Frito-Lee has released a recall on some bags of toastitose chips on an undeclared allergen.
The company on Wednesday issued a press release about a limited number of 13-oun bags of bags, which is being remembered in the US traditional yellow corn tortila chips. The affected bags can be accidentally having an undeclared milk allergen.
The back -called product was distributed to a series of retailers in 13 states: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentki, Mississypi, Northern Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessi, Virginia and West Virginia.
The affected product has a UPC of 28400 52848 and the “guaranteed fresh” date of May 20, 2025. The bag will also have some manufacturing codes, which are listed in the press release.
The chip bags were first sold on 7 March, which included less than 1,300 bags. There is no allergic reaction due to the product. No other tostitos products have been affected by recall.
According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), consumption of undeclared allergies “may be adverse health results for some individuals.” The most common are undeclared allergies wheat, shellfish, eggs, fish, peanuts, milk, trees nuts and soybeans.

This is not the first time that Frito-Lee has recalled a product due to an undeclared allergen. In November, a limited number of classic potato chips bags were remembered because they may include undeclared milk, which Frito-Le learned “after being alerted through a consumer contact.”
The back -called product was sent to retail stores and distributors in Oregon and Washington, and it was available to buy in early November 3, 2024. Two months later, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recalled this memory to a class, which is “a situation in which there is a proposer, or exposure, a violative product or death.”
Within the previous month, there was a group of food and drink memories. Earlier this week, Coca-Cola’s 864 cases-each had 12 coaches-were recalled because they were contaminated with plastic. This means that more than 10,000 compartments of soda were affected by recall. The affected cases of Coca-Cola were distributed to retailers in Illinois and Wisconsin.
Last week, Aldi issued a voluntary recall on 400 cases of Kolbie Jack Daily Chopped Paneer of Happy Farm, consisting of 12 plastic pouches of mixed callbies and monterery cheese slices. According to the FDA, the Aldi product may have stainless steel pieces, and exposure to such contaminants can cause temporary health risk. It is not clear how possible metal products were found in cheese.
Earlier this month, Desert Holdings, LLC announced that he was remembering the target brand preferred day’s New York Style Cheesecake, which was sold in a six-ingented container with two slices of the cake. Recall is caused by misleading packaging, resulting in undeclared pekans in products.