Gerber Recalls some Arrowroot Biscuits over Potential Plastic or Paper Pieces
Gerber recalled three batches of Arrowroot Biscuits made July-Sept 2025 due to potential soft plastic and paper contamination; no illnesses reported, consumers advised to return products.
- On January 27, 2026 the Singapore Food Agency announced an ongoing recall after Nestle Singapore pulled three batches of Gerber Arrowroot Biscuits for possible foreign matter.
- Nestlé traced the issue to arrowroot flour from a supplier, and investigators say foreign matter may have come from arrowroot flour possibly containing soft plastic or paper; Nestlé has stopped sourcing it from the implicated supplier.
- Manufactured in the United States, the recalled batches have drawn no complaints and no other Gerber products are affected, Nestlé said.
95 Articles
95 Articles
Gerber recalls baby biscuits over contamination fears
ARLINGTON, Virginia (WISH) — Gerber is recalling baby biscuits over possible contamination concerns. Gerber Arrowroot Biscuits were recalled because they may contain pieces of soft plastic and paper. The company says the recall is out of an abundance of caution, and no injuries or illnesses have been reported. The product was sold nationwide, and produced between July and September. Buyers were asked not feed the biscuits to children and return …
Gerber Recalls Popular Snack Over Potential Contamination with Paper and Plastic Pieces
There are 21 affected batches of the product, which is meant for infants over 10 months oldStock image of Gerber baby food James Leynse/Corbis via GettyNEED TO KNOWGerber is recalling a popular snack product over potential contamination with paper and plastic piecesThe company announce the voluntary recall of its arrowroot biscuits on Jan. 26There are 21 affected batches of the snacks, which are meant for infants over 10 months oldParents, check…
Gerber recalls arrowroot biscuits that might contain pieces of plastic or paper
Baby food maker Gerber is recalling certain lots of arrowroot biscuits. The biscuits, often given to teething babies, might contain pieces of soft plastic or paper and should not be eaten.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 79% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
























