Kroger and Contessa Premium Foods Inc. Tuesday recalled 24-ounce bags of Kroger brand Meals Made Simple Shrimp Linguini, because it contains undeclared milk product. 
People who have an allergy or severe sensitivity to milk products run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume the product.
The Kroger brand Meals Made Simple Shrimp Linguini was distributed nationally to all divisions of Kroger’s retail stores. 
All units of Kroger brand Meals Made Simple Shrimp Linguini (UPC 1111097756) product are included in the recall. 
One adverse reaction associated with the product recall has already been reported. 
This recall was initiated after Contessa Premium Foods, Inc. discovered that the Kroger brand Meals Made Simple Shrimp Linguini included an ingredient labeled only as “Natural Flavors” that may have used milk or milk byproducts. 
Consumers who have an allergy or severe sensitivity to milk products and have purchased the 24 ounce bags of Kroger brand Meals Made Simple Shrimp Linguini are urged to either contact Contessa Premium Foods Inc. at 888-832-8000 Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, or just return them to the place of purchase for a full refund. 
Headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio, Kroger is one of the nation’s largest grocery retailers, with fiscal 2009 sales of $76.7 billion.
San Pedro, CA-based Contessa Premium Foods, Inc. imports, processes, exports, and distributes frozen seafood and convenience meals in North America, Europe, and Asia.

Are Iowa chefs having trouble landing dates these days? If so, it may explain why one head chef was caught kissing toads by the Scott County Health Department. The restaurant has been fined $355 for the dangerous (and desperate) act, which was caught on video.  The owner of the Davenport, Iowa restaurant where the chef works has agreed to pay the fine, and promises to address the health risks associated with amphibian handling.

The restaurant’s head chef was seen holding two toads that he found outside the building.  In the video he kisses them each a few times, then proceeds to lick their bodies and stuff them both into his mouth. After this he sets them back on the prep table and continues cooking. The chef’s brother videotaped the entire episode and posted it on YouTube. Though the act was meant to be a joke, the health inspectors watching the video did not find it amusing. Toads can carry a number of different diseases, including Salmonella. Food inspector Lindsay Gorishek said that they found multiple different food safety violations in the video.  The Scott County Health Department fined the restaurant for compromising sanitation guidelines and failing to abide by good hygienic practices.

A half million pounds of “ready to eat” sausages and hog headcheeses are being recalled in Louisiana for possible contamination with Listeria monocytogenes.
The Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry’s Office of Animal Health and Food Safety said Veron Foods, LLC, based in Prairieville, LA, produced the 500,000 pounds sausage and cheese that is being recalled.
Included in the recall are:
 
  • All Size Packages of Veron Hot Smoked Sausage
  • All Size Packages of Veron Mild Smoked Sausage      
  • All Size Packages of Martin Hot Smoked Sausage
  • All Size Packages of Martin Mild Smoked Sausage
  • All Size Packages of Veron Andouille Sausage
  • All Size Packages of Martin Andouille Sausage
  • All Size Packages of Veron Hog Head Cheese
The products subject to recall bear the establishment number “LA 22″ inside the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry mark of inspection as well as date codes of 010110 through 111310 and were distributed to retail establishments and institutions within the state of Louisiana.
 
The contamination of the ready-to-eat products was discovered through a foodborne illness investigation that resulted in a product sample testing positive for Listeria monocytogenes.
 
Consumption of food contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes can cause listeriosis, an uncommon but potentially fatal illness. Healthy people rarely contract listeriosis. However, listeriosis can cause miscarriages and stillbirths, and can also cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in those with weak immune systems, such as infants, the elderly, and persons with HIV infection or undergoing chemotherapy. Infection can spread to the nervous system, resulting in high fever, severe headache, neck stiffness, nausea, confusion, and convulsions.
 
The Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify that firms notify their customers (including restaurants) of a recall and that steps are taken to make certain that a suspect product is no longer available to consumers.
 
Consumers with questions about the recall may contact Veron Food LLC, at 225-622-3262.

Letter from the Editor: No Magic

On August 15, 2010, in Food Saftey, HRBAudit Blog, by HRBAudit

The President, with his traveling family in tow, will be enjoying this weekend on the Gulf of Mexico in the sunshine state of Florida.  One of the First Family’s missions in Panama City will be to consume Gulf seafood and pronounce it safe.
So much of this safe talking has been on the agenda that the always-creative Obama Foodorama suggested this week that the White House had become “a branch of the Gulf Coast Seafood Marketing Board.”
While keeping an area of the Gulf’s federal waters that is about the size of Alabama off limits to both commercial and recreational fishing, federal agencies have used every opportunity to say that seafood that is being harvested is safe.
Safe seafood coming from the clean waters of the Gulf is the story the Obama Administration wants coming from those states after going through about 100 days when the federal government at times looked impotent and incompetent. 
Gulf fisherman, however, are not buying the magical recovery theory (from the largest environmental disaster in U.S. history).  This week, they put together a scientific mission of their own, sending the 60-foot Capt. Quinntinn to sea to collect samples off Pass Christian, MS. 
“We sampled dispersed oil at several locations between the Harbor and the northern tip of Cat Island,” Ed Cake, a biologist with Gulf Environmental Associates in Ocean Springs, MS, said.
“At each location an absorbent pad (Pro-Sorbents Oil-Select #10007 pad) was tied to a small grappling hook to form of a cone-shaped drogue and submerged into the water column for 30 to 60 seconds,” Cake continued.
“When the absorbent pad was immersed into the areas of “black water” it would absorb a yellowish oil mixture that remained on the pad when the water was hand-squeezed therefrom. The oil had a similar color to that reported by Harriet Perry under the carapace of megalops larvae of blue crabs. ”When the pad was submerged in normal-colored Sound water near Cat Island, little or no dispersed oil would adsorb to the pad.  There was a definite difference between the amount of dispersed oil present in the ‘black water’ samples and those from other areas.  ”When the vessel was stopped for sampling, small, 0.5- to 1.0-inch-diameter bubbles would periodically rise to the surface and shortly thereafter they would pop leaving a small oil sheen.  ”According to the fishermen, several of Bap’s Vessels-of-Opportunity (Carolina Skiffs with tanks of dispersants [Corexit?]) were hand-spraying in Mississippi Sound off the Pass Christian Harbor in prior days/nights.  It appears to this observer that the dispersants are still in the area and working their “magic” on the oil in the water column. ”The bubbles, including clumps of smaller bubbles, persisted on the Sound surface despite the fact that sea conditions were not generating any surface foam or bubbles.  It was evident to this observer that some organic agent or surfactant was present [dispersants?] that helped to form and sustain the smaller bubbles throughout the “black water” areas.”
Cake and the others, including boat Capt. James “Catfish” Miller immediately shared their findings with a community meeting of fishermen and their families in nearby D’Iberville, MS. 
After hearing the report, the fishing community unanimously voted to support a petition calling for the firing of Dr. Bill Walker as Mississippi’s Director of the Department of Marine Resources.
It was Walker who last week opened Mississippi state waters to fishing and whose action was hailed by none other than Dr. Margaret Hamburg, Commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 
Last week in this space, I called out that old definition of news.   It is NOT news when a dog bites man, but it is news when a man bites dog.  Here we have the fin and shell fish industries saying state and federal regulators are moving too fast and not doing enough to protect their product and the public who consumes it.
Therefore I think it a whole lot more important that fishermen are not eating from the Gulf, nor feeding its harvest to their families than whatever the President is having for dinner.
You can view photographs from the Pass Christian Harbor mission on the Bridge the Gulf Flickr page.

Event
ServSafe® Food Manager Certification Class
When
Monday, September 20, 2010
9:00am - Click on class for more information & register - All Ages
Where
Huntsville - Holiday Inn Express Hotel and Suites (map)
3808 University Drive
Huntsville, AL 35816
Other Info
ServSafe® delivers high-quality training options for every manager. From the classroom to online, and in a variety of languages, this is your food safety training and certification solution.
The ServSafe® Food Protection Manager Certification is nationally recognized and accredited. To date, more than 3 million ServSafe® Food Protection Manager Certifications have been awarded.
See the advantages for yourself with an overview of ServSafe® Fifth Edition. You’ll discover this is the food safety training program that truly is “workforce ready.”

Do you meet state requirement?

Alabama | Florida | Georgia| Mississippi | N. Carolina | S. Carolina | Tennessee


Class Details:

Time - 9:00am - 6pm Lecture, 5:30 - 6:00pm Review, 6:00 PM Test/ReTest (If you are doing the online express test make sure you bring your laptop with WiFi)
Food & Beverage - Coffee & Soft Drinks all day and 45 minute lunch break around 1:00pm
Dress - Business Casual
Books & Test - Will be given out the day of the class. If you have your own books please download & print out the new 2009 FDA Food Code update to the 5th Edition - Download Link

    Class with ServSafe® Essentials Book w/ 2009 USDA UPDATE

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010(Standard ServSafe Managers Class):price:160.00:end] Standard Seminar Style Class - $160.00 (Standard paper test. Test score in 10 business days) *

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010(Express ServSafe Managers Class) :price:180.00:end] Express Seminar Style Class - $180.00 (Express electronic test is given on computer and you will have your test score that day. You must supply you own lap top with WiFi and have Internet Explorer / FireFox web browser installed.)*

    Class with out ServSafe® Essentials Book w/ 2009 USDA UPDATE

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010(Standard ServSafe Managers Class):price:120.00:end] Standard Seminar Style ClassNO BOOK - $120.00 (Standard paper test. Test score in 10 business days)*

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010(Express ServSafe Managers Class) :price:140.00:end] Express Seminar Style ClassNO BOOK - $140.00 (Express electronic test is given on computer and you will have your test score that day. You must supply you own lap top with WiFi and have Internet Explorer / FireFox web browser installed.)*

    Proctored Test/Re-Test

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010 - HRBAudit Proctored Test (Paper w/HRBAudit) :price:50.00:end] Standard Paper – Course taken with HRBAudit – $50.00 (Standard paper test. Test score in 10 business days)*

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010 - HRBAudit Proctored Test (Electronic w/HRBAudit) :price:70.00:end] Express Electronic – Course taken with HRBAudit – $70.00 (Express electronic test is given on computer and you will have your test score that day. You must supply you own lap top with WiFi and have Internet Explorer / FireFox web browser installed.)

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010 - Proctored Test (Paper w/0 HRBAudit) :price:75.00:end] Standard Paper – Course not taken with HRBAudit – $75.00 (Standard paper test. Test score in 10 business days)

    [wp_cart:September 20, 2010 - HRBAudit Proctored Test (Express w/o HRBAudit) :price:95.00:end] Electronic Express – Course not taken with HRBAudit – $95.00 (Express electronic test is given on computer and you will have your test score that day. You must supply you own lap top with WiFi and have Internet Explorer / FireFox web browser installed.)*

    If you sign up for a ServSafe Food Manager Safety Class you have read and agree to the *Online Store Details – PLEASE READ .


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    Uncommon as typhoid fever is in the United States, a rare outbreak is underway in California and Nevada, and it may spread to other western states where a frozen fruit product was sold.
    Typhoid fever is a life-threatening illness caused by the bacterium Salmonella Typhi.
    The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta announced Aug. 12 that three cases of typhoid fever were confirmed in California and four more in Nevada.  
    CDC linked the illnesses to frozen mamey pulp recalled a day earlier by Goya Foods after it was found contaminated with Salmonella.  While based in Secaucus, NJ, Goya distributed the red fruit pulp, which is often used in smoothies, in western states including:  AK, AZ, CA, CO, HI, NM, NV, OR, TX, UT, and WA.
    Only about 400 typhoid fever cases a year are reported in the U.S., and most of those occur after people have traveled to undeveloped areas of the world.

    The onset dates for the current outbreak so far have fallen between April and July. CDC said the victims’ ages ranged from 4 to 31.  Five of the seven victims are known to have drank shakes or smoothies made with frozen mamey fruit–which is grown in South and Central America before being peeled and mashed into pulp.
    Four of the five are certain the pulp came from Goya Foods.
    Since it takes up to eight weeks for an infected person to develop Typhoid Fever symptoms, the outbreak may claim other victims in other states where the fruit pulp was sold.
    CDC says anyone who suspects they might have Typhoid Fever (sustained fever as high as 103° to 104° F (39° to 40° C),  weakness, or stomach pains, headache, loss of appetite–In some cases, a rash of flat, rose-colored spots)  should see a doctor immediately, adding:
    “You will probably be given an antibiotic to treat the disease. Three commonly prescribed antibiotics are ampicillin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and ciprofloxacin. Persons given antibiotics usually begin to feel better within two to three days, and deaths rarely occur. 
    “However, persons who do not get treatment may continue to have fever for weeks or months, and as many as 20 percent may die from complications of the infection.
    “Even if your symptoms seem to go away, you may still be carrying S. Typhi. If so, the illness could return, or you could pass the disease to other people. In fact, if you work at a job where you handle food or care for small children, you may be barred legally from going back to work until a doctor has determined that you no longer carry any typhoid bacteria.
    “If you are being treated for typhoid fever, it is important to do the following:
    “Keep taking the prescribed antibiotics for as long as the doctor has asked you to take them.
    “Wash your hands carefully with soap and water after using the bathroom, and do not prepare or serve food for other people. This will lower the chance that you will pass the infection on to someone else.
    Have your doctor perform a series of stool cultures to ensure that no S. Typhi bacteria remain in your body.”