This page tracks FDA recall records matching Once Upon a Farm, a baby food brand, in our baby and infant food recall database, generated from the FDA food enforcement data feed. It is a historical record: an entry here means the FDA published a recall on the date shown, not that the product is being recalled today.
This list is filtered to baby and infant food and may not include every relevant recall. For the complete, current list, search the FDA website.
The FDA enforcement feed can lag public recall announcements by weeks. For the most current information, always check FDA.gov directly.
Baby Ledger AI is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Once Upon a Farm. The brand name appears on this page only to identify products named in FDA recall records.
Recall records matching Once Upon a Farm
Our database contains 1 FDA recall record matching Once Upon a Farm as of July 17, 2026. Each row links to the permanent record with the UPCs and lot codes as reported by the FDA.
| Date | Product | Recalling firm | Class | FDA status | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 17, 2024 | Once Upon a Farm Organic Plant-Rich Meal, Curried Carrots & Beans, 3.5 oz | ONCE UPON A FARM PBC | Class II | Terminated | Potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes |
Is your package affected?
A recall almost never means "every jar of this brand, ever." It means a specific run of a specific product. To know whether the package in your kitchen is affected, you need to match the identifiers in the recall notice against the ones printed on your package:
- Product name and brand (exact, including the variety or flavor)
- UPC / barcode number (the 12-digit number under the barcode)
- Lot or batch code (often a string of letters and numbers near the seam or bottom)
- "Best by," "use by," or expiration date
- Package size (a 4-oz jar and an 8-oz jar can be different lots)
If the notice lists specific lot codes and yours isn't on the list, your package likely isn't part of the recall. If you can't find the codes, or they're worn off, the safe move is to treat it as recalled and not feed it.
If your product is recalled: stop using it. Most notices tell you to either dispose of it or return it to the store for a refund. Don't donate it or pass it along. If your child has already eaten it and you have any concern, call your pediatrician, and in an emergency call 911 (US) or your local emergency number.
Recall classes: how serious is it?
The FDA sorts recalls into three classes by how much risk the product poses. Knowing the class tells you how urgently to act.
| Class | What it means | Plain-English read |
|---|---|---|
| Class I | "A reasonable probability that the use of, or exposure to, a violative product will cause serious adverse health consequences or death." | The most serious. Stop using it now. Undeclared allergens are the leading cause of Class I food recalls, and serious contamination recalls land here too. |
| Class II | Use "may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences," or the risk of serious harm is remote. | Real but lower risk. Still worth acting on. |
| Class III | Use is "not likely to cause adverse health consequences." | Usually a labeling or quality issue, not a safety emergency. |
Official FDA sources
Search current FDA recalls, market withdrawals, and safety alerts on the FDA website.
Check future recalls automatically
The AllerSee scanner built into Baby Ledger AI cross-checks every barcode you scan against the FDA recall feed automatically, and cross-references the ingredients against your own child's allergen profile at the same time. The allergen and recall checks are free and unlimited on every plan. It's there so you don't have to refresh a government website every morning, not as a substitute for the official sources or for your pediatrician's guidance.
All baby & infant food recalls · Recall checker · Guide: How to Check If Your Baby's Food Has Been Recalled