Archdut LTD of Ariel, Israel, is recalling tahini products sold under a multitude of brand names: Achdut, Baron’s, S&F, Pepperwood, Soom, and Achva. Israel-based Achdut LTD's popular tahini products are sold online and through retailers worldwide. An investigation was launched after a product sample of a U.S. import tested positive for the bacteria. The products were packaged under six brand names: Achdut, Baron's, S&R, Pepperwood, Soom and Achva, the FDA said. Healthy persons infected with Salmonella typically experience fever, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain or cramping. A link has been posted to your Facebook feed. Read or Share this story: https://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/2018/11/28/tahini-salmonella-recall/2138015002/, Israel-based Achdut is recalling six brands of tahini over possible salmonella contamination, Remote learning for Fox Lane HS students who attended large gatherings, Getty Square shooting: Man charged with attempted murder, COVID-19 cases rising in Mid-Hudson, Southern Tier, 3 die in rollover crash on Cross County Parkway, COVID-19 case comes from Hawthorne Confirmation, 1 killed in Central Park Avenue crash in Yonkers, Your California Privacy Rights/Privacy Policy. Packages are purple laminated paper packets with a tear-away tab on one end. They include tahini, whole tahini, organic tahini, and seasoned tahini products sold in 15oz, 16oz, 17.6oz, 635 oz (428g, 454g, 500g, 18Kg) containers. Several brands of the company's tahini, whole tahini, organic tahini and seasoned tahini produced between April 7 and May 21 are the subject of the recall. According to the FDA, eggs, even clean, uncracked ones, can contain salmonella with "79,000 cases of foodborne illness and 30 deaths each year caused by eating eggs contaminated with Salmonella." Anyone who has purchased the recalled tahini products is urged to return them to the place of purchase for a full refund. All rights reserved. Consumers may also contact the company Sunday through Thursday with questions, at 972-3-9068020. If you are The recalled tahini products display lot numbers 18-087 to 18-141 and/or have expiration dates of April to May 21, 2020. Organic homemade Hummus Hummus is a chickpea-based dip, and a staple at any Israeli table spread. A tahini maker is issuing a recall after one imported sample tested positive for salmonella, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration said this week. Pepperwood Organics Tahini Recall Posted on November 30, 2018 by foodsafeguru 0 Achdut LTD. of Israel, is recalling its Tahini products of all packages and sizes produced on the following dates: April 7th to May 21st 2018 as well as the custom-made Pepperwood Organics sesame butter, because it may be contaminated with Salmonella. Will rapid COVID-19 tests be enough to get students back in the classroom? The U.S. Food and Drug Administration advised consumers not to eat Achva, Achdut, Soom, S&F, Pepperwood, and Baron’s brand tahini. The tahini products recalled by Achdut LTD. are: tahini, whole tahini, organic tahini, and seasoned tahini. The products are being sold under six different brand names: Achdut, Baron’s, S&F, Pepperwood, Soom, and Achva. In some cases, Salmonella infection can result in the pathogen entering the bloodstream and producing more severe illnesses such as arterial infections (i.e., infected aneurysms), endocarditis, and arthritis. provide us, the better we can evaluate your claim. Recalled tahini products sold under the following brands have expiration dates of April 7, 2020 to May 21, 2020: Achva; Achdut; Soom; S&F; Pepperwood brand tahini; Soom brand Chocolate Sweet Tahini Halva Spread (lot code 071318CH) Recalled Baron’s brand tahini … Man, woman dead in apparent Aurora murder-suicide: police, Thorntons seeks to fill 50 jobs at Bensenville hiring event, Worldwide death toll from coronavirus eclipses 1 million, Grand jury transcript to be released in Breonna Taylor case, Mother dies of COVID-19 shortly after daughter, 12th annual Taste of Pilsen event goes 'to-go', Experts warn of 'twindemic' as COVID-19, flu season collide, Microsoft sees service improvements after outage, E. coli outbreak linked to romaine lettuce. So far, health officials believe the probable cause of the Salmonella problem is cross contamination.