Pepperidge Farm Bagels 2015: Traditional US Bakery Recalls THOUSANDS Of Bagels Over Allergies

A breakfast classic for years, Pepperidge Farm's bagels 2015 have seen a setback directly from the famous bakery, as they have discovered that a great number of these products could have mistakenly added components that could trigger allergic reactions to people unaware that these products contain them.

In an interesting case of honesty before a scandal breaks out, thousands of Pepperidge Farm's bagels 2015 have been recalled to the manufacturer, after the company realized that there were some errors in the factory that could potentially endanger thousands of people allergic to components like peanuts or almonds, strong allergies that could potentially cause a lot of harm.

According to The Associated Press, the Pepperidge Farm bagels 2015 recall started last Friday, after the company said that around 46,000 packages of their bagels could potentially endanger consumers with allergies, though there have been no reports of illnesses or allergic reactions of any kind.

UPI reports that the Pepperidge Farm bagels 2015 recall includes products from the company's different lines of bagels, namely cinnamon raisin bagels, plain and everything bagels, as well as those mini bagels made out of whole wheat, brown sugar and cinnamon.

This recall includes products that have sell-by dates from February 7 until February 12, including all of the abovementioned bagels. The products were sold to 23 states: Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

According to The Inquisitr, the bagel recall will include the company's full refund to each and every store in these 23 states reached by the "tainted" bagels, as the company takes full responsibility for the issue, supposedly caused by a problem in their main manufacturer from the New Jersey-based baking company.

In any case, Pepperidge Farm's bagels 2015 future seems clear, as they averted possible disaster being honest about an issue that could've ultimately taken its toll on many lives across the country.

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