Silvestri Sweets Cookie Butter Holiday Bark and Pecan, Cranberry & Cinnamon Holiday Bark recall
|

Urgent Recall Alert: Aldi Holiday Chocolate Bark Recalled Over Undeclared Allergens

Holiday production lines were running hot, and somewhere in the shuffle, things got messy. Silvestri Sweets Inc., the company that makes Aldi’s Choceur Holiday Chocolate Bark, mixed up the packaging. Two different flavors got mislabeled, and that mistake meant allergens weren’t listed where they should have been.

  • The Cookie Butter Holiday Bark (light blue bag, best by May 2026) ended up with pecans inside but no mention of them on the label.
  • The Pecan, Cranberry & Cinnamon Holiday Bark (dark red bag, best by August 2026) contained wheat that wasn’t declared.

That’s not just a small slip. By law, allergens have to be clearly listed. When they’re not, it’s a recall waiting to happen. Aldi and Silvestri Sweets pulled the trigger fast, working with the FDA to get the products off shelves nationwide.

Why It’s a Big Deal

For most shoppers, a mislabeled bag of chocolate bark is annoying. For people with food allergies, it can be dangerous.

Tree nuts like pecans are one of the top allergens in the U.S. Wheat is another. Reactions can range from itchy skin to full-blown anaphylaxis, which can be life-threatening. Every year, thousands of people end up in emergency rooms because of food allergies, and labeling mistakes are one of the easiest ways those emergencies happen.

This isn’t about nitpicking labels. It’s about keeping families safe.

What You Should Do

If you bought Aldi chocolate bark this season:

  • Check the packaging. Light blue and dark red bags are the ones in question.
  • Look at the best-by dates: May 2026 and August 2026.
  • If you’ve got them, don’t eat them. Toss them out.

So far, no illnesses have been reported, but the recall is a precaution.

Bottom Line

The Aldi chocolate bark recall shows how quickly a holiday treat can turn into a health risk when production slips. For families managing allergies, trust in food labels isn’t optional — it’s survival. Aldi and Silvestri Sweets moved fast to fix the mistake, but it’s a reminder that even small errors in the food industry can have big consequences.

More Great Content