National Recall Roundup, May 27
A few new recalls while other recall campaigns continue
New and notable consumer hazards
Peanut allergen contamination in packaged noodles
Salmonella contamination tied to powdered dairy ingredients used in grocery foods
Crash risks involving missing vehicle labels and rearview camera failures
Autonomous vehicle software defects involving flooded-road navigation
FDA food recalls and alerts
Sesame noodles recalled over undeclared peanuts
Fly By Jing Creamy Sesame Noodles sold through Whole Foods, Thrive Market, and online retailers were recalled nationwide because they may contain undeclared peanuts caused by manufacturing cross-contact. The recall poses potentially life-threatening risks to consumers with peanut allergies.
Salmonella-related recalls continue expanding
The FDA continues tracking expanding recalls linked to powdered milk ingredients from California Dairies Inc. because of possible Salmonella contamination. Affected products include chips, snack foods, seasonings, croutons, and packaged grocery items sold nationwide.
Vehicle recalls and transportation safety (NHTSA)
Tesla recalls Model Y SUVs over missing labels
Tesla recalled 14,575 Model Y SUVs because some vehicles are missing federally required weight certification labels warning owners about maximum safe loading limits. NHTSA warned overloaded vehicles could face increased crash risks.
Tesla rearview camera recall remains active
Tesla continues addressing a recall involving more than 218,000 vehicles because rearview camera images may lag or fail to display while reversing.
Waymo recalls robotaxis after flooded-road incidents
Waymo recalled nearly 3,800 autonomous vehicles after software defects allegedly allowed robotaxis to continue driving into flooded roadways, potentially resulting in loss of vehicle control.
Ford recalls continue involving seat bolts and camera defects
Ford Motor Company continues addressing recalls involving loose seat-frame bolts, rearview camera failures, and driver-assistance system outages affecting hundreds of thousands of vehicles.
USDA FSIS public health alerts
Listeria warning tied to deli meat products
The USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service continues warning consumers about headcheese deli meat products from Crawford Sausage Co. because of possible Listeria contamination tied to reported illnesses.



