Loard’s Ice Cream Recall: What to Check Before You Scoop

Silver Moon LP dba Loard’s Ice Cream has issued a voluntary recall of retail-sized Loard’s ice cream products because the packages were distributed without the required ingredient statement. That matters because the undeclared allergens include milk, eggs, tree nuts, peanuts, soy, wheat, sulfites, and added colors.
If you have any of those allergies, do not eat the product. The safest next step is to check your freezer now for Loard’s retail-packaged ice cream and set any affected product aside.
Do not serve it to children, guests, or anyone with a food allergy. If you already bought it, dispose of it or follow the company’s refund instructions if available.
This is the kind of recall where label checking really matters. An ice cream package can look normal and still be risky when the ingredient statement is missing or incomplete. For people with food allergies, undeclared ingredients can lead to a serious reaction.
The FDA says this recall involves retail-sized Loard’s products, so focus on anything from that brand in your freezer rather than assuming a whole store section is affected. If you are unsure whether a carton is part of the recall, do not taste it to check. Keep it out of service until you can verify the package details against the recall notice.
For households that shop for relatives, kids, or older adults with allergies, a quick freezer check is worth the time. One overlooked carton is enough to create a problem at dessert time.
When a package is missing the required allergen information, treat it as a food-safety issue, not just a labeling mistake. The goal is simple: keep anyone with the listed allergies from eating it.
