FDA Recall Ledger: Cottage Cheese Listeria Risk, Pet Milk Vitamin D, And Peanut Allergy Raisins
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BadPD source check, June 27, 2026: this recall package is source-cleared because all three core items are direct FDA recall pages, and the Google News feed confirmed they were fresh enough to matter in the current public-safety lane. The three receipts are La Ceiba Foods Latin Market cottage cheese products over possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination, Revival Animal Health canine and goat-milk replacers over variable Vitamin D levels, and Lehi Valley Trading Company chocolate-covered raisins over undeclared peanuts.
This is not a political outrage article. It is a practical public-safety ledger. BadPD covers recalls because people can actually use the information before someone gets hurt. The public value is simple: identify the product, identify the risk, link the official source, tell readers what is confirmed, and tell them where the facts still need checking. This article is not medical, veterinary, or legal advice. It is a source trail and action prompt: check the official FDA pages, compare the exact product and lot information, contact the company or FDA if needed, and do not guess when allergies, Listeria risk, puppies, kittens, goats, or vulnerable family members are involved.
Recall One: La Ceiba Cottage Cheese Products
FDA posted a June 26, 2026 announcement for La Ceiba Foods Latin Market Inc. The FDA page says the company is recalling Requeson Salvadoreno and Requeson Mexicano products marketed under the La Colonia and Selectos Latinos brands because of possible contamination with Listeria monocytogenes. That source gives the strongest current record: company name, product category, brands, date, and hazard.
Listeria is not a casual risk category. The FDA recall page itself is the record readers should use for the final product details, photos, codes, and company instructions. BadPD is deliberately not copying the whole recall notice or asking readers to rely on a paraphrase when the official FDA page exists. If the product in your refrigerator looks close, go to the FDA page and confirm the label, size, date, UPC, code, and company contact instructions. If you are pregnant, elderly, immunocompromised, caring for an infant, or caring for someone with high medical risk, do not freestyle the decision. Use official health guidance and contact a clinician or local health department if exposure is possible.
The accountability angle is broader than one product. When a dairy item gets a possible Listeria recall, the public should ask how the contamination risk was detected, how distribution was traced, whether stores were notified fast enough, whether multilingual warnings reached the communities most likely to buy the product, and whether state or local health agencies issued matching alerts. Recalls are only useful if they reach the people with the product in hand.
Recall Two: Revival Animal Health Milk Replacers
FDA posted a June 25, 2026 announcement for Revival Animal Health, LLC of Orange City, Iowa. The FDA page says Revival is recalling Breeder's Edge Foster Care Canine and Shelter's Choice Canine milk replacers and expanding the recall to include Breeder's Edge Foster Care GM goat-milk products because of variable Vitamin D levels. The FDA metadata describes the issue as low or elevated Vitamin D.
This is a pet and animal-safety story, but it can still hit families hard. Milk replacers are used for vulnerable animals, often young animals, rescues, shelters, breeders, foster homes, and people trying to keep puppies, kittens, or goats alive. Vitamin D levels matter because too much or too little can create real health problems. Readers should check the FDA page for the exact products, lot codes, and company instructions, and should contact a veterinarian if an animal may have consumed affected product and shows symptoms.
The accountability lane is not to panic every pet owner. It is to make sure the chain is visible. Who manufactured the product? What lot ranges are affected? How was the Vitamin D variance found? What retail, shelter, veterinary, breeder, or online channels received product? Were rescues and small shelters notified directly? Did marketplaces keep selling affected inventory after the recall date? Those are practical records questions.
BadPD should keep this in the recall archive because animal products can move through informal networks fast. Shelters share supplies. Foster homes trade formula. Breeders may have stock on shelves. Small stores may miss a recall email. The public-service value is in repetition: check the product name, check the lot, stop use if it matches, follow the official instruction, and preserve the package if there is illness or a complaint.
Recall Three: High Valley Orchard Chocolate-Covered Raisins
FDA posted a June 25, 2026 announcement for Lehi Valley Trading Company of Mesa, Arizona. The FDA page says the company is recalling 624 units of 15-ounce packages of High Valley Orchard Chocolate Covered Raisins because they contain undeclared peanuts. FDA's summary says people with peanut allergies risk serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume the product.
This one is straightforward and serious. Undeclared peanuts are not a preference issue. They can be fatal to people with severe allergies. A package that looks like a simple chocolate raisin snack becomes a medical-risk product if peanuts are present and not declared. Readers should compare the exact FDA product details and photos before acting. If the product matches, follow the company's recall instructions and do not serve it to anyone with peanut allergy or uncertain allergy status.
The accountability lane is labeling, packaging, inventory, and notification speed. How did peanuts get into a raisin product? Was it a packaging mix-up, supplier issue, cross-contact issue, or label-review failure? How were the 624 units distributed? How quickly were retailers told? Were online listings updated? Did any complaints or reactions trigger discovery? Those facts decide whether this was a narrow error or a preventable process failure.
BadPD is not turning a small-unit recall into fake drama. The public-safety value is that one wrong package can matter a lot to one family. The low unit count does not reduce the severity for the person with the allergy. The correct frame is targeted urgency, not broad panic.
Confirmed, Pending, And What Readers Should Do
Confirmed: FDA posted direct recall pages for all three items. Confirmed: the La Ceiba page identifies possible Listeria contamination involving cottage cheese products under the La Colonia and Selectos Latinos brands. Confirmed: the Revival page identifies canine and goat-milk replacer products affected by variable Vitamin D levels. Confirmed: the Lehi Valley page identifies undeclared peanuts in 15-ounce High Valley Orchard Chocolate Covered Raisins and lists 624 recalled units.
Pending: full state-by-state distribution details for each product unless listed on the FDA pages, store-level pullback evidence, whether illness or adverse-event reports have been confirmed, whether retailers removed online listings, and whether state health departments or agriculture departments issued parallel notices. BadPD should update when the recall pages are amended or when enforcement reports add classification details.
Readers should not rely on a headline. Use the FDA page for the exact product identifiers. If a product matches a recall, follow the company and FDA instructions. If a person or animal became sick after consuming a recalled product, preserve the package, record dates and symptoms, contact the appropriate health professional, and report through official channels. If the product does not match, do not invent risk from a similar name. Recalls are exact-record work.
Why BadPD Covers Recalls
BadPD's core lane is police, government, public power, civil rights, courts, and accountability. Recalls fit when they help people avoid harm and when official records can be packaged in plain language. A recall is government accountability in miniature. A company announces a problem. FDA posts the notice. Retailers and distributors should pull product. Consumers should be warned. The public can test whether the system worked.
The useful question is not just whether FDA posted a page. The useful question is whether the warning reached the shelf, the refrigerator, the shelter, the pantry, the online marketplace, and the caregiver. A recall nobody sees is not a safety system. It is a document.
That is why BadPD should keep a recurring recall ledger next to police and government stories. Not every item deserves a 2,500-word article. But clusters like this do, because they cover food safety, animal safety, allergy safety, and official-source public service in one sweep. They also help solve the site's low-value-content problem by publishing original, practical, source-backed information instead of thin reposts.
Records And Follow-Up Demands
For the La Ceiba recall, BadPD wants the state distribution list, lot identifiers, recall classification, health-department cross-posts, inspection or testing trigger if available, and any follow-up FDA enforcement report. For Revival, BadPD wants the affected lot ranges, retail and online distribution channels, veterinary guidance, adverse-event summary if one exists, and whether shelters or rescues were contacted. For Lehi Valley, BadPD wants the packaging error explanation, retailer list, online listing status, and whether any allergic reactions were reported.
Those records may not all be public today. That is fine. The article starts the ledger and gives readers the official trail. Follow-ups should add facts only when the FDA page updates, enforcement reports classify the recall, state agencies post companion alerts, or companies issue expanded instructions.
Practical Checklist
Check your refrigerator for La Colonia or Selectos Latinos cottage cheese products matching the FDA notice. Check pet supplies for Revival Animal Health, Breeder's Edge Foster Care, Shelter's Choice, and goat-milk replacer products matching the FDA notice. Check pantry and snack shelves for High Valley Orchard Chocolate Covered Raisins in 15-ounce packaging matching the FDA notice.
Do not rely on memory. Look at the label. If someone else shops for an elderly relative, checks a pantry for a child, or manages supplies for a rescue, share the official FDA links with them. If you manage a small store, church pantry, shelter, breeder supply room, daycare, or senior center, search the exact product names and verify whether recalled products were stocked.
BadPD will update this page if FDA adds recall classifications, expands products, reports illnesses or adverse events, posts distribution updates, or if state agencies add local instructions.
The Store-Shelf Problem
A recall page is only the first step. The harder problem is the store shelf. A product can be recalled at the company and FDA level while still sitting in a cooler, pantry, online listing, discount bin, shelter supply cabinet, or home refrigerator. That is why the public needs distribution, retail, and pullback records. The exact product details matter more than broad brand fear.
For the cottage cheese recall, grocery stores and small markets should check whether the specific La Colonia or Selectos Latinos products were stocked, moved to a back cooler, sold through a local delivery app, or provided to a restaurant, food truck, community event, or family-run market. Many small food recalls do not reach people because the customer base is local, multilingual, or buying from stores that do not have polished recall-notification systems. The official FDA page should be the source, but community sharing may be what actually keeps someone safe.
For the pet milk recall, the store-shelf problem includes shelters, foster networks, rescue pantries, breeders, feed stores, veterinary offices, and people who buy in bulk. A household may have an opened container with the label thrown away, a half-used bag in a bin, or product moved into another container. That is why product photos and lot-code checks are important. If the product might match and an animal is vulnerable, the safer path is to verify with the company or veterinarian rather than guess.
For the peanut-allergy recall, the store-shelf problem is especially urgent because people with severe allergies often rely on label trust. A caregiver, school, camp, office, senior center, church pantry, or vending supplier may have snack products in shared spaces. The fact that the recall covers 624 units does not mean the risk is tiny for the one person with the package. It means the search should be precise and fast.
How To Report A Problem Without Creating Noise
If you think you have one of these products, first compare the official FDA page. Look for the exact product name, brand, package size, lot, date, UPC, and photo. If it matches, follow the recall instructions. If someone or an animal got sick, write down the timeline, preserve the package, preserve receipts if available, and contact the appropriate medical or veterinary professional. Reports are most useful when they include the product identifier, purchase location, date, symptoms, and whether any official case report was filed.
BadPD does not want rumor submissions like someone saying a store seemed suspicious or a product looked weird. BadPD wants receipts: product photos, lot photos, official notices posted at a store, retailer emails, company responses, state health alerts, FDA updates, veterinary notes, or public enforcement records. The goal is to help people and document whether the recall system worked, not to create panic or accuse a store without evidence.
Why Elderly And Disabled Readers Need Extra Recall Visibility
Food recalls often assume the consumer will see the notice, search the FDA site, and compare labels. That assumption fails for a lot of people. Elderly homeowners, disabled residents, caregivers, people without reliable internet, people with limited English, and families using food pantries may not see a recall until after exposure. BadPD's public-service lane should package official recalls in plain language because not every important record is hidden in a court docket.
For Listeria risk, timing and health status matter. For undeclared peanuts, one snack can be serious. For animal milk replacers, a small foster animal can decline quickly. A useful article should ask readers to check on someone else: an elderly relative's refrigerator, a foster's supply shelf, a shelter cabinet, a school snack bin, or a pantry donation table. That is community accountability, not filler content.
The Follow-Up Calendar
BadPD should revisit these recalls within a week. Check whether FDA changed the recall classification, whether additional lots were added, whether company photos were updated, whether distribution states were clarified, whether illnesses or adverse events were reported, and whether state agencies mirrored the notice. If there are no changes, the article can be marked reviewed with no change. If there are changes, update the article and source date.
This is also where advertisers and public-service partners fit without compromising the newsroom. A local food-safety attorney, veterinary clinic, allergy clinic, community pantry, or consumer-safety sponsor can buy ad space on BadPD, but editorial coverage must stay source-led. The ad space can say it is available for purchase and link to the contact form. The recall article itself should remain a public-service ledger, not paid copy.
Send Receipts
Have a source document, docket link, bodycam release, official statement, public-record response, or firsthand video that fits BadPD police, government, court, civil-rights, recall, or public-safety focus? Use the BadPD contact form and include the date, location, source, and how the record was obtained. BadPD does not publish rumors as facts; send receipts.
Source Trail
- FDA – La Ceiba Foods cottage cheese recall (Published June 26, 2026; archived June 27, 2026) – Official recall page for possible Listeria risk in La Colonia and Selectos Latinos cottage cheese products.
- FDA – Revival Animal Health milk replacer recall (Published June 25, 2026; archived June 27, 2026) – Official recall page for variable Vitamin D levels in canine and goat milk replacers.
- FDA – Lehi Valley chocolate-covered raisins recall (Published June 25, 2026; archived June 27, 2026) – Official recall page for undeclared peanuts in 15-ounce High Valley Orchard Chocolate Covered Raisins.
- FDA recalls, market withdrawals, and safety alerts (Checked June 27, 2026) – Official FDA recall portal for cross-checking updates and additional notices.
- FDA recall resources (Checked June 27, 2026) – Official background resource for recall handling and consumer follow-up.
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