Horse Meat Free and Back on the Menu: Ikea Meatballs

Ikea says its meatballs are now free of horse meat.
Radek Mica | AFP | Getty Images
Ikea says its meatballs are now free of horse meat.

Furniture retailer IKEA's trademark meatballs are returning to the menu after last month's horse meat scare, with new supply chain controls "from farm to fork", the company's head of foods said Thursday.

In February, IKEA stopped selling meatballs from its main supplier in Sweden, Familjen Dafgard, after tests showed a batch contained horse meat. The discovery widened a Europe-wide horse meat scandal that has damaged confidence in the continent's vast and complex food industry. (Read More: Economics of the Taboo Against Eating Horse Meat)

IKEA Foods Chief Executive Edward Mohr told Reuters in an interview its in-store cafeterias in Sweden, Denmark and Finland started selling meatballs again on Thursday. Meatballs from Familjen Dafgard, which supplies nearly all IKEA stores in Europe, would be back in all stores by mid-April.

"We want to have a traceability standard in place, tracing meat from farm to fork," he said. "That means we are establishing an auditing scheme for the suppliers, and we are taking out certain elements in the supply chain, such as traders. We are also, for example, looking at having slaughtering and deboning together."

Mohr said IKEA had made Familjen Dafgard drop eight of its 15 suppliers, including the importer of the meat that contained horse, and would cut the number of purchasing countries.

(Read More: Horse Meat Found in Ikea Meatballs)

The horse meat found in IKEA's meatballs originated from a Polish abattoir.

Mohr said IKEA would shorten the supply chain to be able to trace all meat back to its origins, and external consultants would inspect all abattoirs in the chain of supply to IKEA.

In the meantime, IKEA has introduced a temporary extensive DNA test scheme to ensure no minced meat products sold at IKEA contain horse meat, he said. "Each batch is tested."

Europe's horse meat scandal erupted in January, when testing in Ireland revealed that some beef products also contained equine DNA.

It has since spread across the continent, ensnaring numerous well-known brands, prompting product withdrawals, consumer concerns and government investigations into the region's complex food-processing chains.

Mohr said he did not know which abattoir in Poland had provided IKEA with the horse meat.

IKEA's meatballs are a popular dish among customers visiting the shops to buy flat-pack furniture and other household goods.