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290

Archive: https://archive.today/FHq5z

From the post:

>Multiple people have been hospitalized after eating Pillsbury products suspected of being contaminated with E.coli. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) said this week that 20 people have been sickened and four have been hospitalized after the E.coli outbreak, which has been linked to Pillsbury brand Pizza Pops. Those sickened range in age from one to 87 years old and live in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and New Brunswick. A recall was announced over the weekend that includes Pillsbury Pizza Pops pepperoni and bacon pizza snacks sold in 760g and 2.85kg packages.

Archive: https://archive.today/FHq5z From the post: >>Multiple people have been hospitalized after eating Pillsbury products suspected of being contaminated with E.coli. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) said this week that 20 people have been sickened and four have been hospitalized after the E.coli outbreak, which has been linked to Pillsbury brand Pizza Pops. Those sickened range in age from one to 87 years old and live in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and New Brunswick. A recall was announced over the weekend that includes Pillsbury Pizza Pops pepperoni and bacon pizza snacks sold in 760g and 2.85kg packages.
[–] 1 pt

Pizza pops really did have more "stuff": https://youtu.be/aRsc1H-D2RU

[–] 2 pts

I have never seen them but I stopped eating most frozen stuff from the store a long time ago.

[–] 1 pt

I don't know when they stopped being sold in the U.S., I haven't seen them since the 90s. The worst case of lava filling, you would have to let it cool for longer than it took to heat them up in the microwave. That commercial sure is working against them now.