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Popular brand of salad dressing recalled in 11 states

The salad dressing has undeclared wheat and soy in it, making it a hazard to people with those allergies.
Credit: AP
In this April 30, 2019 photograph, a Whole Foods sign hangs over the store's entrance in the Highland Village shopping center in Jackson, Miss. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

WASHINGTON — A brand of Caesar salad dressing sold at Whole Foods is being recalled because it may contain soy and wheat, two allergens that aren't declared on the label. 

Bottles of Whole Foods Market 365 Organic Creamy Caesar Dressing with a UPC code 99482-49028 and a best by date of 11/17/22 should be returned to the store for an exchange or thrown away if they were bought in Arkansas, Connecticut, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maine, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, New York, Texas or New Hampshire. 

The recalled dressing was sold in 12 ounce glass bottles. 

The recall was issued because the dressing has undeclared wheat and soy in it, making it a hazard to people with those allergies. Allergic reactions can range from mild irritation to fatal anaphylactic shock. 

No illnesses or allergic reactions related to the recall have been reported, according to the company's announcement. 

According to the recall notice, the undeclared allergens were a result of the labeling and packaging process temporarily breaking down at the Van Law Food Product facility where the dressing was made. 

Other recent recalls in the U.S. include some Kinder chocolate products that may have been contaminated with salmonella and a batch of carbon monoxide alarms that are defective and won't make a sound if they detect the gas.

In the Kinder case, the recall was issued because the chocolates were made at the same facility that has been linked to a growing salmonella outbreak in Europe. At least 134 children in European countries have grown sick, but no cases have been reported in the U.S.

RELATED: Amid growing Kinder egg recall in Europe, some chocolates recalled in US

The 8,000 carbon monoxide alarms were all sold between 2017 and 2019, but regulators in the U.S. recently discovered the defect and urged anybody who purchased one in that timeframe to check it against the recalled manufacturing numbers.

RELATED: Check your carbon monoxide alarm: 8,000 2-in-1 alarms recalled

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