giant reminder! The list of batches with expiry date

giant reminder The list of batches with expiry date

KINDER. Many Kinder products are affected by the giant recall launched following suspicions of links with cases of salmonellosis. There are many lots of Kinder Surprises and Schoko-bons. What should you look for on the packaging to know if you are concerned? Here is all the info.

[Mis à jour le 6 avril 2022 à 16h16] Alert on Kinder Easter chocolates! A hundred tons of Kinder chocolates are affected by a gigantic recall concerning the brand’s flagship products, owned by the Ferrero group. Kinder Surprise “classic” or large 100 grams, Kinder Schoko vouchers but also baskets of miniatures in Kinder Mix assortments are affected by this recall affecting hundreds of tons of Kinder chocolates.

According to Ferrero, this recall is carried out “as a precaution” after suspicions of links with several cases of salmonellosis reported in France. A alert was also launched by the Ministry of Health following a first communicated of the Ferrero group published on Monday. A (discreet) update to the press release published by Ferrero on Tuesday April 5 provides more information on the lots affected by the giant recall of Kinder products. Only one information is to be scrutinized on the Kinder products that you have purchased: the expiry date of the product. The list of affected chocolates is available below. Be aware that the expiry dates to be checked on Kinder Surprises, for example, cover a long period: from April 20, 2022 to the end of October 2022!

Ferrero has set up two forms of contact for its customers wishing to know if the lots purchased are affected by this recall and to know the terms of reimbursement:

  • the freephone number 0800 653 653 which was quickly rendered unreachable on Tuesday April 5 due to too many calls. A second number is available: 0 800 553 553.
  • by email to the following address: [email protected].

Kinder did not communicate on specific batch numbers or product references to find on the packaging. The only information to scrutinize is the expiry date of the purchased product. Here is the list of Kinder products that are subject to this recall:

  • Kinder Schoko-Vouchers : the recall is massive on these small chocolate eggs individually wrapped and sold in sachets since all formats are concerned for batches displaying expiry dates ranging from April 20, 2022 to the end of August 2022.
  • Kinder Surprise : all boxes containing 20 gram Kinder Surprises (the classic format sold all year round) are concerned, whether Kinder Surprise eggs are sold by one, three, four or by box of six. All batches with best before dates from April 20 to the end of October 2022 are being recalled.
  • Kinder Surprise Maxi 100 grams : these larger eggs, sold at the time of the holidays, are also concerned, with the same expiry dates: from the end of June 2022 to the end of October 2022.
  • Kinder Mini Eggs : all the batches of these mini eggs sold in particular at the time of the holidays or Easter are also concerned with expiry dates ranging from between April 20, 2022 and August 21, 2022.
  • Kinder Happy Moments : are concerned the packaging 193 grams (ballotins) with expiry date indicating the dated August 21, 2022.
  • KinderMix : are concerned the “plush” pack 133 grams and the “egg hunt basket” 150g and Bucket 198 grams, with expiry dates indicating the date of August 21, 2022.

Several hundred tons of chocolate are de facto concerned. All of the recalled products are made in Belgium, in the Arlon factory, where 46,000 tonnes of chocolate were produced in 2017 according to the brand. The Belgian subsidiary of Ferrero specifies on its website that this production site “today has 8 production lines and manufactures Kinder Schoko-Bons exclusively for the whole world.”

Other Kinder products such as Kinder Bueno, small Kinder Chocolate bars or larger Kinder Maxi are not affected by this recall, such as Kinder Country or the range of large flame eggs sold for Easter (egg of 220 grams).

The brand ensures that “none of our Kinder products placed on the French market has tested positive for salmonella, we have not received any complaints from consumers, nevertheless we take this matter very seriously, because the consumer protection is our top priority.” The brand thus evokes a recall “as a precaution” but Santé Publique France goes further: “in France, the investigations carried out by Santé Publique France have revealed the consumption of certain Kinder brand products subject to this withdrawal-recall in the days preceding the appearance of symptoms in the 15 patients who could be questioned at this time”, specifies a press release published on the Public Health France website. If no proof has been provided for the time being, several children have fallen ill and had the common point of having consumed it very recently, which has fueled fears of contamination and led to this recall. The products concerned by this possible contamination are numerous.

The link between these batches of Kinder chocolate and salmonella is for the moment “potential”, Ferrero ensuring that no product has at this stage tested positive. It is about twenty cases of salmonellosis noted by the health authorities in France which caused this recall “as a precaution”. Salmonella (or Salmonella) is a bacterium that can spread and multiply in the digestive system and cause salmonellosis: a food infection that manifests itself in gastrointestinal disorders, diarrhea, vomiting, stomach aches. Complications can arise and lead to a generalized infection with fever, typhoid and paratyphoid fever or even sepsis. Most cases of salmonellosis are mild, but depending on the cases and the profile of those infected, sometimes the disease is life-threatening. Symptoms appear on average after one to three days of incubation. A few cases of severe complications, leading to meningitis or septicemia, have already been observed in the past, in susceptible people.

It is therefore advisable to monitor children who have consumed Kinder chocolates within forty-eight hours after ingestion. People who have consumed the Kinder products mentioned above and who show symptoms are invited to consult their doctor without delay.

According to the Directorate General for Competition, Consumer Affairs and Fraud Control (DGCCRF), which published a statement Tuesday morning, of the 21 cases currently listed, eight have been hospitalized and all have now returned home. “The median age of cases is 4 years old”, detail the authorities. Infants and young children, but also the elderly, pregnant women or immunocompromised people are most at risk in the event of salmonellosis due to the risk of severe dehydration following symptoms of acute diarrhea.

If you have purchased any Kinder products listed above, the Department of Health asks that you “do not consume them and dispose of them immediately”. If you wish to obtain a refund, take a photo of the packaging as well as the product references present on this same packaging. You are invited to report it by calling the number provided by Ferrero or by writing to the email address provided:

  • the telephone number set up by Ferrero is as follows: 0800 653 653 (freephone).
  • the contact email address is: [email protected]

Attention, the toll-free number indicated has been reported as regularly saturated. At midday, it could even appear as “unassigned”, as indicated by several Internet users. We repeatedly tried to reach an operator but the switchboard continuously sounded like “busy”. It is therefore more advisable to use the email address provided above for a quick response.

You will be asked for the expiry date and the barcode number in particular. This contact will also make it possible to initiate a request for reimbursement.

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