Starting now, Uber Eats shoppers can order essential groceries, ready-to-eat meals, artisanal breads, fresh produce and an international selection of cheeses from Wegmans locations via the Uber Eats and Uber apps across six states, including New Jersey.
Three months after expanding its relationship with last-mile delivery service DoorDash, the family-owned business is adding another option to meet customers where they are.
The federal government cited concerns that the product may contain bone fragments — posing a potential health risk to consumers.
If you have Wegmans chicken nuggets in your freezer, throw them away. The Upstate New York-based grocery store chain announced a product recall for Wegmans FYFGA Chicken Breast Nuggets 46oz. The chicken nuggets may contain possible bone pieces, Wegmans said.
A recall was issued for 46 ounce plastic packages containing “Wegmans Family Pack Fully Cooked Breaded Chicken Breast with Rib Meat."
Wegmans issues health alert for chicken nuggets due to bone contamination. Consumers should return or dispose of the product.
If you have a bag of Wegmans breaded chicken breast nuggets in your freezer, you may want to check the label before
Wegmans issued a recall for frozen chicken nuggets sold in its stores due to contamination with possible bone fragments. Here are the affected states.
U.S. Figure Skating confirms team members, coaches and families were on board a plane that crashed in Washington, D.C. Several skaters from New Jersey are listed on the roaster. Eric Scott has details on this morning's First News.
After getting complaints from customers about finding bone fragments in the chicken nuggets, the Food Safety and Inspection Service issued a public health alert. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service says you should not eat these chicken nuggets to protect your health.
OpenAI says it is reviewing evidence that Chinese startup DeepSeek broke its terms of service by harvesting large amounts of data from its artificial intelligence technologies. The San Francisco-based startup,