Boar’s Head Cheese Recall: Why Traceability is Your Kitchen’s Best Defense

Cheese recall
Deli meat
Have you checked the recall list this week?

The Boar’s Head cheese recall involves specific lots of Pecorino Romano cheese (both grated and in wedges) because of potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes. Even though there have been no confirmed illnesses, the FDA classified this as a Class I recall because there is a reasonable probability that using the product could cause serious health consequences. If you’re managing a kitchen in Minnesota, you must immediately check your inventory for the affected lot codes and review your traceability procedures.

It’s Not Just the Deli Meat

If you’re like most food managers in Minnesota, you probably remember the massive deli meat recall earlier this year. But this latest alert proves a critical point: contamination can happen anywhere in the supply chain.

This time, it isn’t the liverwurst. It’s the Pecorino Romano.

Cheese recall
Boar’s Head is in the news again!

Specifically, the recall affects:

  • Boar’s Head Grated Pecorino Romano (6 oz jars and foodservice bags)

     

  • Boar’s Head Pecorino Romano Wedges (7 oz)

     

  • Note: This recall also affects other brands produced by the same supplier, including Locatelli and Ambriola.

If you’ve got these in your cooler, don’t serve them. Check the UPCs and sell-by dates against the official FDA notice immediately.

The "Peaches" Connection: Why It Could Be Anything

peaches
Checking recalls is a vital part of keeping your kitchen and patrons safe!

You’re probably thinking, “We don’t use Boar’s Head cheese, so we’re safe.” That’s a dangerous mindset.

Remember the peaches?

 

In late 2025, Moonlight Companies recalled yellow and white peaches because of Listeria. Back in 2020, a similar situation with Wawona peaches sickened 23 Minnesotans with Salmonella.

The lesson is simple: Whether it’s a processed dairy product like grated cheese or raw agricultural commodities like fresh peaches, the risk is always present. You can’t inspect Listeria out of a cheese wedge with the naked eye—it can survive and grow at temperatures as low as 31.3°F. You can only defend against it with traceability.

Traceability: Your Only Real Defense

When a recall hits, there are two types of kitchens:

  1. The Panic Kitchen: They scramble through the walk-in for 3 to 4 hours, tossing anything that “looks like” the recalled item, wasting hundreds of dollars and potentially missing the actual contaminated batch.

  2. The Proactive Kitchen: They pull up their invoices and receiving logs. Within 5 minutes, they know exactly when the product arrived, which lot it was, and whether it’s still in the building.

Reactive vs. Proactive Safety Procedures

Feature

The Panic Kitchen (Reactive)

The Proactive Kitchen (Safe Food Training)

Response Time

4+ Hours (searching physically)

< 10 Minutes (checking records)

Waste

High (tossing safe product “just in case”)

Low (only tossing affected lots)

Inventory Method

Visual checks only

First-In, First-Out (FIFO) & Lot Logging

Confidence

“I think we got it all.”

“I know we’re safe.”

3 Steps to Take Today

If you haven’t updated your receiving procedures lately, do it now.

  1. Log Your Lots: When high-risk items (deli meats, soft cheeses, leafy greens) arrive, write the Lot ID on your receiving log.

  2. Keep Invoices Accessible: Don’t just bury them in the office. If a recall alert drops during the dinner rush, your chef needs to see those dates immediately.

  3. Train Your Team: Does your prep cook know what a “Julian Date” is? If not, it’s time for a refresher.

Building Trust Beyond Compliance

We know how hard you work to put great food on the table. Recalls are frustrating because they feel out of your control, but how you handle them is 100% in your control. When you can look a health inspector—or a customer—in the eye and say, “We checked our lots, and we’re clear,” that isn’t just following the rules. That’s building trust. And in Minnesota, trust is everything.

Frequently Asked Questions

Recalls can be confusing, and it is natural to have questions about how they impact your certification and daily operations. Here are answers to some of the most common questions we hear from Minnesota food professionals.

Traceability
Traceability is vital in any recall.

Q: Will this course fulfill Minnesota's food license requirements?

A: Absolutely. Our 8-hour food licensing course specifically aligns with and meets Minnesota’s official food safety standards, including handling recalls and traceability.

Q: How often must I complete continuing education to maintain my food safety certification in Minnesota?

A: In Minnesota, you must renew your certified food protection manager license by completing continuing education every 3 years. Staying current helps you stay on top of new risks like these.

Q: How does Safe Food Training support clients beyond the initial course?

A: We’re committed to building and maintaining relationships. We provide ongoing support through renewal reminders and as a reliable resource during confusing recalls like this.

Q: What's the primary service that Safe Food Training offers?

A: We specialize in providing personalized, 8-hour certified food protection manager licensing courses tailored for food professionals across Minnesota. We teach you the systems to handle recalls effectively.

Q: Why is staying current with food safety standards so important?

A: Upholding Minnesota’s food safety standards is critical for protecting public health. As these recalls show, ensuring your business remains compliant is the only way to protect your reputation.

Secure Your Kitchen Today

Don’t leave your kitchen’s safety to chance.

 

Register for an upcoming course at https://www.safefoodtraining.com, complete your food safety certification, and learn how to build a defense system that works.

Boar’s Head Listeria Crisis: Urgent Recall, Lawsuit Surge, and Factory Shutdown

Boar’s Head Listeria
Boar’s Head Listeria-what you need to know.
Boar’s Head Listeria-what you need to know.

The role of a Certified Food Protection Manager is to stand as the first and most critical line of defense for public health. The 2024 Boar’s Head listeria crisis brought this responsibility into sharp focus. This event, linked to Boar’s Head products, isn’t just news—it’s a powerful case study for any food professional in Minnesota. The outbreak, which began in mid-2024, ultimately resulted in 61 illnesses and 10 tragic fatalities. Officials traced all of these back to a single production facility.

This incident highlights the serious real-world consequences of sanitation failures and the absolute necessity of stringent food safety protocols. Let’s break down the key lessons from this event for every food manager.

1. The Outbreak: A Failure at the Source

The timeline of the crisis shows how quickly a localized problem can become a national tragedy. Health officials identified a cluster of listeria cases and, through investigation, traced the outbreak to its source: the Boar’s Head facility in Jarratt, Virginia. Officials determined the cause was inadequate sanitation practices that allowed Listeria to contaminate the processing environment.

This single-point failure is a powerful reminder for any manager in Minnesota.

  • Pathogens are persistent: Listeria is a uniquely stubborn bacterium. It can thrive and grow in cold, wet environments—like a production plant or your own walk-in cooler. This is why active cleaning and sanitation, not just passive storage, are critical.

  • Traceability is non-negotiable: The ability of health officials to trace 61 separate illnesses back to a single plant underscores its importance. This same principle applies to your operation: you must be able to track your products from receiving to serving.

You cannot see the threat: Listeria does not change the appearance, smell, or taste of food. This is why we, as food professionals, must rely on our systems and training, not our senses, to protect our customers.

2. The Response: Containment and Legal Fallout

In response to the outbreak, Boar’s Head initiated a massive recall of over 7 million pounds of deli meats, including liverwurst, ham, salami, and bologna. The Jarratt plant was permanently closed, and the company announced it would stop producing liverwurst entirely.

Severe legal and financial consequences followed this immediate corporate response.

  • Legal accountability: The fallout included numerous lawsuits from affected consumers and the families of victims. Someone filed a $20 million wrongful death lawsuit, and class-action lawsuits are still ongoing.

  • The financial cost: The cost of a 7-million-pound recall, the permanent closure of a production plant, and the ongoing legal battles represents a devastating financial blow. It proves that investing in food safety is always cheaper than paying for a food safety failure.

3. The Boar's Head Listeria Lesson: What Every CFPM Must Know

For food protection managers, the most alarming detail from this crisis is that the USDA’s investigation revealed prior health violations at the Jarratt plant. This outbreak was preventable, which is why this incident serves as a critical reminder of our professional responsibility.

This is where the role of a Certified Food Protection Manager becomes a legal and financial shield.

  • Documentation is your defense: Those prior violations highlight the importance of our daily logs. Your temperature, sanitation, and receiving logs are not just “paperwork.” They are your legal, documented proof that you are practicing due diligence and actively preventing foodborne illness.

  • Your team is your responsibility: You must train your team to be your eyes and ears. They must understand why they are following procedures—from handwashing to checking receiving temperatures—and be empowered to speak up if they see a protocol being missed.

  • You are the last line of defense: You’re the final checkpoint in the food supply chain. You place trust in your suppliers, but you must also verify their work. A manager with a strong food safety culture is the best defense against this kind of crisis.

This Boar’s Head listeria crisis is a stark reminder of the immense responsibility we hold. Rigorous food safety practices are not optional. As a Certified Food Protection Manager, you are the leader who upholds these standards, protects public health, and fosters consumer confidence in our food supply.

Stay Prepared with Safe Food Training

Boar’s Head Listeria
Boar’s Head Listeria outbreak-how to stay safe!

Don’t wait for a crisis to test your team’s knowledge. Whether you need your initial 8-hour food licensing certification or your three-year continuing education, our friendly, personalized, and effective training is tailored for Minnesota food professionals. Visit us at safefoodtraining.com to register for an upcoming course.