idil toffolo/Getty Images
The frozen pizza might be polluted with pieces of plastic.
Now Trending
Avoid the store-bought frozen pizza on Friday night. You might wish to make homemade pizza rather due to the fact that a popular frozen pizza brand name has actually remembered almost 2,000 pizzas. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reported the recall on December 13 and stated the pizza might include a “plastic foreign pollutant.”
What pizza is impacted by the recall?
Courtesy United States Food and Drug Administration
This frozen pizza recall impacts Connie's Thin Crust Frozen Cheese Pizzas. The item was dispersed to retail supermarket in Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Frustratingly, the maker, Palermo Villa, Inc., didn't reveal this recall up until more than 2 weeks after the impacted item's expiration date. The infected pizzas had all ended since 11/27/2024. We're sharing this recall statement since frozen pizzas are typically safe to consume after the “Best By” date and might still remain in customers' freezers.
What should I do next?
If you have a Connie's Thin Crust Frozen Cheese Pizza in your home, inspect the lot number and “Best By” date. This recall on frozen pizza just impacts lot number MR199856 with a date of 11/27/2024.
Throw out any remembered frozen pizza or return it to the location of purchase for a refund. The infected pizzas are no longer readily available at supermarket, so any frozen pizzas you got from the shop this month must be safe to consume.
Individuals with concerns or issues ought to connect to Palermo's Consumer Service at 1 (888) 571-7181 throughout organization hours, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. CST.