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US fast-food chains pull onions from some menus after McDonald’s E coli outbreak

McDonald’s pulls Quarter Pounder from about 20 per cent of its more than 13,000 US restaurants, as other chains remove onions

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A McDonald’s Quarter Pounder hamburger. Photo: Reuters

US fast-food chains were pulling fresh onions out of their menu items on Thursday after the vegetable was named as the likely source of an E coli outbreak at McDonald’s restaurants that has sickened 49 people and killed one.

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Restaurant Brands International, parent of McDonald’s rival Burger King, and Yum Brands said they were removing fresh onions from menu items. Roughly 5 per cent of Burger King locations have removed onions from the menu, a Burger King spokesperson said in a statement.

McDonald’s said on Thursday that Taylor Farms was the supplier of the sliced onions that have been removed. Taylor Farms did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The company has recalled several batches of yellow onions produced in a Colorado facility, according to a recall memo on Wednesday by US Foods, one of the largest US suppliers of food service operations.

Quarter Pounders are marked as unavailable and ‘Back Soon’ at a McDonald’s restaurant in Omaha, Nebraska. Photo: AFP
Quarter Pounders are marked as unavailable and ‘Back Soon’ at a McDonald’s restaurant in Omaha, Nebraska. Photo: AFP

About 5 per cent of Burger King stores also get supplies from Taylor Farms, but a company spokesperson said Burger King has not been contacted yet from health authorities or had any illnesses. Yum, which operates KFC, Pizza Hut and the Taco Bell chains, said it was removing onions “out of an abundance of caution”.

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The US Food and Drug Administration on Thursday also confirmed that Taylor Farms was the supplier for the affected McDonald’s locations and that the company has initiated a voluntary recall.

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