A major produce supplier is pulling lettuce linked to the Cyclospora outbreak from shelves and kitchens.
Taylor Farms said in a statement onFriday that it is voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce from central Mexico that was for sale in the US. The company said it was pulling the lettuce from the region "indefinitely," though an FDA investigation showed that cyclospora-contaminated lettuce originated at one farm that supplied "less than 1%" of the US's iceberg lettuce.
Other Taylor Farms products, including salad kits sold under the company's name, are not affected by the removal, the company said.
"As a family-owned and operated company, we are deeply concerned for those who became ill, their families, and the many Americans whose trust in the safety of their fresh produce has been shaken," the company said in the statement.
The parasite outbreak has affected at least 1,644 people in 34 states since May 1, according to the US Food and Drug Administration.
The tainted lettuce reached some Taco Bell restaurants in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia, the FDA said on Thursday. Later on Thursday, the fast-food chain said it was removing shredded lettuce at affected restaurants and would replace it.
Taylor Farms has recalled produce before
The iceberg removal is not the first for Taylor Farms, which supplies produce to major restaurants and grocery stores.
The supplier recalled yellow onions in 2024, citing potential E. coli contamination. Some of those onions were sent to fast-food chains, including McDonald's. The resulting outbreak sickened over 100 people, one of whom died, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said at the time.
Another recall in 2020 focused on Taylor Farms onions sold at Kroger and Walmart, according to FDA records.
Last year, the company also recalled some salad kits after their labels failed to disclose that they included soy and sesame, two potential allergens, the FDA said.
More on the cyclospora outbreak
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Alex Bitter is a senior retail reporter covering the gig economy, food, and retail. His work focuses major gig delivery and ride-hailing apps, including Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart, and Walmart's Spark. He is interested in everything from what it's like to work on the apps to the companies' business strategies.Some of his recent stories feature gig workers who have been deactivated on the apps, DoorDash hiring traditional employees to make deliveries, gig workers' use of bots, and gig work expanding into new professions, such as nursing.Alex has also written about Aldi's US expansion, Starbucks' turnaround efforts, and the fallout from Kraft-Heinz's budget cutting. Convenience store chain Sheetz ended its "smile policy" after his reporting.Before joining Insider in September 2020, he wrote about consumer and retail companies for S&P Global Market Intelligence. He's a graduate of the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa and grew up on the Big Island.Alex lives in the Washington, DC, area, where you can find him studying ancient coins or searching for Civil War artifacts with his metal detector in his free time.Got a tip? Reach out at [email protected] or via encrypted messaging app Signal at +1 (808) 854-4501.
Hilary Brueck is a Health Correspondent at Business Insider, where she covers longevity and the quest to improve human aging. She also writes regularly about the complexities of diagnosing and treating cancer, the evolving landscape of GLP-1 drugs, new developments in exercise science, and expert-backed nutrition advice. In general, she relishes any opportunity to unpack scientific discoveries or examine the latest consumer trends. Her reports have ranged from exploring how sherpas effortlessly climb into the thin air 29,029 feet above sea level to summit Mount Everest, to trudging along a Jersey shore beach with scientists fighting killer pandemic flu viruses by studying bird butts.She spoke with Dr. Anthony Fauci about his vitamin and supplement routine over a cold slice of pizza, and chatted with the world's oldest Nobel Prize winner in his basement solar lab. She also went an entire month without eating any ultra-processed foods (yes, it was time-consuming and challenging). A graduate of Columbia Journalism School and former Peace Corps Volunteer, Hilary speaks English, French, and Malagasy. Previously, Hilary reported for ABC News Radio, Fortune, Forbes, and Al Jazeera America. In her spare time, she likes to run, hike and she is also an aspiring (but very bad) surfer. If you've got a pressing health question, tip, or concern, reach out to [email protected]Expertise
- Longevity and healthy aging
- GLP1s like Ozempic and Mounjaro
- Exercise and nutrition science
- Brain-Computer Interfaces (Neuralink, Synchron)
- Mental health and wellness
Awards
- 2026 National Headliner Award: first place for online beat reporting in health & science for a series on young colon cancer.
- 2025 North American Travel Journalists Association silver award for sports, recreation, and adventure writing.
- 2024 New York Press Club award for best online infographic: What loneliness does to your body and brain
- 2024 James Beard nominee for health and wellness reporting: Long-Lived Loma Linda
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