Butter is made from cream, which is derived from milk. Not a new truth; it’s never been anything but.
B‑but — some people are allergic!
And we must protect them.
Under the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act (FALCPA) of 2004, milk is one of nine major allergens that must be explicitly declared — either in parentheses after the ingredient (e.g., “cream (milk)”) or in a separate “Contains: Milk” statement.
Which is why Costco had to recall 79,200 pounds of butter. A labeling oversight meant that perfectly good and safe butter was placed on the big box store’s shelves without the explicit warning that butter contains milk. The FDA issued a Class II recall, and Costco began the process on October 11.
“Voluntarily,” we’re told.
No doubt “voluntary” because neither Costco nor the bulk of its customers wants to get into arguments about government regulation designed to protect people with cows’ milk allergies.
In a world run by common sense and not a federal bureaucracy, however, even the most litigious lawyers would surely be satisfied by extra signage at point of sale — something like
ALL BUTTER IS MADE FROM MILK.
PEOPLE WITH ALLERGIES KNOW THIS.
THIS BUTTER IS NO EXCEPTION.
USE WITH CUSTOMARY CAUTION!
But even this may strike us as bending too far backward for people whose responsibility is to know what the stuff they ingest is made from. They must protect themselves. If milk makes you ill, you’ll forswear all butter and reach for some good oil, or even margarine.
Something like I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter … but only in its original spray and vegan versions … all others contain milk!
I can’t believe this isn’t Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
Illustration created with Krea and Firefly
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3 replies on “I Can’t Believe It’s Not Overkill”
“Dairy” refers to milk and products made from milk, such as cheese, yogurt, and butter. What consumer is unaware of that? What person diagnosed with a milk allergy does not know that? Every dairy item in my kitchen has ‘contains milk’ on the label, even if milk or cream are also listed in the ingredients. Given how long this regulation has existed, how could such an oversight happen? Maybe Costco needs to find a new supplier.
Common sense in government?
Surely you jest.
Sen John Kennedy from Louisiana, speaking about one of his female Democratic senate colleagues said the she’s the reason there are directions of shampoo bottles. A nicer way to say stupid is as stupid does.