and Gilles Peterson launches initiative to support grassroot music communities

NexaScale marks one-year milestone with visionary initiatives empowering Africa's youth for the future of work

NexaScale marks one-year milestone with visionary initiatives empowering Africa's youth for the future of work

How Patrice Motsepe-backed GoSolr wants to solve South Africa's power crises

How Patrice Motsepe-backed GoSolr wants to solve South Africa's power crises

ADVERTISEMENT