Carrots linked to one US death, 39 cases of illness from E. coli, CDC says

Recalled carrots were also shipped to stores in Canada says USDA

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: November 18, 2024

,

carrots

One person has died and at least 39 others made ill by E. coli infections linked to fresh carrots sold by several large grocery retailers in 18 states, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Sunday.

The CDC said in a statement that the infections are linked to whole bagged carrots and baby carrots sold by Grimmway Farms in California. Walmart, Target, Kroger, Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s, among other stores, retail the carrots under a variety of brand names.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Saturday that Grimmway Farms had issued a voluntary recall of the carrots, which were also shipped to stores in Canada and Puerto Rico.

Read Also

This August, U.S.-based Norfolk Healthy Produce received Health Canada’s approval to bring The Purple Tomato to Canada. Photo: Screencap via norfolkhealthyproduce.com

Selling GMO tomato seeds to Canadian gardeners ‘reckless’ say advocates

Selling genetically-modified purple tomato seeds to home gardeners could raise the risk of contamination of organic vegetable varieties and hamper farmers’ ability to save their own seed, say a group of advocates.

This morning, Global News reported that Grimmway Farms distributes organic whole, bagged carrots and baby carrots to Canadian brands including President’s Choice and Compliments. At time of writing, the recalled carrots  were not posted on Health Canada’s online list of food safety alerts and recalls.

The carrots are unlikely to still be on store shelves, the CDC said, but may still be in consumers’ homes and should be thrown away.

The recalled whole carrots had best-if-used-by dates ranging from Aug. 14 through Oct. 23. The recalled baby carrots had dates from Sept. 11 through Nov. 12.

Grimmway, based in Bakersfield, California, said in a Saturday press release that the company is reviewing its growing, harvesting and processing practices, and that it is working with suppliers and health authorities on the matter.

According to media reports, the previously family owned company was sold to private equity firm Teays River Investments in 2020.

— Reporting by Brad Brooks, Glacier FarmMedia staff

explore

Stories from our other publications