Walmart Kroger Target Food Recalls: Walmart, Kroger, and Target Hit by Wave of Food Recalls Over Salmonella Fears
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Several popular snack products sold at three of America’s largest retailers are off shelves this summer, pulled after contamination concerns and labeling issues prompted urgent recalls affecting shoppers nationwide.
What triggered the recalls
The bulk of the action traces back to a single root cause: a third-party supplier’s dry milk powder flagged for potential Salmonella contamination. Because that ingredient feeds into seasoning blends used by multiple snack brands, the fallout spread quickly across the supply chain, pulling products from Walmart, Kroger, Target, and ALDI locations across the country.
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Salmonella is a serious bacterial infection. It can cause diarrhea, fever, and stomach cramps within 12 to 72 hours of exposure, and in vulnerable populations, including young children, the elderly, and people with weakened immune systems, it can require hospitalization.
The products pulled from shelves
Pennsylvania-based Utz Quality Foods moved first. On May 4, the company recalled several Zapp’s and Dirty brand potato chip varieties after determining their seasonings were made with the contaminated dry milk powder. The affected Zapp’s flavors include Bayou Blackened Ranch, Salt and Vinegar, and Big Cheezy. On the Dirty brand side, Salt and Vinegar, Maui Onion, and Sour Cream and Onion varieties were all pulled.
Utz officials noted that no confirmed illnesses had been reported at the time of the recall, but the company moved out of caution given the supplier’s findings.
Just one day later, John B. Sanfilippo and Son Inc. issued a separate recall for several of its snack mix products, including items sold under the Fisher brand, again citing concerns tied to the same third-party dry milk supplier. This recall extended the reach of the contamination concern further across major retail chains.
In total, seven products across multiple brands have been caught up in this recall wave, with some pulled for contamination concerns and others flagged over labeling issues.
What shoppers should do right now
If you’ve bought any flavored Zapp’s or Dirty brand chips recently, or any Fisher snack mix products, check the packaging against the specific lot codes and best-by dates listed in the official recall notices on the FDA’s website at fda.gov. Do not eat the product if it matches a recalled item. Throw it away or return it to the store where you bought it for a full refund.
Walmart has confirmed it blocks recalled items from point-of-sale systems and removes them from store shelves as soon as a recall is initiated. The retailer also notes it communicates recall information through its official website and direct email, not text messages, so shoppers should be cautious of any recall-related texts claiming to be from Walmart.
Kroger and Target have similar protocols in place for pulling flagged items quickly.
Staying ahead of future recalls
Food recalls happen more often than most people realize, and the fastest way to stay informed is to sign up for automatic alerts directly from the FDA at fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts. You can also check the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service at fsis.usda.gov for any meat or poultry-related recalls.
Checking those pages periodically, especially after buying packaged snack foods, takes about two minutes and can save you from a genuinely unpleasant, or dangerous, experience.
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