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Our favorite food storage containers are just $1.37 each during Prime Day 2024

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Amazon Prime Day 2024 is here, and we found lots of amazing deals across tech, home and kitchen, including a discount on our favorite food storage containers from Vtopmart. The 24-piece container set is a 38% off during Prime Day, making it just $33. That breaks down to about $1.37 per container, which is definitely a steal given their popularity. Amazon shoppers consistently rave about these handy containers, awarding them a 4.7-star rating from more than 19,100 reviews.

Vtopmart’s airtight container set includes 24 food storage containers of varying sizes, perfect for holding all kinds of dry foods. These containers can help you organize and neatly store food in your pantry, which can often become one of the messiest and most disorganized areas in the kitchen. If tidying up your kitchen has long been on your to-do list, we recommend grabbing these before Prime Day ends

We’re tracking down all the best Prime Day discounts, including the best lightning deals and rival sales during Prime Day 2024. Whether you’re trying to find the best Prime Day deals on tech, Prime Day sales on beauty and fashion finds or Prime Day deals on health and fitness equipment, our team of expert deal hunters has you covered.


Vtopmart airtight food storage containers, set of 24: $33 (save $20)

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This comprehensive food storage container set will tame even the messiest of pantries. The set comes with 12 tall containers (six that are 2.5 quarts and six that are 1.8 quarts), six medium containers (1.5 quarts) and six small containers (0.7 quarts). We love that these come with decorative, chalk labels, which will make organizing your pantry that much easier.

In addition to the downright stylish labels, we also like these food storage containers’ airtight seal, which is achieved thanks to the silicone gasket on the lids. This tight closure will help keep your food fresh and protect it from pantry bugs (this is especially crucial for flour).

The containers are made of dishwasher-safe, BPA-free plastic. They’re also stackable and conveniently see-through, making it easy to find ingredients and snacks as well as discern how much of them you have left. Keep in mind these are only for dry foods.

The Vtopmart airtight food storage containers are a favorite of Amazon shoppers and have a 4.7-star rating out of more than 19,100 ratings. One reviewer wrote, “I love that my pantry is so organized now and protected from rice and flour bugs. I thought this set had too many containers but I had just enough. Love them. My life feels free and organized.”

Another verified customer said, “I love the fact that they all use the same lid, there’s no searching through a stack of different lids trying to find the right one. They seem to seal well and I really like the labels.” 




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Bugs, mold and mildew found in Boar’s Head plant linked to deadly listeria outbreak

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U.S. Department of Agriculture inspectors turned up dozens of violations at a Boar’s Head plant in Virginia now linked to a nationwide recall of deli meats, according to new records released by the department, including mold, mildew and insects repeatedly found throughout the site.

Last month, Boar’s Head recalled all of the deli meats made at its plant in Jarratt, Virginia, after a listeria outbreak was blamed on products distributed from the site. 

The outbreak has grown to 57 hospitalizations in more than a dozen states linked to recalled products from the plant. At least eight deaths have now been reported, including new fatalities linked to the outbreak in recent days from Florida, Tennessee, New Mexico and South Carolina.

“This is the largest listeriosis outbreak since the 2011 outbreak linked to cantaloupe,” the CDC said Wednesday.

Samples from unopened products distributed from the Boar’s Head plant were found by authorities in multiple states to be contaminated with the bacteria Listeria monocytogenes. Genetic sequencing linked the bacteria from the products to the strain driving the outbreak.

People are urged to double check their fridges for the recalled meats and to clean any surfaces that might have touched them.

“Consumers who were unaware of the recall may have eaten recalled products. People may also have a prolonged course of illness,” a spokesperson for South Carolina’s health department said in a statement following the new deaths. 

Records released by the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service to CBS News through a Freedom of Information Act request tally 69 records of “noncompliances” flagged by the agency over the past year at the Jarratt plant.

It’s unclear whether Boar’s Head will face any penalties by the USDA for the repeat issues. Reports published by the agency so far show no “enforcement actions” taken against the company in the past year.

Spokespeople for the USDA and Boar’s Head did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Beyond issues like paperwork lapses and the buildup of leftover meat on equipment, the records show inspectors faulted Boar’s Head several times for mold or mildew building up around the company’s facilities in Jarratt.

In July, federal inspectors found what looked to be mold and mildew around the hand washing sinks for the workers tasked with meats that are supposed to be ready to eat.

Mold was also found building up outside of steel vats used by the plant, previous records show, as well as in holding coolers between the site’s smokehouses.

“A black mold like substance was seen throughout the room at the wall/concrete junction. As well as some caulking around brick/metal,” they wrote in January, saying some spots were “as large as a quarter.”

Other locations were found to have a number of issues with leaking or pooling water, including a puddle found to have “a green algal growth” inside and condensation that was found to be “dripping over product being held.” 

After inspectors flagged one of the leaks to the company, workers tried to mop up the leaks.

“The employee wiped a third time, and the leaks returned within 10 seconds,” inspectors wrote after one condensation issue was raised on July 27, near fans that looked to be blowing the liquid onto uncovered deli meats.

Beyond water, USDA faulted the company for leaks of other substances. In February, an inspector found “ample amounts of blood in puddles on the floor” and a “rancid smell” throughout a cooler used at the plant.

A number of records also flag sightings of insects in and around deli meats at the plant, including one instance that prompted the agency to tag more than 980 pounds of ham in a smokehouse hallway to be “retained” for an investigation.

In June, another record flagged concerns over flies going in and out of “vats of pickle” left by Boar’s Head in a room. 

“Small flying gnat like insects were observed crawling on the walls and flying around the room. The rooms walls had heavy meat buildup,” they wrote.

Other parts of the facility were also found to have bugs, including what looked to be “ants traveling down the wall,” as well as a beetle and a cockroach.



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FBI releases new images of evidence from Trump assassination attempt

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The FBI has released new images of evidence from the Trump assassination attempt, including the gunman’s firearm, his backpack and an improvised explosive device that was found in the trunk of his car following the incident. CBS News Justice Department reporter Robert Legare has more.

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8/28: CBS News 24/7 Episode 2

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Israel launches operation in the West Bank; Recovery efforts continue in Ketchikan, Alaska.

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