All frozen products under Inarah’s Frozen Foods, Inarah’s Fine Foods and New York Crispy packaging with the listed addresses are covered by a Food Standards Agency alert. Shoppers should not eat affected packs, while food businesses should remove them from sale.

The Food Standards Agency says all frozen products supplied by Inarah’s Frozen Foods Ltd under the Inarah’s Frozen Foods, Inarah’s Fine Foods and New York Crispy labels should not be eaten. Shoppers should check their freezer and dispose of affected packs at home, while food businesses should remove them from sale.
The FSA food alert, last updated on 4 June 2026, says the affected products may be unsafe to eat because the company has been unable to demonstrate that they were produced and handled safely. The notice applies to food businesses and consumers and says the products are known to have been supplied to food businesses across the UK.
The alert is broad. It is not limited to one frozen dish, one pack size or one best-before date.
The FSA says the brands cover a wide range of frozen food, including chicken, beef, fish and vegetarian items. Packs may come in different sizes and carry multiple best-before dates and/or batch numbers.
A pack is included in the alert if it is a frozen product in Inarah’s Frozen Foods, Inarah’s Fine Foods or New York Crispy packaging and carries one of these company names or addresses.
Inarah Frozen Foods LTD, Regal Drive, Walsall, WS2 9HQ
Four Seasons Food Group, Unit 7-8 Monarch Works, Elswick Road, Fenton Industrial Estate, Stoke-on-Trent, ST4 2SH
KBH Foods, BD9 4TS
Customers checking older packs should look at both the front label and the manufacturer or supplier details on the back or side of the packaging. The FSA notice does not restrict the alert to one batch code.
The FSA said Inarah’s Frozen Foods Ltd has been unable to demonstrate that the products covered by the alert have been produced and handled safely. Food that has not met food hygiene and safety requirements can pose a risk to consumers and may be unsafe to eat.
The notice does not describe the alert as an allergy recall and does not name a single contaminant. It is a food safety and hygiene alert covering the listed frozen products.
Anyone who has bought an affected frozen product should not eat it. The FSA’s consumer advice is to dispose of the product at home.
The safest check is to compare the pack with the three brand names, all-pack-size and all-date scope, and the label addresses listed above. Because the alert covers all best-before dates for the listed brands, do not rely on a date being outside the scope if the pack otherwise matches the notice.

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Food businesses selling the affected products in the UK have been advised to stop sales immediately. The FSA says businesses should carry out product withdrawals and, where the products have been sold at retail, recalls from consumers.
Affected products should be disposed of safely. Enforcement authorities have also been asked to make sure businesses that received the products take withdrawal and recall action, and local authorities have been asked to report those actions to the FSA.
The alert does not give a named retailer list, a number of affected packs or a reported illness figure in the accessible notice checked. It also does not narrow the recall to a smaller group of products by batch code.
That means shoppers and businesses should use the brand, address, pack-size and best-before scope rather than looking for one specific product line.
This article will need updating if the FSA changes the alert, if Inarah’s Frozen Foods Ltd or retailers issue new customer notices, or if authorities add more precise product or retailer details. Until then, the published FSA advice remains that the affected frozen products should not be eaten and should be withdrawn from sale.
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