***KIND HEALTHY GRAINS***Oats & Honey Granola with Toasted Coconut***
FDA Recall #F-1025-2020 — Class II — July 7, 2020
Recall Summary
| Recall Number | F-1025-2020 |
| Date Initiated | July 7, 2020 |
| Classification | Class II |
| Status | Terminated |
| Type | Voluntary: Firm initiated |
| Product Type | Food |
Recalling Firm
| Firm | KIND LLC |
| Location | New York, NY |
Product Description
***KIND HEALTHY GRAINS***Oats & Honey Granola with Toasted Coconut***INGREDIENTS: Oats, tapioca syrup, brown rice, cane sugar, honey, millet, oat flour, coconut, canola oil, buchwheat, amaranth, molasses, quinoa, brown rice syrup, sea salt, Vitamine E***May contanin peanuts, tree nuts, soy and sesame seeds***"; packaged in 11oz and 17oz pouches
Reason for Recall
Product contains undeclared sesame seeds.
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
AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, ME, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT, NC, NH, NJ, NV, NY, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WI
Product Quantity
142,273 cases plus 484 individual pouches
Product Codes / Lot Numbers
Best Before dates are from April 4, 2021 to June 1, 2021 for the 11 ounces pouch and from April 30, 2021 to June 22, 2021 for the 17 ounces pouch Lot #'s/Serial Codes: 018AM4KZ15 1220RD1 1220RDA1 1220RDB1 1220RDC1 HF20100C4 HF20101A4 HF20101B4 HF20102A4 HF20102B4 HF20102C4 HF20121C4 HF20122A4 HF20122B4 HF20122C4 HF20123A4 HF20123B4 HF20123C4 HF20126B0 HF20127B0 HF20132C4 HF20133A4 HF20133B4 HF20133C4 HF20134A4 HF20134B4 HF20134C4 HF20135A4 HF20135B4 HF20135C4 HF20136A4 HF20136B4 HF20136C4 HF20154B4 HF20154C4 HF20155A4 HF20155B4 HF20155C4 HF20156A4 HF20156B4 HF20156C4 HF20157A4 HF20160C0 HF20161A0 HF20161B0
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.
If you have a food allergy and consumed the recalled product, monitor yourself closely for allergic reaction symptoms — including hives, swelling, difficulty breathing, nausea, vomiting, or anaphylaxis. If you experience any symptoms, seek medical attention immediately. For anaphylaxis (severe allergic reaction with difficulty breathing, rapid heartbeat, or loss of consciousness), call 911 and use an epinephrine auto-injector (EpiPen) if available. Stop consuming the product and check all products from the same manufacturer for similar labeling issues, as undeclared allergens sometimes affect multiple products from the same production facility.
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.