Deadly listeria outbreak linked to chicken alfredo fettucine sold at Kroger and Walmart
- The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced a recall of FreshRealm chicken Alfredo products due to potential Listeria monocytogenes contamination, with the contamination linked to an outbreak that has killed three people and sickened at least 17.
- The listeria outbreak affected 13 states and lasted from August 2024 to May 2025, according to the USDA.
- FreshRealm's chicken Alfredo was identified in March 2025 as containing the same listeria strain responsible for the outbreak.
- A Class I recall indicates a health hazard where there is a reasonable likelihood of the product causing serious or adverse health consequences, including death.
242 Articles
242 Articles
Deadly listeria outbreak linked to prepared meals sold at Kroger, Walmart
By Zachary Stieber Contributing Writer At least some of the listeria cases appearing across 13 states in recent weeks came from prepared meals sold at Kroger and Walmart, federal health officials said on Wednesday. The listeria outbreak has resulted so far in 17 cases, including three deaths. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in an alert on Wednesday that “certain chicken fettuccine alfredo meals made by FreshRealm sold in g…
Nationwide Recall Issued for Chicken Fettuccine Alfredo Products Due to Listeria Contamination Risk
FreshRealm establishments in San Clemente, Calif., Montezuma, Ga., and Indianapolis, Ind., are recalling chicken fettuccine alfredo products that may be adulterated with an outbreak strain of Listeria monocytogenes (Lm), the
Walmart, Kroger chicken meals recalled after 3 listeria deaths | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
A listeria outbreak that has reached 13 states and involves three deaths has been linked to chicken Alfredo dishes recalled from Walmart and Kroger, the nation’s two largest grocery sellers.
The listera outbreak that affected fewer than 17 people in 13 states began last August.
Gallego demands Kroger respond to grocery overcharging investigation involving outdated discount tags
Sen. Ruben Gallego is demanding accountability after a recent investigation found Kroger, which owns Smith’s and other grocery chains, routinely overcharged customers due to outdated discount tags across 14 states, including Arizona.
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