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Kinder chocolate contaminated with salmonella may still be at Jumbo

At the beginning of this year, Kinder chocolate was removed from the shelves because of a salmonella bacteria. It may still be in Jumbo’s store; the supermarket is recalling Kinder Schoko-Bons with a best-before date until October 5, 2022.

Salmonella bacteria in Kinder chocolate

At the beginning of this year, hundreds of reports were made in Europe of a salmonella contamination after eating a Kinder Surprise egg. Three Dutch children also became ill. Manufacturer Ferrero immediately stopped production and closed its doors.

The Dutch Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority advised everyone to stop eating chocolate from the Ferrero factory and the manufacturer itself recalled all Kinder chocolate. The consequence? Empty shelves in the supermarket for weeks. In June, the company was allowed to reopen under strict conditions and the production of Kinder chocolate started again.

Also read: Everything you need to know about salmonella

Possibly infected Kinder Schoko-Bons at Jumbo

It now appears that there may still be Kinder chocolate in supermarkets, contaminated with salmonella. The Kinder Schoko-Bons 300 grams, with an expiry date of 5 October 2022, have been delivered to a limited number of Jumbo supermarkets. These can therefore be contaminated with the salmonella bacteria.

Recall

Supermarket chain Jumbo regrets this mistake and asks customers not to eat the Kinder Schoko-Bons with an expiration date until October 5, 2022 and to return them to the store. For the time being, this only concerns the Kinder Schoko-Bons in a package of 300 grams.

Source: RTL NewsAD.nl

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