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Published 10:17 16 Oct 2020 BST
Enterobacteriaceae are a group of bacteria, of which some can be harmful to humans, the FSAI says.
The test for Enterobacteriaceae is used as an indicator of poor hygiene, process failure and/or post-processing contamination of heat processed foods. The test itself does not confirm the presence of harmful bacteria.
Retailers have been requested to remove the implicated batches from sale and to display a point-of-sale recall notice in stores where the affected batches were sold.
Caterers have been informed not to use the implicated batches and consumers advised not to drink them; all affected products have a use-by date of 26 or 27 October.Molly-Mae drops hint on new baby’s name and admits everyone’s going to pronounce it wrong’
Theories are doing the rounds online. Successful influencer and Love Island royalty Molly-Mae Hague has welcomed her second child with Tommy Fury. The gender and name of the newest addition to the family are yet to be revealed; however, the influencer has dropped some major clues about what the baby’s name could be. Because the […]
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Good weather not gone forever as forecasters reveal when Ireland will see sunshine again
The dark days are only temporary. After a stunning taste of summer last week, the drop in temperatures and darkening skies seem to have taken over, but fear not, the good weather is not gone forever. While the country is set for some rainy conditions this week, the sunny spells are forecast to make a […]
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2 days ago
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CMAT expresses ‘deep sadness’ after comments about her body at BBC Radio 1 performance
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