The Food and Drug Administration has newly classified the December recall of some Lay’s Classic Potato Chips sold in Oregon and Washington with the designation reserved for the highest degree of health hazard.
Frito-Lay recalled its Lay's classic potato chips over undeclared milk allergen possibly in the product that could affect a person with an allergy or severe sensitivity to milk and may risk a serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they eat the product.
A previous FDA recall on certain Lay's potato chip products has now been updated to the category with the highest risk for consumers. What to know
Frito-Lay is recalling bags of Lay’s Classic Potato Chips after the FDA increased the risk level of the product to its highest level of risk classification.
A recall of one of America’s favorite snacks has been classified as high risk for people with milk allergies. Here’s everything you need to know.
The FDA elevated Lay's Classic Potato Chips to the highest risk level. Here what to know, and whether the recall impacts Ohio.
The Frito-Lay voluntary recall on a limited number of Lay's Classic potato chips due to an undeclared allergen has been updated by the FDA to Class 1.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says a previously announced recall of certain bags of Lay’s potato chips in Oregon and Washington now falls into “Class I” status, its highest risk
Cal Yee Farms' dark chocolate walnuts, dark chocolate almonds and dark chocolate apricots have been given a Class 1 recall classification because the chocolates contained undeclared milk
A major chocolate recall has been upgraded to the highest possible risk level.
Kendrick Lamar is about to take the stage for one of the biggest performances of his career at Super Bowl Fifty-Nine, but guess what? He is not getting paid for it. Yes, the thirty-seven-year-old rapper,