No mango sticky rice recall

There is no reported recall of mango sticky rice; instead the dessert is back in the spotlight as Hatyai’s floating market draws crowds selling it and food blogs share recipes. (freemalaysiatoday.com) Recipe posts include variations like mango‑ube sticky rice and restaurant dessert roundups that are driving widespread online interest today. (kwikarecipes.com) (blog.weerathai.com)

There is no reported mango sticky rice recall on April 18, 2026; the dessert is circulating instead through travel coverage, recipe posts and restaurant guides. (fda.gov) (foodsafety.gov) (cpsc.gov) U.S. recall databases list current food and consumer-product alerts, but a search for “mango sticky rice recall” turns up recall index pages rather than any posted alert for the dessert itself. (fda.gov) (foodsafety.gov) (cpsc.gov) What is surfacing today is a tourism story from southern Thailand: Free Malaysia Today reported on April 18 that Hatyai’s Khlong Hae Floating Market is drawing weekend crowds again, with vendors selling mango sticky rice from boats after earlier flood disruption. (freemalaysiatoday.com) The dish itself is simple and specific: sweet glutinous rice, coconut milk and sliced mango, a combination recipe sites still describe as a classic Thai dessert. Recent how-to pages from Allrecipes and Hot Thai Kitchen both frame it as a standard home recipe rather than a product under warning. (allrecipes.com) (hot-thai-kitchen.com) The attention is widening through variations. Kwika Recipes published a mango-ube sticky rice version that swaps in purple yam, adding another colorful spin to a dessert already familiar across Thai menus. (kwikarecipes.com) Restaurant marketing is adding to the spike. Weera Thai’s dessert roundup highlights mango sticky rice alongside other Thai sweets, pushing the dish through menu guides as well as recipe blogs. (blog.weerathai.com) If consumers are checking whether a food has actually been recalled, federal guidance says the reliable trail runs through FoodSafety.gov and the Food and Drug Administration’s recall pages, where notices identify the brand, lot and hazard. (foodsafety.gov) (fda.gov) For mango sticky rice on April 18, the paper trail points to markets, kitchens and menus — not a recall notice. (freemalaysiatoday.com) (kwikarecipes.com) (blog.weerathai.com)

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