McDonald's India outlet gets regulatory warning over rotten tomatoes, reused oil

Indian food safety officials have issued a warning to a McDonald's outlet in Jaipur. Inspectors found cooking oil unfit for consumption and rotten tomatoes. Samples were seized for testing. The outlet has 14 days to correct its practices. Further ...

Indian food safety officials ‌have warned ⁠a ⁠McDonald's outlet in Jaipur after an inspection found cooking oil unfit for consumption and rotten tomatoes in storage, prompting regulators to seize samples for testing, an official told Reuters.

During an inspection at the outlet on Monday in Jaipur, a tourist ​hotspot in the desert state ⁠of Rajasthan, ‌inspectors found 40 litres of oil ​repeatedly used ​in cooking and unfit of consumption, government ⁠food safety officer Sushil Chotwani said.

That breached food ​safety norms and "officials collected oil samples for further ​testing," Chotwani said.


McDonald's spokesperson in the United States did not respond to Reuters queries outside regular business hours.

Its franchise for North and East India, Connaught Plaza Restaurants, said it was cooperating with ‌the authorities and followed "rigorous McDonald's global standards."

Chotwani said McDonald's was issued a warning and ​given 14 days ​to fix its ⁠practices at the outlet or face further "strict" action.
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Officials would "inspect more McDonald's outlets in the city," he said.

Food adulteration is ​often reported across India, but safety lapses at high-profile brands like McDonald's are rare.

McDonald's is one of India's most popular restaurant chains, with hundreds outlets that draw customers with its burgers and other offerings.
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