Peanut Butter Recall Rapidly Expands, Not Just Jars of Jif You Should Be Throwing Away Now
Editor’s Note: Our readers responded strongly to this story when it originally ran; we’re reposting it here in case you missed it. Details have been updated as more information has become available.
It’s no secret that peanut butter is one of America’s favorite ingredients: The smooth (or crunchy) spread is found in candy, confections, snacks, protein bars, ice cream and baked goods.
Now the ingredient’s seemingly ubiquitous presence in the grocery store is coming back to bite peanut butter lovers in a major way.
The massive Jif recall, sparked by a salmonella outbreak in states across the country, has rapidly expanded to include items using the peanut product.
A June 21 notice from the FDA listed 20 items that have now been recalled in connection with the Jif contamination.
Contaminated items appear to be from locations across store departments, creating a nightmare for shoppers.
Products described on the list include food like fudge, snack packs and packaged fruit trays.
The FDA is encouraging consumers not to consume any of the products currently identified or jars of contaminated Jif that appear to be the origin of the outbreak.
In the original May recall, the FDA stated potentially tainted jars of Jif would have a lot code from 1274425 through 2140425.
The FDA, along with CDC and state and local partners, are investigating a multistate outbreak of Salmonella Senftenberg infections linked to certain Jif peanut butter products produced at the J.M. Smucker Company facility in Lexington, Kentucky. https://t.co/tflb2yhDFh pic.twitter.com/mb1SdpHJIb
— U.S. FDA (@US_FDA) May 21, 2022
Officials from the FDA appear certain about the factory origin of the outbreak.
“FDA conducted Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) analysis on an environmental sample collected at the Lexington, KY, J.M. Smucker Company facility in 2010,” the agency wrote in its latest recall notice.
“The analysis shows that this 2010 environmental sample matches the strain causing illnesses in this current outbreak. Epidemiologic evidence indicates that Jif brand peanut butter produced in the J.M. Smucker Company facility located in Lexington, KY, is the likely cause of illnesses in this outbreak.”
According to the latest FDA-provided data, the total number of illnesses has grown to 16.
Although there have been no deaths, two people have been hospitalized with complications following infection.
The outbreak currently spans Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts, Missouri, Ohio, North Carolina, New York, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia and Washington.
Tainted product is not confined to these states and has been confirmed to have been distributed nationwide and overseas.
Hopefully, the recall on this favorite food and ingredient will soon be lifted as all contaminated products are found and destroyed.
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