

Jaltemba Sol
Salmonella found in basil grown in Nayarit Mexico
FDA finds the germ in herbs imported by a Garden Grove firm.
The product is recalled in three states.
Salmonella, the bacterium that has sickened more than 1,000
Americans who ate tainted produce since April, has also been found in Thai basil
grown in Mexico.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration identified
salmonella during random testing of basil imported by Lucky Green Trading Inc.,
a family-run company based in Garden Grove, the agency said Friday. The product
has been recalled from Southern California, Arizona and Nevada, where it was
distributed directly and sold in retail stores.
FDA officials have boosted inspections of Mexican exports as
they look for the origin of the Salmonella Saintpaul outbreak that has spread to
42 states since mid-April. Although the focus has been on certain types of
tomatoes grown in Mexico and Florida, officials said this week that jalapenos
caused some illnesses and serrano peppers and cilantro also were under
investigation.
"Every importer from Mexico has to go through the
inspection," said Tony Ton, whose family runs Lucky Green. "That's a new thing.
Every year, we used to have one or two occasions where FDA has to do a random
inspection."
No illnesses have been linked to Lucky Green's herbs. The
firm's Thai basil comes from the town of Santa Rosa Tapachula in Nayarit, a
state on the west-central coast of Mexico. It sells no other products this time
of the year, Ton said.
Three shipments of Thai basil from the same
Mexican grower passed inspection last week, so Lucky Green is checking on
whether the latest batch was contaminated by another grower in the same area,
Ton said.