If you didn't notice it's no longer January in Texas. We have already plowed through the first month of the new year here in the Lone Star State. There has been ice and snow in Houston and Galveston. The football season has come to an end in Austin and Dallas. And While southeastern Texas especially is preparing for Mardi Gras in about four weeks almost all of Texas will be looking for love on Friday.

Travis Grossen via Unsplash.com
Travis Grossen via Unsplash.com
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Yeah, it's Valentine's Day and it's approaching fast here in Texas. A lot of Texans enjoy the day set aside for romance. And one of the ways we celebrate our love of love is through food. In fact one of the leading love languages in Texas is food. And only in Texas would it be appropriate to ask your Valentine to share her "burnt end' with you. In some other states that request might lead to a lawsuit.

Luis Santoyo via Unsplash.com
Luis Santoyo via Unsplash.com
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Anyway, back to food and romance. The most eloquent food for communicating romance is chocolate. Not only does chocolate excite the taste buds, but its chemical makeup affects our brains. Yeah, the chemicals in chocolate produce a unique sense of pleasure which may be why the stuff is closely connected to Valentine's Day, our holiday to celebrate love and romance.

I think we are all in agreement that we want the chocolate that we give to our Valentine will be a positive experience and not the kind of experience that involves doctors, emergency rooms, stomach pumps, or the coroner. But, unfortunately, there is a situation involving some popular chocolate that could derail your romantic Valentine's Day.

Sydney Prepares For Valentine's Day
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The Food and Drug Administration has just raised the risk level of a chocolate product recall that could indirectly affect consumers in Texas. The products involved were shipped directly to stores in Texas. The product was available to our neighbors in Louisiana, Arkansas, and Oklahoma online.

The FDA recall says the concern is over an undeclared allergen. Officials with the FDA say the concern is so great that they have raised the risk level of this recall to Level 1. That is the highest level recall in the FDA playbook. 

Mikael Seegen via Unsplash.com
Mikael Seegen via Unsplash.com
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A Level 1 recall means there is a:

situation in which there is a reasonable probability that the use of or exposure to a violative product will cause serious adverse health consequences or death

We should note that the most serious outcomes of exposure to the recalled products are for those individuals who are sensitive to the allergens that could be contained in the products.

Tetiana Bykovets via Unsplash.com
Tetiana Bykovets via Unsplash.com
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The products involved were Dark Chocolate Almonds, Dark Chocolate Apricots and Dark Chocolate Walnuts all sold and distributed by Cal Yee Farms of California. The products, as we mentioned, were shipped to stores in Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Tennessee, Ohio, Oregon and Pennsylvania. The products were also available for purchase online.

The items in question were sold in 8-ounce, one-pound, two-pound, or five-pound sizes. The items are packaged in clear plastic zippered pouches. The pouches are adorned with a bright yellow label that describes the product. For a complete list of products, lot numbers, and descriptions of the recalled items you can see that here. 

Severga/ThinkStock
Severga/ThinkStock
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If you have any of the recalled products you are urged to contact Cal Yee Farms directly or you may return the item to the store where it was purchased. Do not consume the products if you still have them on hand, discard them.

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Gallery Credit: Liz Barrett Foster