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This week's recalls: popsicles with undeclared milk and tree nuts, and two more to check for

Check this one first: paletas with undeclared milk and tree nuts

De Dios’s Ice Pops II is recalling its 3.7-ounce Paletas for undeclared milk, pecans, and pistachios (the notice also flags Yellow #5 and Red #40, which are dyes, not allergens). These are Mexican-style ice pops, a children’s treat, carrying two major allergens the label never names. They went to retail grocery stores in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut, and the recall covers every unit produced before April 27, 2026; the company says production after that date was made under new, FDA-verified procedures and is not part of the recall.

A popsicle is exactly the kind of thing that gets handed to a kid without a second look. If you buy paletas at a grocery store in those four states, this is the one to pull from the freezer and check.

A Class I octopus recall

Azuma Foods TAKO WASABI Seasoned Octopus with Wasabi, frozen and made in Japan, sold in retail 3-pack 50g packages and 2.2-pound foodservice packs, is under a Class I recall (H-1075-2026) for undeclared fish. The octopus itself is named right on the label, so the undeclared piece is some other fish-derived ingredient the label doesn’t call out. Azuma Foods International Inc USA shipped 545 retail cases and 3,616 foodservice cases into AK, AZ, CA, CO, FL, GA, HI, IL, MD, MA, NC, NJ, NV, NY, OR, TX, and WA, 17 states in total. The recall is dated May 28, 2026.

And one from the UK

Gü Double Sea Salted Caramel Frozen Dessert is being recalled under FSA notice FSA-AA-28-2026 (also May 28, 2026) because it may contain hazelnuts and soya lecithin not declared on the label.

Before you go

The recall notices, with photos and lot numbers, are linked on each product above. I run this sweep every week and post what an allergy household would actually want flagged.

Not medical advice. Every reaction is different, so follow the emergency action plan you built with your allergist; if you do not have one, that is the ask for your next visit. When a reaction is severe or you are not sure how bad it is, do not delay epinephrine, then call for help.

These are summaries of official recall notices from the U.S. FDA, USDA FSIS, Canada's CFIA, and the UK FSA. Each product above links to its primary source. This is reporting on public recall notices, not a substitute for medical advice.

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