If you’ve picked up a variety pack of High Noon Beach recently, you might want to take a closer look at it. The company issued a voluntary recall after discovering ...
The California-based company announced in a recall announcement Tuesday, which was shared on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration website Wednesday, that some lots of its High Noon Beach Variety ...
(NewsNation) — Some drink packs are being recalled after Celsius Astro Vibe energy drink cans were mistakenly filled with High Noon vodka seltzer. The recall affects two production lots of High Noon ...
According to NPR, the drink mix-up happened due to empty Celsius cans being accidentally shipped to the High Noon production facility, which was where they were filled with the vodka seltzer. Photo by ...
Popular alcoholic beverage maker High Noon this week recalled some of its boozy seltzer products that were mislabeled as Celsius energy drinks. According to the announcement posted on the U.S. Food ...
High Noon is recalling some of its vodka seltzer drinks because they were mislabeled as nonalcoholic Celsius energy drinks, according to a recall notice posted Wednesday by the Food and Drug ...
Fans of a popular energy drink may unknowingly be cracking open a can of alcohol, thanks to a supply-chain snafu. High Noon is recalling certain 12-packs of its vodka seltzers, which turned out to ...
“We are working with the FDA, retailers and distributors to proactively manage the recall to ensure the safety and well-being of our consumers,” High Noon told PEOPLE in a statement Celsius High Noon ...
High Noon is owned by E. & J. Gallo’s Spirit of Gallo division, which also owns whiskey and tequila brands like Komos and Horse Soldier Bourbon. According to information released by Impact Database, ...
Two production lots of High Noon hard seltzers were recalled Wednesday after the company found some of the packs contained cans mislabeled as Celsius energy drinks, which still contained High Noon ...
(Bloomberg) -- High Noon announced a recall of vodka seltzer drinks that it says were mislabeled as Celsius energy drinks, according to a posting on the US Food and Drug Administration’s website.