Certain groups, such as children, women of childbearing age, and those who are breastfeeding may be at higher risk after eating food from cookware leaching lead. Babies and kids are more susceptible ...
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has identified more cookware that could be leaching lead into your food, it said in an expanded warning updated on Sept. 12. The FDA published an initial notice ...
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is warning consumers and retailers not to sell or use certain imported cookware that may leach significant levels of lead. The FDA issued an alert on Wednesday ...
The FDA found that some imported aluminum and brass cookware may leach lead into food, making it unsafe. Affected products include Tiger White, Silver Horse, and JK Vallabhdas branded cookware sold at ...
Inspect the cookware in your cabinets. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has added three more pots and pans, all sold in Illinois, to its ongoing list of products that may leach significant ...
When it comes to being an amateur chef, aluminum cookware ticks off a lot of boxes. It’s usually more affordable, lighter, and is known to cook food evenly and quickly. But there is one big question ...
The cookware may be contaminated with elevated lead levels that could leach into food.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) expanded its warning to consumers and retailers not to use or sell certain imported cookware that may leach significant levels of lead into your food. The list ...