Listeria found in Walmart, Trader Joe's meals may be linked to deadly
fettuccine outbreak
[September 27, 2025]
By JONEL ALECCIA
Federal health officials are warning consumers not to eat certain
heat-and-eat pasta meals sold at Walmart and Trader Joe's because they
may be contaminated with listeria bacteria previously linked to a deadly
outbreak.
The U.S. Agriculture Department updated a public health alert Friday to
include Trader Joe's Cajun Style Blackened Chicken Breast Fettucine
Alfredo sold in 16-ounce plastic trays. The products have best-by dates
of Sept. 20, Sept. 24 and Sept. 27 and still may be in customers'
refrigerators. The affected meals have the number P- 45288 inside the
USDA inspection mark.
Late Thursday the USDA issued a warning for Marketside Linguine with
Beef Meatballs & Marinara Sauce sold at Walmart in refrigerated 12-ounce
clear plastic trays. Those products have best-by dates of Sept. 22
through Oct. 1. The affected meals contain the establishment numbers
“EST. 50784” and “EST. 47718” inside the USDA mark of inspection on the
label. They were sent to Walmart stores nationwide.
Additional products may be identified, according to USDA’s Food Safety
and Inspection Service.
No recall has been issued, but FreshRealm, a large food producer that
distributed the products, said they advised Walmart this week to pull
the meals from store shelves. Walmart officials said they put a stop on
sales and removed the products from stores.

The meals may be contaminated with the same strain of listeria that
caused an outbreak tied to chicken fettuccine Alfredo sold at Walmart
and Kroger stores. Four people were killed and at least 20 were sickened
in the outbreak updated by federal health officials on Friday evening.
The outbreak led to a large recall this summer.
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This image provided by U.S. Agriculture Department shows Marketside
Linguine with Beef Meatballs & Marinara Sauce. (U.S. Agriculture
Department via AP)
 FreshRealm conducted tests that
detected the listeria in linguine used in the meatball dish, company
officials said. The strain matched the listeria identified in the
chicken fettuccine Alfredo outbreak, the company said.
“We have long maintained that the source of the listeria was likely
an ingredient supplied by a third party,” the company said in a
statement.
The pasta came from Nate's Fine Foods of Roseville, California. The
company did not immediately respond to questions.
Listeria infections can cause serious illness, particularly in older
adults, people with weakened immune systems and those who are
pregnant or their newborns. Symptoms include fever, muscle aches,
headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions.
About 1,600 people get sick each year from listeria infections and
about 260 die, the CDC says. Federal officials in December said they
were revamping protocols to prevent listeria infections after
several high-profile outbreaks, including one linked to Boar’s Head
deli meats that led to 10 deaths and more than 60 illnesses last
year.
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