SunFed Recalls Fresh American Cucumbers Due to Potential Salmonella Contamination
Press release from SunFed Produce via the FDA:
SunFed Produce, LLC (SunFed) is recalling all sizes of whole fresh American cucumbers packaged in bulk cardboard containers labeled with the “SunFed” label or in a generic white box or black plastic crate with a sticker that provides the implicated grower’s name, “Agrotato, S.A. de C.V.,” (photos below). The recalled cucumbers were sold between October 12, 2024, thru November 26, 2024, and are being recalled because they have the potential to be contaminated with Salmonella.
Salmonella is an organism that can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems. Healthy persons infected with Salmonella often experience fever, diarrhea (which may be bloody), nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. In rare circumstances, infection with Salmonella can result in the organism getting into the bloodstream and producing more severe illnesses such as arterial infections (i.e., infected aneurysms), endocarditis and arthritis. Symptoms of salmonellosis usually start 6 hours to 6 days after infection and last 4 to 7 days.
The whole fresh American cucumbers were sold by SunFed and other importers and shipped to customers located in the states of Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington & Wisconsin and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbia, Calgary, Saskatchewan, & Ontario. The cucumbers would have reached consumers through foodservice and retail outlets that may be located in states other than those listed above.
SunFed initiated this recall after the US Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) notified SunFed that the cucumbers described above were associated with reported salmonellosis illnesses between October 12 – November 15, 2024. SunFed is also contacting each of its direct buyers to advise them of the recall. No other products sold by or farms supplying to SunFed are implicated in this recall.
The individual whole American cucumbers may also have a PLU sticker in the form of the attached picture.
Consumers should take the following actions:
- Check to see if you have recalled whole fresh American cucumbers (photo below)
- Anyone with the recalled product in their possession should not consume, serve, use, sell, or distribute recalled products. We also encourage them to clean and sanitize surfaces that could have come into contact with the recalled product to reduce cross-contamination.
- Recalled products should be thrown out or destroyed so they may not be consumed or returned to the point of purchase.
- Consumers who are unsure if they have purchased the recalled product are advised to contact their retailer.
- If you think you have consumed a recalled product and do not feel well, contact your healthcare provider.
Consumers who have purchased the recalled products may obtain additional information by contacting SunFed’s recall hotline (888) 542-5849, M-F 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. MST.
“As soon as we learned of this issue, we immediately acted to protect consumers. We are working closely with authorities and the implicated ranch to determine the possible cause,” said Craig Slate, President at SunFed. “Here at SunFed, food safety and consumer health and wellness have been our priorities for more than 30 years. We require all of our growers to strictly comply with the FDA food safety requirements.”
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Fun fact.
Cucumbers are both a fruit and a vegetable.
The botanical definition, which focuses on physiological elements like the structure and organization of the plant, classifies the cucumber as a fruit. A botanist would explain that fruits grow from the ovary of a flowering plant, and they possess seeds. Because cucumbers have seeds in the middle and grow from the flower of a cucumber plant, they are botanically a fruit.
Botanical vegetables may be other edible structures of a plant, such as the leaves, stems and roots, and they do not have seeds. Examples of botanical vegetables include lettuce, carrots, asparagus and broccoli.
Discard?… I want a refund. Those things cost $, Safeway doesn’t give them away.
How are they labeled “American Cucumbers” when the grower is apparently in Mexico?
Clearly they are illegal alien cucumbers smuggled across our border and should never be labeled as God-fearing true American Cucumbers!!!!
Be careful to make sure you never accidentally buy an un-American English or Persian Cucumber or, heaven forfend, a gherkin.
Gerkins are too small to satisfy most americans.
Fortunately, the wild cucumbers grow like crazy in our little gully. Unfortunately, they’re not edible. And my wife likes a good cucumber. Uh . . . sliced and placed over her eyes of course.
You’d be surprised how much produce in the USA is grown in Mexico.
Really? Have you not noticed that packaging and advertising can be misleading without being false? What continent is Mexico part of? What is the name of the country you live in?
Sex and sex and sex and sex and that’s what makes our town the best….can salmonella be spread through sexual contact???
I pooped in da cucs!
It is heartening to learn that “at SunFed, food safety and consumer health and wellness have been our priorities for more than 30 years“.
Also good to know that SunFed “requires all of our growers to strictly comply with the FDA food safety requirements.”
I believe that if you get infected with Salmonella, SunFed feels terrible and hopes you get well soon.
Interesting how the mega growers with all the oversight continually recall their products because folks get sick. But the produce produced by the little farmers market families with little to no oversight rarely, if ever, gets anyone sick.