FDA Recalls 80,000 Pounds of Costco Butter Over Missing Milk Allergy Warning
Apparently consumers are too stupid to know that butter contains milk.

Last month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recalled almost 80,000 pounds of Costco's popular store-brand butter due to a crucial labeling error. While the butter listed "cream" as an ingredient, the packaging lacked a critical allergen warning alerting consumers that butter contains milk.
That's right, Costco had to waste 40 tons of perfectly good butter because shoppers apparently don't know that butter contains milk.
FDA rules require food manufacturers to state whether their products contain or may have come into contact with major allergens, including milk, eggs, fish, crustacean shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, sesame, and soybeans. According to the FDA, 46,800 pounds of Kirkland Signature Unsalted Sweet Cream Butter and 32,400 pounds of Kirkland Signature Salted Sweet Cream Butter accurately listed "cream" as an ingredient, but omitted an allergen-specific label on the package warning that the product contained milk.
The FDA classified the recall as Class II, meaning the labeling error is a "situation in which use of or exposure to a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences or where the probability of serious adverse health consequences is remote." But despite the low risk of harm—made even lower when considering that butter is one of the most well-known dairy products—the enormous supply of butter will now go to waste.
In response, 2020 Libertarian vice presidential candidate Spike Cohen said, "80,000 pounds of Costco butter was just recalled, because the label doesn't say that it contains milk. It's butter."
"News articles are telling people how they can return, or safely dispose of, the butter. It's butter," he added.
"This is a joke, right? Or it's sabotage, by someone who wants the @US_FDA to be deleted," replied another X user.
While these rules are designed to help consumers avoid accidentally ingesting something they're allergic to, this kind of stringent labeling seems less necessary for products that clearly contain a specific allergen. Is it really a risk to public health if a package of butter that accurately lists its ingredients doesn't also provide an additional warning about milk? Or if a jar of peanut butter neglects to add an allergen warning for peanuts? Are those allergic to shellfish in danger if a package of shrimp doesn't have an allergen label for shellfish?
This isn't the first time FDA labeling rules have led to frustrating consequences. In 2023, the agency added sesame to its list of major allergens. However, instead of helping those allergic to the seeds stay safe, the rules may have led to more danger for those with sesame allergies. Because sesame seeds are so small, it's difficult to fully isolate them from other ingredients in a manufacturing facility. Instead of taking onerous steps to fully guarantee no cross-contamination with sesame seeds, bakers and food producers have resorted to adding small amounts of sesame into their products so they can list sesame as an allergen and avoid FDA scrutiny.
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Couldn’t just put stickers on the boxes?
Couldn't just beat the inspectors to death and hide the bodies?
That would be margarinally butter.
Duuuuuude!
Winner
You sure know how to stick it to a guy.
Inspired.
Another example of why consumers butter pay closer attention to dairy products.
Dairy I say the FDA should go churn butter?
They have it down pat.
""may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences ""
Like clogged arteries?
Fact: seed oils and margarine are worse for you than real butter.
So go back to your cotton seed oil margarine and don't forget to use that corn oil next time you fry that delicious tofu burger.
A churn for the worse.
Does this tie in to the dairy lobby trying to ban "almond butter" as misleading? Maybe they got bit by their own retard?
Hoisted on their own retard? Udder nonsense.
Can you clarify that?
We'll have to skim for facts
The very act of issuing a recall serves as a warning about the allergen, so the FDA should require nothing more than the warning message itself -- Actually recalling the butter and destroying it is as gratuitously, capriciously unnecessary as the label was in the first place.
you are not thinking like a bureaucrat
I mean this with all seriousness. We need to get rid of the FDA as soon as possible, in its entirely. Fire every single employee and close all the doors.
Hopefully DOGE will come to the same conclusion (not holding my breath tho)
Maybe, maybe not. I don't know, but it's possible that some people think making butter somehow inactivates the allergens present in the milk used to make it. Pointing out that the FDA sometimes makes unforced errors like this one doesn't prove that we don't need labels, or even the FDA itself. I do know that a lot of people don't look for, read, believe, or care about warning labels in the first place. After all this time (since 1964), are people too stupid to know without being reminded that tobacco use causes cancers and other diseases? Perhaps not, and I'm sure that Big Tobacco would love to know that 80,000 packs of cigarettes can't be confiscated if for some reason they don't carry the required warning label.
Forced warning labels is for a society of children who depend on daddy government to take care of them and then they dont read the labels.
This is from 2012. They had been doing this for 90 years.
https://reason.com/2012/06/30/the-sickening-nature-of-many-food-safety/
Why can't you just trust the science?
What, you think we should jam Fauci into cow carcasses and sniff to see if he still stinks?
Hadn't thought of that but I really don't see a down side.
How about up a pig's arse.
I'm allergic to milk so I'm going to assume that butter makes the allergens inactive? Ok. First, if you are allergic to something that can kill you, you read and eat carefully. You are right. Most people ignore warning labels, because they can.
Wait, so you are fine if milk has a line/sticker that says contains milk? Peanut butter? Peanuts? Where do you draw the line?
I'm not going to say the FDA should be abolished. I'm sure it has done some good. But stuff like - don't eat the wrapper, shampoo is not to drink to name a few is just trying people as children.
No offense, but if you don't know that butter is milk, maybe, just maybe, you should die from an allergic reaction.
Die from poor adherence to social norms? Who do you think you are? Canada?
The FDA
Fraud
and Death
Administration
Butter and hard cheese contain little if any lactose, and do not cause reactions from people who are lactose intolerant
"crucial"?
What's next, a warning on milk that it maybe contain milk? You never know, it might be that milk free milk.
Yes. They've already tried banning "almond milk" and other such names.
Ackshually, that’s the current state of affairs. According to data I gathered this morning, by looking at the milk carton in my refrigerator: “CONTAINS: MILK.”
There are news programs instructing people how to dispose of the impacted butter. No shit.
There are people out there following these instructions and posting it to social media.
Lol. They should post instructions on how to print your own label at home.
Elon and Vivek: "Hey! Slow down, we haven't even started the job yet!"
But the list has already started.
Someone just painted a target on the back of the FDA director.
I’ll take it. Just point me to the dumpster.
That's right, Costco had to waste 40 tons of perfectly good butter because shoppers apparently don't know that butter contains milk.
I mean, in Litigious America, that's probably a pretty safe move.
You dumb society down, you treat them like perpetual victims, you infantilize them as much as possible, and then you tell them they can get 8-figures (minus 40% and hospital bills) if they're harmed somehow.
And, if social media is any indication, yea apparently we DO need to inform our moron society that butter contains milk. They're eating tide pods and huffing cinnamon for pete's sake.
Don't get mad at Costco for this. Get mad at the society we've allowed to be degraded and corrupted to such degrees that dumping 80,000lbs of butter is considered the reasonable approach to prevent liability exposure.
So consumers should be able to assume something labeled as "butter" is a milk product, but should not assume that something labeled as "mayonnaise" is made from eggs?
Yes, the FDA thinking that "butter" is not a clear enough indication that the product is dairy is silly, but there has also been an argument that marketing products made from nontraditional ingredients shoukd not have to have clear, upfront indication of that. This seems a contradictory position to hold, basically that concepts have a fixed meaning until it is inconvenient.
Do they put a warning on almond milk that it is made from tree nuts?
Good one Emma!
This is your government taking steps to protect you from yourself.
Now don't you feel all warm and fuzzy knowing your tax dollars are being spent wisely?
Just be thankful the FDA didn't send out SWAT teams to kill all the cows who produced the milk. They should at least have raided the farmer's homes just to be sure. They could have been charged with "insurrection"!
Here's a thought - assuming that there is a person who is allergic to milk (not lactose), how about shifting the responsibility of not eating butter to the person who says they are allergic to milk?
Perhaps, the idiots who forced the destruction of so much perfectly healthy food should be eliminated. I can see having Costco posting signs, adding stickers, but destroying butter that is simply missing a couple of words is completely ludicrous.
If we could hold government agencies to even half the requirements that they hold everyone else to and it would probably fix the problems we have with the federal government. I thought lawyers were bad, but these fools take the cake.