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Popular Waitrose ready meal urgently recalled over 'undeclared' ingredients

Popular Waitrose ready meal urgently recalled over 'undeclared' ingredients

Daily Record5 days ago
The premium supermarket has urgently recalled the product due to a packaging error.
UK shoppers have been issued with another food recall recently. This time it is for a popular ready meal that may be "unsafe to eat" for some consumers.

Waitrose and Partners has issued a recall for its Waitrose Indian Takeaway for 2 due to a packaging error that has led some packs to contain spring rolls which are not mentioned on the label.

Since the savoury snacks contain sesame and soya, both which have not been declared on the list of allergens, this means they pose a health risk to anyone with an allergy or intolerance to the said ingredients.

An allergy alert posted to the Food Standards Agency (FSA) has advised that the supermarket's recall affects 1412g pack sizes with the best before date of July 25, 2025.
Customers who have purchased the affected Indian takeaway meal have since been urged "do not eat", with the supermarket advising they should package it up and return it to their local Waitrose store to receive a full refund.

Waitrose and Partners have been advised to contact the relevant allergy support organisations to let customers know about the recall.
Meanwhile, the premium UK chain has since issued a recall notice that details all the information regarding why the ready meal has been recalled, alongside what to do if it has been bought.
Shoppers looking for further information are being advised to contact the Waitrose Customer Care on 0800 188 884, option 4, for further information.

Waitrose said in its recall notice: "We apologise it has been necessary to recall this product and for the inconvenience caused."
Allergy alerts are generally posted by the FSA when foods have to 'withdrawn' or 'recalled' due to numerous factors that make it a risk for some consumers due to missing or incorrect allergy labelling, or other food risks.

It comes after we reported that the food watchdog had to issue the same alert for multiple jars of jam sold by a Scottish firm after they were found to contain sulphites - an ingredient not mentioned on the label.
Fife-based firm Sarah Gray's issued a recall for 13 strawberry and prosecco/champagne jams since they posed a possible health risk for anyone who is sensitive to sulphites and sulphur dioxide.
The FSA doesn't just issue allergy alerts, as the food watchdog has also issued a recent 'food alert for action' after they found that one version of the viral Dubai chocolate bar contained peanuts, also not mentioned on the list of ingredients.

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The firm has advised UK food businesses to immediately halt sales of the Noesis Schokolade Love of Dubai chocolate and to undertake product withdrawals, alongside issuing recalls for sales already made.
We recently reported that the recall affects all numbers and best before dates of the 95g bars, with anyone suffering from a peanut allergy being urged not to eat the chocolate bar.
It comes after the FSA previously had advised anyone with allergies to "exercise caution" when it came to consuming the TikTok-viral treat, after it was discovered that some of them may not have been intended for UK sale, therefore not meeting the high levels of food safety standards.
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