Salmonella Outbreaks: How to Tell If Your Honey Smacks Cereal, Honeydew Melon or Other Pre-Cut Fruit Have Been Recalled

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Breakfast is the most important meal of the day, a marketing slogan alleges, but eaters of food should check the newsfeed before they pour a bowl of cereal or cut up that delicious honeydew. Outbreaks of salmonella have been preliminarily tied to Kellogg’s Honey Smacks cereal and pre-cut melons and a fruit medley.

Kellogg’s issued a Honey Smacks cereal recall on June 14 in 15.3 and 23 ounce sizes with a “best if used by” date from June 14, 2018 to June 14, 2019. Consumers can also check for a UPC code of 38000 39103 or 38000 14810 on the bottom of the box. Cereal buyers can throw the cereal away or return it for a refund. So far, 73 people have been infected and 24 people hospitalized across 31 states, but no deaths have yet been reported. Illnesses began on March 3.

It’s unusual for packaged dry foods to pass along salmonella. More common is fresh foods, which is the case for the multi-state infections the CDC and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have tracked to pre-cut fruit at an Indianapolis plant run by Caito Foods. The fruit in question includes “cut watermelon, honeydew melon, cantaloupe, and fresh-cut fruit medley products containing any of these melons,” according to the FDA. So far, 60 people in five Midwestern states have been ill, and 31 of whom were known to have been hospitalized.

Caito Foods has recalled fruit salad mixes shipped to 22 states and across a host of groceries and under different names, including , Jay C, , Payless, Owen's, Sprouts, Trader Joe's, Walgreens, , and Whole Foods. The full route of contamination isn’t yet known. The FDA has a complete list of products and even a lengthy list of every known retail location that carried them.

Salmonella, a bacteria, can lead to salmonellosis, which causes 1.2 million illnesses, 23,000 hospitalizations, and 450 deaths each year in the United States, the large majority of which come from food, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The disease can cause diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps lasting 4 to 7 days. Most people don’t require treatment, but the infection can lead to death in some cases.