Raley's All Butter Meyer Lemon Cookie; Case of Raw Dough (168 cookies) 28.87...

FDA Recall #F-0516-2018 — Class II — November 30, 2017

Recall Summary

Recall NumberF-0516-2018
Date InitiatedNovember 30, 2017
ClassificationClass II
StatusTerminated
TypeVoluntary: Firm initiated
Product TypeFood

Recalling Firm

FirmRaley's
LocationBroderick, CA

Product Description

Raley's All Butter Meyer Lemon Cookie; Case of Raw Dough (168 cookies) 28.87 lbs - UPC 10659728; 1 cookie (85 g); 6 count package UPC 4656760890 sold in retail stores Individual cookies in Bakery Case - identifier 106 Ingredients: ENRICHED BLEACHED WHEAT FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, IRON, THIAMIN MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID), SUGAR, BUTTER (PASTEURIZED CREAM), WHOLE EGGS, WATER, MEYER LEMON JUICE CONCENTRATE, VANILLA EXTRACT, SEA SALT, BAKING POWDER (SODIUM ACID PYROPHOSPHATE, SODIUM BICARBONATE, MODIFIED FOOD STARCH, MODIFIED TAPIOCA, MONOCALCIUM PHOSPHATE), MODIFIED FOOD STARCH, MILK POWDER, INVERT SUGAR, BAKING SODA, NATURAL LEMON FLAVOR Contains: WHEAT, MILK, EGG

Reason for Recall

Plastic material was found in unbaked Meyer Lemon Cookies at retail store.

Classification

Class II — A situation in which use of, or exposure to, a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences, or where the probability of serious adverse health consequences is remote.

Distribution Pattern

CA, NV

Product Quantity

57 cases (9576 cookies)

Product Codes / Lot Numbers

Lot# 25, 26, 27 Use by 12/26/17

What Should You Do?

Stop consuming this product immediately. Check your home for the recalled item and dispose of it safely. If you experienced a health issue after consuming this product, contact your doctor and report it to the FDA MedWatch.

Frequently Asked Questions

Stop consuming the product immediately and do not donate or give it to others. Check the recall notice above for specific disposal or return instructions. Many food recalls ask you to throw the product away and retain the packaging for a possible refund from the retailer. If you purchased it online, check your order history — some retailers send recall notifications directly to customers. You do not need a receipt to report an issue or seek a refund; the fact of purchase is typically sufficient.

In most cases, yes. Retailers are typically notified to accept returns of recalled products and issue refunds, regardless of whether you have a receipt. Check with the store where you purchased the item. Some manufacturers also offer direct refunds — contact the recalling firm using the information in the official recall notice. If you purchased the product online, contact the retailer's customer service with your order number. In either case, you generally do not need original packaging, though retaining the product label with the lot code or UPC can speed up the process.

Report foodborne illnesses and adverse food reactions to the FDA through the MedWatch Safety Reporting Portal at FDA.gov, or by calling 1-800-332-1088. You can also report issues directly to the FDA's Safety Reporting Portal at SafetyReporting.hhs.gov. If you believe there is an immediate public health risk, contact your local health department. Your report helps the FDA identify contamination patterns, initiate recalls faster, and protect other consumers from the same hazard. Include as much detail as possible: the product name, lot code, purchase date and location, and a description of your symptoms or findings.

The FDA assigns a status to each recall action throughout its lifecycle. "Ongoing" means the recall is active — the firm is still working to remove the product from commerce and notify consumers. "Completed" means the recall strategy has been implemented and the FDA has determined that the recalling firm has taken all appropriate steps to remove the product. "Terminated" means the FDA has reviewed the results and concluded the recall is complete. Even if a recall is marked as completed or terminated, you should still discard any recalled products you find at home — the recall status refers to the firm's compliance actions, not the safety of product still in consumers' possession.