Tesco recall: Popular food pulled from shelves amid salmonella fears

tesco is part of a nationwide food recall after the Food Safety Authority of Ireland raised concerns over the possible presence of Salmonella in Good4U Super Sprouts Super Greens. The affected batches were sold in Tesco and Supervalu, and shoppers are being told not to eat the product. Recall notices are being displayed at point of sale while retailers remove the implicated stock.
What Tesco shoppers need to know
The alert covers a popular food item tied to a nationwide recall in Ireland, with the warning focused on the possible presence of Salmonella. The product is Good4U Super Sprouts Super Greens, and the recall applies to the below batches sold in Tesco and Supervalu.
Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batches. Retailers are requested to take the affected stock out of sale and show recall notices where customers can see them. The warning is being treated as urgent because Salmonella can cause illness that may develop within 12 to 36 hours, though the time window can stretch from 6 to 72 hours.
Why the recall was issued
The Food Safety Authority of Ireland said the recall was triggered by the possible presence of Salmonella in the product. The authority also set out the main symptoms linked with the infection, including diarrhoea, fever, headache and abdominal cramps. In some cases, diarrhoea can be severe enough to require hospital admission.
The authority noted that the illness usually lasts 4 to 7 days. It also said the elderly, infants and people with impaired immune systems are more likely to experience severe illness. tesco shoppers who have already bought the product are being told to check whether they hold any of the implicated batches and avoid eating them.
Impact on stores and households
Food recalls are designed to remove unsafe products quickly and limit the chance of harm. In this case, the recall is not being limited to one location, but is instead described as nationwide. That means the product may have reached a wide set of customers through ordinary grocery shopping trips.
The key immediate step is simple: do not eat the affected product and look for the recall notice in store. Tesco has been listed among the retailers carrying the product, alongside Supervalu, and the stock is being withdrawn while the public warning remains in place.
What happens next
For now, the focus is on removing the affected batches from shelves and making sure customers see the warning quickly. If more information is issued, it is likely to center on which batches are covered and whether any further products are involved. For shoppers, the safest response is to check purchases carefully and follow the recall instructions tied to tesco and the affected Good4U product.




