Nestle Voluntarily Recalls Raw Cookie Dough
E. coli infections in more than two dozen states, and company warns consumers.
June 19, 2009— -- The food maker Nestle today voluntarily recalled its refrigerated Toll House cookie dough products and warned consumers not to eat raw Toll House cookie dough as fears about possible E. coli contamination spread to more than two dozen states.
Health officials are not positive Toll House cookie dough is to blame, but Nestle is taking precautionary steps because many of the people sick ate the raw cookie dough. More than 60 people have fallen ill so far in 28 states.
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"While the E. coli strain implicated in this investigation has not been detected in our product, the health and safety of our consumers is paramount so we are initiating this voluntary recall," Nestle said in a statement Friday morning.
"Consumers who have purchased these products should not consume them," the Nestle statement said. "Instead, we are asking that consumers return these products to their local grocer for a full refund."
Nestle does advise on its package that people should not eat raw cookie dough.
The company also stressed today that its other products are OK to eat -- including its pre-baked cookies, chocolate chips, cocoa and ice cream made by Dreyer's and Edy's that contain cookie dough.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration also released a statement this morning about the cookie dough advising consumers to throw away cookie dough products already in their refrigerators.
"Cooking the dough is not recommended because consumers might get the bacteria on their hands and on other cooking surfaces," the FDA statement said.
Bill Marler, an attorney focused on food poisoning cases with the law firm Marler Clark, said he recently noticed that this season's cases of E. coli did not look like others.
"Summer season is high season for E. coli cases -- normally you'd expect them to be related to hamburger consumption," Marler told ABCNews.com on Friday. "So we started tracking cases in May and June, and not very many of them had hamburger consumption."
Still, cookie dough "was certainly not on the list of things we've asked them," Marler said, adding that he is "surprised" the possible contamination may have occurred in such a "highly processed product."
"We're now going back and getting all the health department records on the people who contacted us over the last three months to see if they match this outbreak," Marler said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there are about 76 million cases of foodborne sicknesses in the United States every year. Most of them are mild illnesses. Symptoms of E. coli in particular include dehydration, bloody diarrhea and stomach pain, though serious cases can lead to kidney failure.