General Mills said Tuesday it was recalling 10
million pounds of flour because of suspicions the product might be
contaminated with a dangerous strain of E. coli bacteria.
It's a huge recall of a item not normally linked
with outbreaks of foodborne illness, but state and federal health
officials say flour seems to be the common link among 38 illnesses in 20
states.
General Mills is recalling 10 million pounds of flour for fear it might carry dangerous E. coli bacteria
"General Mills is collaborating with health
officials to investigate an ongoing, multistate outbreak of E. coli 0121
that may be potentially linked to Gold Medal flour, Wondra flour, and
Signature Kitchens flour (sold in Safeway, Albertsons, Jewel, Shaws,
Vons, United, Randalls, and Acme)," the company said in a statement.
"Out of an abundance of caution, a voluntary
recall is being made. To date, E. coli O121 has not been found in any
General Mills flour products or in the flour manufacturing facility, and
the company has not been contacted directly by any consumer reporting
confirmed illnesses related to these products."
Many of the people who got sick reported having
eaten raw flour, in cookie dough for instance. Cooking kills most
bacteria, including E. coli.
How Do You Catch E. Coli?0:42
"Flour is an ingredient that comes from milling
wheat, something grown outdoors that carries with it risks of bacteria
which are rendered harmless by baking, frying or boiling. Consumers are
reminded to wash their hands, work surfaces, and utensils thoroughly
after contact with raw dough products or flour, and to never eat raw
dough or batter," the company said.
E. coli bacteria are just about everywhere and
they are normally harmless residents of the digestive tract. But there
are a few forms that can cause diseases. E. coli 0121 is one of them.
The last big national outbreak of disease from E. coli 0121 was in
clover sprouts in 2014 - nineteen cases were reported.
E coli bacteria CDC
The CDC estimates that about one in six
Americans are made sick by foodborne illnesses every year — that's about
48 million people. About 3,000 die of these infections
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