News

Skippy Foods has recalled 60,000 jars (totaling 161,692 pounds) of its Reduced Fat Peanut Butter and its Creamy Peanut Butter Blend With Protein. The jars may contain fragments of stainless steel ...
Skippy Foods, LLC, is recalling thousands of pounds of Skippy peanut butter because of stainless steel fragments possibly contaminating “a limited number of jars.” ...
SKIPPY recalls 9,000 cases of peanut butter 00:26. NEW YORK -- SKIPPY is recalling more than 9,000 cases of peanut butter because jars may contain fragments of stainless steel from manufacturing ...
Skippy advised consumers in a press release to throw away any jars of the recalled peanut butter and to call Skippy for a replacement coupon. The toll-free number to call is: 800-453-3432. You've ...
Skippy Foods, LLC has recalled more than 9,000 cases of peanut butter "due to the possibility that a limited number of jars may contain a small fragment of stainless steel from a piece of ...
Skippy is recalling tens of thousands of jars of peanut butter in 18 states – including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut – over concerns that they may be contaminated with fragments of ...
The Du Drop Athletic Club was started by close friends Clifford " Skippy" Rohloff, Ralph Colucci, "Big" Dave Friedrich and others. And, believe it or not, the Du Drop Athletic ...
Former Hormel CEO Jeffrey Ettinger is returning to the role in an interim capacity starting in July, the company said Monday.
While Skippy has always been one of the best peanut butter brands, it missed the mark by a mile on this one. Stick with Reese’s this Easter, folks. You’ll thank me for it.
Skippy's hot dog truck is operated by Dawn LaVigne who learned the food trade from her parents. They established the original truck in 1962, an historic vehicle that washed away in Hurricane Sandy.
The Skippy's ice cream truck visits Hamilton in 2017. Skippy's Ice Cream recently stopped sending trucks out in the summer because there aren't enough kids outside.
Local News Skippy White has been selling records in Boston for nearly six decades. But it’s time to close up shop, he says. "It used to be that if you wanted to find out what was happening, the ...