Wednesday, May 21, 2025 -The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has announced a recall of cucumbers grown by Bedner Growers, Inc., and distributed by Fresh Start Produce Sales, Inc., due to a multistate salmonella outbreak that has sickened over 20 people.
According to a Monday news release from the FDA, the
Florida-based companies distributed the cucumbers to restaurants,
wholesalers, retailers, and distribution centers from April 29 to the present.
The FDA is still working to determine where the potentially contaminated
vegetables were sold.
"Cucumbers may have been sold individually or in
smaller packages, with or without a label that may not bear the same brand,
product name, or best by date," the FDA warned. "For
distributors, restaurants, and retailers who have purchased these cucumbers,
the products were labelled as either being 'supers,' 'selects,' or
'plains.'"
FDA investigators conducting a follow-up inspection of the
cucumbers last month collected a sample that came back positive for Salmonella
Montevideo and "matched recent clinical samples from ill people," the
FDA said. The inspection was a follow-up from a Salmonella Africana
outbreak linked to Bedner Growers, Inc. last year. Fresh Start Produce
Sales, Inc., also issued a recall of whole cucumbers in 2024 due to possible
salmonella contamination.
According to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention,
Salmonella is a bacterium that can sicken those who consume it by eating
contaminated food, drinking contaminated water, or touching animals, their
faecal matter, or the areas they live in. People who contract the illness can
have stomach cramps, diarrhoea, nausea, and vomiting anywhere from six hours to
six days after infection, and symptoms can last up to seven days.
Salmonella Montevideo is a type of salmonella enterica
bacteria.
According to the CDC, the bacteria are "a leading cause
of foodborne illness, hospitalisations, and deaths in the United States and
worldwide."
The bacteria cause about 1.35 million infections in the U.S.
every year.
"Children younger than five, the elderly, and people
with weakened immune systems are more likely to have severe infections,"
the FDA said.
According to the FDA, as of Friday, at least 26 people had
been sickened by the outbreak in 15 states, including Florida, Alabama,
California, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Colorado, Illinois,
Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee.

0 Comments