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Author Topic: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad  (Read 22096 times)

Description: Marzetti's Asian Chili vinaigrette

Offline becca

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #15 on: March 31, 2014, 07:23:03 AM »
I have the page open to email them later.  Just need to get second kiddoe off to school. 

ETA:

Done.  I mentioned the corss contact issues wrt leaky packets, patrons spreading it around the establishment, and that we would not be able to safely eat there anymore.  I played up loyalty.  That we have a Wendy's in our community, and it was the first place where I took dd for a safe lunch when we ventured out knowing she now had food allergies(true).  We will be sorry to lose them as an option both locally and while travelling.  Said I hope they reconsider and suggested other Asin flavors that would be very tasty without the use of peanuts.

Hope it helps.   
« Last Edit: March 31, 2014, 08:08:20 AM by becca »
dd with peanut, tree nut and raw egg allergy

Offline CMdeux

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #16 on: March 31, 2014, 08:59:45 AM »
I'm worried about 'splody packets getting all over and employees touching, spreading, not washing goo, etc. More than once I've gotten sticky-outside salad dressing packets :(   So I think the risk is real.

I think so, too.

Much more of a risk than the whole packaged nuts that go ON the salads, in fact.   :-[
Resistance isn't futile.  It's voltage divided by current. 

Western U.S.

twinturbo

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #17 on: March 31, 2014, 11:33:50 AM »
The one popular item Wendy's did discontinue to my knowledge was their spinach salad due to the prevalence of bacterial outbreaks and industrial supply issues wrt food safety. For anyone writing in it may doubly motivate them to remind Wendy's of its discontinued spinach salad due to food safety concerns for its entire customer base, then send them an update from advocates of those sickened and killed by industrial peanut butter supplies in recent years.

I think satay sauce salads work fine on a locally sourced level. On a national scale I don't know how long an uncooked greens and peanut butter combination will remain free of the food safety issues that have plagued greens and peanut butter on the industrial scale.

I posted this in the other thread. Some of the families of those permanently hurt or killed by the salmonella tainted peanut butter have given testimony before Congress if I read that correctly. Follow the link to listen to the families. Peanut Corporation of America is the one I think the criminal charges are referenced for knowingly distributing tainted peanut butter. I think that's the company's name. The CDC thinks for every case of peanut related salmonella illness reported 29 go unreported so the final numbers of the sickened was estimated in the tens of thousands.

Marzetti's, the dressing manufacturer is probably going to restructure the exclusive distribution with Wendy's due to popular demand put to Marzetti's for its dressing outside of Wendy's. So Wendy's has already lost it's salad branding to Marzetti's in the long run. The downside of Wendy's is that it is responsible for the food safety integrity of both greens AND a peanut butter sauce across the country. Marzetti's will only be responsible for it's direct sales of dressings. At the end of the day Marzetti's brand gains the lion's share of strength while Wendy's is left holding that huge bag of responsibility for two of the most likely food service items to be contaminated in one single menu item.

I really loved their spinach salad but understood why it was discontinued. I'm unsure why they would take on another equally huge risk. It's possible this is why McD's has Reese's product and bagged peanuts but no product with peanut butter specifically. Just speculation.

Quote
http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2012/12/salmonella-and-peanut-butter-victims-stories/#.UzmOT9ysbeI

Quote

    Headlines from recent years have made the combination of peanut butter and Salmonella a notorious duo, predominantly due to two massive outbreaks in the second half of the 2000s: Peter Pan peanut butter in 2006-07, and products made with Peanut Corporation of America peanut butter in 2008-09.

    Together, the two outbreaks resulted in at least 1,139 confirmed cases of Salmonella infection. The CDC estimates that for every one laboratory-confirmed case of Salmonella another 29 cases go unreported, meaning the outbreaks potentially sickened tens of thousands of people.

    At least 425 people in 44 states fell ill with strains of Salmonella Tennessee in 2006 and 2007 after eating Peter Pan and Great Value peanut butter manufactured by ConAgra in Georgia. Of those ill, 20 percent required hospitalization.

    One of those people was Mora Lou Marshall, an 85-year-old cancer survivor and grandmother from Louisiana.  After her dentist recommended eating a spoonful of peanut butter every day for supplemental vitamins, Marshall continued to eat the Peter Pan brand throughout months of illness before health investigators finally traced the nationwide Salmonella outbreak back to that product.

    Clifford Tousignant went through an all-too-similar experience two years later when he was hospitalized just after Christmas 2008 with what became diagnosed as a Salmonella infection. Tousignant, a sociable, 78-year-old Korean War veteran and three-time Purple Heart recipient from Minnesota, had recently moved into an assisted living facility where he was eating a peanut butter sandwich almost every day.

    As it turned out, Tousignant was part of a Salmonella outbreak that eventually sickened at least 714 people across 46 states. Just after New Year’s 2009, investigators finally began to connect the rampant outbreak to thousands of products all made with peanut butter manufactured by Peanut Corporation of America.

    For Tousignant, however, the discovery did not come fast enough. Health complications from his infection led to his passing on January 12. The outbreak also contributed to the deaths of 8 other victims.

    Life, mobility cut short



    Mora Lou Marshall Salmonella Peanut Butter Outbreak Illness from Marlerclark on Vimeo.

    Even at the age of 85, Mora Lou Marshall was still active. She cooked her own meals and enjoyed gardening. She had just moved in with her son David and his family in November 2006, but David really didn’t see much sign of her slowing down.

    “We thought since she was independent, then the best thing to do was to add on a mother-in-law suite to our home with a small bedroom, den and kitchen,” he said after her death.  “I started sketching plans and even went down to the city permit office to see if there were zoning ordinances for this add-on. We considered buying her a small house so she could have her own place and a yard to work in.”

    But just months after moving in with her family, Mora Lou’s life changed forever.

    In the week between Christmas 2006 and New Year’s 2007, Mora Lou fell badly ill with nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Her illness progressed through January 2, when David and his wife Terri decided to call her an ambulance.

    Now hospitalized, the one thing Mora Lou made sure to eat every day was the Peter Pan peanut butter. Neither her family nor any medical personnel had any idea she was continuing to eat the food that was making her sick in the first place. They didn’t even know she had a Salmonella infection.

    Growing so physically weak that she could hardly transition from her bed to a wheelchair, Mora Lou was placed under strict quarantine in a long-term care facility. It wasn’t until January 30 that she was transferred to a nursing home.

    Still unaware that her food was the source of Mora Lou’s illness, David and Terri brought her the Peter Pan peanut butter she had grown accustomed to eating by the spoonful. On February 16, nursing staff discovered her slumped in a chair and unresponsive. She was rushed back to the hospital.

    Days later, Mora Lou was still on a feeding tube when the Marshall family first heard of the Peter Pan peanut butter recall. They checked her jars of peanut butter and discovered that the product codes matched those affected by the recall.

    Not until February 23 did laboratory tests confirm Mora Lou’s infection with Salmonella Tennessee, the strain at the center of the Peter Pan outbreak.

    Back in long-term care and finally rid of her peanut butter, Mora Lou’s weakness and severe malnutrition proved too much of a challenge for doctors and nursing staff to reverse. She now also suffered from dementia, depression, and a host of other ailments.

    Mora Lou lived out the remainder of her life under nursing home care. She never regained the mobility and independence she still enjoyed right up until her infection.

    A veteran debilitated



    PCA Peanut Butter Salmonella Outbreak Victim: Cliff Tousignant from Marlerclark on Vimeo.

    Clifford Tousignant moved into his new room at the Good Samaritan Woodland Skilled Nursing Facility in Brainerd, Minnesota, in November 2008 at the age of 78.

    The place was a good fit: Cliff was in good spirits and would often be found chatting with his fellow residents and appreciated the attentive care he received there. He was also a fan of the food, and almost every day took to eating a sandwich made with King Nut peanut butter.

    Much like Mora Lou two years earlier, Cliff began to fell ill with frequent diarrhea during the week between Christmas 2008 and New Year’s 2009. Staff took a stool sample, but Cliff’s symptoms only worsened as the days went on, and so the home’s attending doctor ordered him to be transferred to the hospital on December 30. His short-term memory seemed to be deteriorating.

    The next day, his culture test came back positive for Salmonella infection and he was prescribed a new antibiotic to treat it. At the same time, however, the constant need for cleanings and tests wore down Cliff, a gentle man still accustomed to a certain level of independence.

    He was experiencing intense aching over his body as he grew weaker by the day. By January 3 he could not leave bed without assistance. During one of countless times a nurse had to wake him, Cliff finally had an angry outburst.

    With little more to do, the hospital discharged Cliff back to his nursing home. The return to familiar settings was a relief, but Cliff’s condition failed to improve over the next week.

    On January 11, Cliff’s son Marshall stopped in to check on his dad as he regularly did. Cliff seemed lethargic and agitated, and then went unresponsive.

    An ambulance returned him to the hospital, where he experienced bloody diarrhea and more vomiting throughout the night. A blood sample came back positive for Salmonella, meaning the bacteria had made it from his gastrointestinal tract into his blood stream.

    Cliff passed away the next morning, January 12, 2009, two years short of a goal to outlive his father. He left behind six children, 15 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.

    Tragedy leads to activism

    Following her Salmonella infection, Mora Lou Marshall became essentially bedridden from early January 2007 until her death in the spring of 2011.

    In April 2007, Mora Lou’s daughter-in-law Terri went to Washington D.C. to testify before the U.S House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations about Mora Lou’s illness and its life-changing impact on her family.

    “It seems Mora Lou has literally lost her life without physically dying,” Terri told members of Congress.

    “She cannot walk, get out of bed, use the bathroom, shower, read the newspaper, or talk on the telephone,” she went on. “All aspects of her former life are gone.”

    Lou Tousignant, another of Cliff’s sons, testified before that same House committee two years later on behalf of his family. The committee was investigating evidence that executives at PCA, namely President and CEO Stewart Parnell, had ordered the shipment of peanut products they knew to be contaminated with Salmonella.

    “My father was a good man,” Lou told committee members. “He fought for his country. He died because he ate peanut butter.”

    In January 2011, President Obama signed a law passed by Congress known as the Food Safety Modernization Act, inspired in part by the outbreaks that impacted the Marshalls and the Tousignants. Once fully enacted, the law will grant the U.S. Food and Drug Administration new authority to help prevent or combat foodborne illness outbreaks.

    Late last month–on November 27, 2012–the FDA used one of its new powers for the first time to suspend the registration of Sunland Inc., the peanut butter manufacturer tied to this autumn’s Salmonella peanut butter outbreak. Until the company proves it can make peanut products without risk of contamination, it will not be allowed to sell those products anywhere in the U.S.

    Now four years after the PCA outbreak, the statute of limitations is nearing for filing criminal negligence charges against Stewart Parnell and PCA. The U.S. Department of Justice recently subpoenaed at least one former PCA employee for questioning on potential criminal activity, and agents have spoken with family members of some who died in the outbreak.

    Officially, however, the DOJ has declined to comment on any possible criminal investigation. Clifford Tousignant’s son Marshall has told reporters he would have rather seen Parnell go to jail than have the family receive any money in the class action lawsuit against PCA, now a defunct company.

    Both the Marshall and Tousignant families became clients of food safety law firm Marler Clark following the peanut butter outbreaks and received settlements from the manufacturers. Marler Clark underwrites Food Safety News.

    Lou Tousignant told Food Safety News in an interview earlier this year that he prefers to honor his father’s life instead of dwelling on how he died. He sees a lot of his father’s characteristics in his son, he said.

    “With that said,” he added, “if there were criminal charges filed, I’d be one of the happiest guys alive.”
« Last Edit: March 31, 2014, 12:56:55 PM by twinturbo »

Online YouKnowWho

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #18 on: March 31, 2014, 01:57:57 PM »
When I searched earlier YKW mentioned she had a heck of a time getting real answers out of them along the lines of allergen wash.

Although bummed I'm very appreciative Wendy's had obvious signage to warn customers even if it shooed away those of us who unfortunately don't have a threshold for cross-contamination for squirty peanut gel. Wendy's had the right signage at the right place for me to about face and go elsewhere. For the warning I'm grateful.

I have not called Marzetti's in years (DS1 was dealing with a junk load more of "allergies").  Maybe things have changed since then??  Not hopeful but seems places are getting to be more enlightened.  (Though yes, I wanted to reach through the phone and beat them at the time).
DS1 - Wheat, rye, barley and egg
DS2 - peanuts
DD -  tree nuts, soy and sunflower
Me - bananas, eggplant, many drugs
Southeast USA

Offline GoingNuts

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #19 on: March 31, 2014, 04:50:04 PM »
Here is the lame answer I received:

Dear X,

The nuts and dressing come to us already packaged, and I understand your concern.  We make allergen information available in our restaurants, on our website and mobile app, so that our customers can make decisions based on their specific dietary needs.

 
 
Jane Frazier
Customer Service Supervisor
C/O Wendy’s Company
1 Dave Thomas Blvd
Dublin, Oh  43017
800 443 7266 x 3015
"Speak out against the madness" - David Crosby
N.E. US

Offline Jessica

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #20 on: March 31, 2014, 04:59:29 PM »
I was hoping this was one of those limited items like a lot of their new things, but it is supposedly permanent.
USA
DD18-PA/TNA
DD16 and DS14-NKA

Offline becca

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #21 on: April 01, 2014, 11:12:11 AM »
I got this:

Hi Becca,
Thank you very much for your comments. We appreciate the time you have taken to share your concerns. We’ll share your feedback about allergies and the dressing with our Marketing team. Please let me know if there’s anything else I can assist you with.


dd with peanut, tree nut and raw egg allergy

Offline kamakaze

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #22 on: April 04, 2014, 11:25:43 PM »
Just spoke to the manager of my local Wendy's and he mentioned as of today they are pulling this product and are currently working to reformulate the dressing without the peanuts.

Offline CMdeux

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #23 on: April 04, 2014, 11:33:46 PM »
Wow-- wouldn't THAT be great news??

I will sure hope that this is chain-wide.  Stay tuned, everyone!!  :crossed:
Resistance isn't futile.  It's voltage divided by current. 

Western U.S.

Offline Jessica

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #24 on: April 05, 2014, 12:11:21 AM »
that would be awesome. I wish we had "like" buttons here.  ;D
USA
DD18-PA/TNA
DD16 and DS14-NKA

twinturbo

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #25 on: April 05, 2014, 12:49:25 AM »
Look what I found on Marzetti's Facebook page. Good and bad for us, I'm sure we'll get the blame. Not knocking folks getting their sauce at the grocery store!! Just don't want it in my food at Wendy's. Plus, they may all thank us down the road if the peanut industry has a huge salmonella contamination--again. Peanut + greens + local source = good. Peanut + greens + industrial source =  :footinmouth:

Quote
Renee Hollowayposted to ‎Marzetti
7 hours ago
I found out today that Wendy's will no longer have spicy Asian chili vinaigrette that marzetti makes for them due to peanut allergies. Will you be making a replacement or can I buy it somewhere?

Quote
Kari Noel Mazetti I was ok with your comment of it being exclusive to Wendy's until I went there today and said it was discontinued, so now can you sell me some because I am upset, either that or the recipe....something please, and poor Wendy's just lost a very loyal customer, going to go type to them next!!!!
4 hours ago

I would totally give her a recipe.

ありがとうございます, 神風-さん.

I'd assume this would free Marzetti's from manufacturing solely for Wendy's and they can make it for their own in-store distribution. Lose it at Wendy's gain it at home in bigger bottles.
« Last Edit: April 05, 2014, 01:14:46 AM by twinturbo »

Offline CMdeux

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #26 on: April 05, 2014, 01:15:46 AM »
Hopefully, yeah.

I mean, there is simply NO WAY that Wendy's is going to lose enough business over a product that they offered for a few weeks (at most) versus what they stand to lose as a previously peanut-free restaurant adding that allergen to the menu in liquid form.

I suspect that someone at corporate did that math already. 
Resistance isn't futile.  It's voltage divided by current. 

Western U.S.

Offline Jessica

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #27 on: April 05, 2014, 02:08:12 AM »
Oh no doubt they did the math. On their facebook page a week or two ago there were quite a few more that didn't like the Asian salad than the ones that did. Actually most seem to be asking for some kind of baja chicken salad (??) to come back.
USA
DD18-PA/TNA
DD16 and DS14-NKA

Offline Jessica

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #28 on: April 05, 2014, 02:11:17 AM »
I swear if Wendy's takes that off of their menu because of feedback from the FA community, I will make it a point to eat there even more than we had been. Even though it's a good 40 minute drive away.
USA
DD18-PA/TNA
DD16 and DS14-NKA

Offline momma2boys

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Re: Wendy's: New peanut butter sauce for salad
« Reply #29 on: April 05, 2014, 07:37:56 AM »
Wow, that is great news  :happydance: . My ds loves Wendy's. It is the only fast food he eats.
peanut, treenut, sesame
Northeast, US