Allergic reaction to tzatziki sees Ebbw Vale firm fined
Hayley Lancaster suffered a “potentially fatal” reaction due to her egg allergy, a court hears. …
A woman suffered a “potentially fatal” allergic reaction after a food company mistakenly put egg in a pot of tzatziki.
Zorba Delicacies pleaded guilty to three food safety charges at Merthyr Tydfil Magistrates’ Court.
Hayley Lancaster suffered anaphylaxis after buying the dip from Morrisons in Caerphilly in February 2018.
The Ebbw Vale-based company was fined £93,000 following a prosecution by Caerphilly Trading Standards.
The three charges relate to the product being unsafe, not of the “nature demanded by the purchaser” and the company providing documents with false or misleading information.
The court heard Miss Lancaster had been diagnosed with an egg and nut allergy at a young age.
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After eating a small amount of the dip she immediately showed signs of a reaction – her airway began to close and she felt nauseous.
Prosecution barrister Matthew Roberts said if she had not had her Epipen, it “could have been potentially fatal”.
Caerphilly council’s Trading Standards was informed and tested the pot bought by Miss Lancaster and another pot bought from the same Morrisons store.
Both were found to contain levels of egg protein, which was not listed on the label or in the company’s recipe.
The court was told about relevant food hygiene practices, including swabbing for allergens and a clean-down between products, but there was “no evidence” these took place on the day the dip was made.
The company said a dip of beetroot, mint and yogurt, which contained egg, had been produced on the line before and had contaminated the tzatziki.
Defence barrister Carl Harrison said Zorba Delicacies sincerely regretted the incident and offered Miss Lancaster a “full and unreserved apology”.
He said changes had been put in place since the incident and products with no allergens were now made at the start of the day.
District Judge Martin Brown fined the company £93,000 and ordered it to pay a surcharge of £120 and prosecution costs of about £14,700.