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The store brand waffles of North Carolina-based Harris Teeter, now owned by Kroger, were involved in the TreeHouse Foods recall. H-E-B: H-E-B Higher Harvest. Higher Harvest by H-E-B Protein ...
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said in its recall alert that listeria monocytogenes is “an organism that can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or ...
Kodiak waffle recall. Additionally, the recalled waffles includes dozens of lots of Kodiak Cake frozen waffles, including its 13.4 ounce vanilla buttermilk waffles variety with multiple "best by ...
Other store brands involved include Target, Winn-Dixie (SE Grocers), Aldi, Harris Teeter, Schnucks, Hannaford, Tops and H-E-B. Listeria recall of waffles sold at Publix, Walmart, Kroger, Food Lion ...
From E. coli traced to slivered onions on McDonald's Quarter Pounders to mass recalls of frozen waffles due to listeria risk, foodborne illness seems ever-present in the headlines.
On July 9, 2013, Kroger announced that it would acquire the 212 stores of Charlotte-based Harris Teeter in a deal valued at $2.5 billion and that it would assume $100 million in the company's outstanding debt. [58] Harris Teeter's stores are in eight Southern states, with a major portion of them in its headquarters state of North Carolina. [59]
The North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia stores were sold to Harris Teeter in 1988, [3] while the Georgia stores were sold in 1992, with most of the Atlanta locations going to A&P. These stores were heavily remodeled, but eventually sold to Publix in 1999.
Bo Sharon and his wife Trish Sharon founded Lucky's Market in Boulder, Colorado in 2003. The two had taken over a grocery store then known as the North Boulder Market, and renovated it. The couple chose to make a store focusing primarily on organic food. After operating their first store for 10 years, they then opened a second store in Longmont ...