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The following products are affected by this recall, sold at Aldi, Market Basket and other grocery stores in some regions of the U.S. (It is not disclosed what states are affected.):
The company contacted Aardman Animations about a licence for a special brand of Wensleydale cheese called, "Wallace & Gromit Wensleydale", which sold well. [18] When the 2005 full-length Wallace & Gromit film, The Curse of the Were-Rabbit , was released, sales of Wensleydale cheeses increased by 23%.
The Wensleydale Creamery Visitor Centre. Wensleydale Creamery is a cheese manufacturer based in the town of Hawes in North Yorkshire, England. It makes several varieties of cheese, but is most notable as a producer of Yorkshire Wensleydale, a variety of Wensleydale cheese with PGI status. It is a subsidiary of the Canadian dairy company Saputo.
39th Street is a major east–west street in Kansas City, Missouri, running almost 5 miles from State Line Road at the Kansas-Missouri border to Topping Avenue in Kansas City's East Side. It was originally named Rosedale Avenue as it led to the town of Rosedale .
The recalled cheese was on the shelves of major retail chains, including Aldi and Market Basket, across multiple states — Indiana, Texas, California, New Jersey, Missouri, Massachusetts, and others.
Bannister Road is a major east–west street in Kansas City, Missouri, US, replacing 95th Street. It stretches 10.9 miles (17.5 km) from State Line Road at the Kansas-Missouri state line in the west to Route 350 and Unity Village in the east. It continues west as 95th Street into Kansas, and east as Colbern Road into Unity Village and Lee's Summit.
3. Emporium Selection Goat's Milk Brie. The new Goat’s Milk Brie ($4.29 for a seven-ounce wheel), is the perfect centerpiece of a holiday cheese board. It’s got a lovely bloomy rind, and the ...
Antioch Crossing is a shopping center in Kansas City, Missouri on the site of the former Antioch Center, a mall which opened in 1956 and became nearly vacant by 2005. [1] The majority of the former dead mall was demolished in January 2012, with the exception of two anchor stores (Burlington Coat Factory and Sears), and redevelopment on the site began in 2014. [2]