For many of us, the morning doesn’t truly begin until the first sip of coffee. However, that ritual can be quickly disrupted when safety concerns arise. Recently, Massimo Zanetti Beverage USA (MZB-USA)—the powerhouse behind household names like Hills Bros. Coffee and Kauai Coffee—has issued safety notifications regarding specific products with “Best By” dates extending into 2026.
While the company maintains high quality-control standards, being proactive about food safety is essential. If you have these brands in your pantry, you don’t need to panic, but you do need to verify. This guide will walk you through exactly how to read your coffee’s “fingerprint”—the batch code—to ensure your morning brew is safe.

Image Description: A consumer inspecting the bottom of a coffee canister to find the printed batch code and expiration date.
1. Where to Find the Batch Code and “Best By” Date
The batch code (or lot code) is a unique identifier that allows manufacturers to trace a product back to the specific day, time, and facility where it was produced. To determine if your coffee is part of a recall, you must first locate this alphanumeric string.
Hills Bros. Coffee
- Steel Cans: Flip the can over. The code is almost always printed in black inkjet on the bottom metal surface. If the ink is faint, try tilting it toward a light source to see the indentation.
- Single-Serve Pods (Cartons): Look at the side or bottom panels of the cardboard packaging.
- Individual Pods: Check the foil lid. Most pods contain a truncated version of the batch code for easy identification even if the box has been discarded.
Kauai Coffee
- Soft-Side Bags: Check the back of the bag, usually near the bottom seal or printed vertically along the side gusset.
- Single-Serve Pods: Just like Hills Bros., the most reliable info is on the outer carton, but the lid of the pod itself will also carry the necessary codes.

Image Description: An infographic guide showing exactly where to find the identification codes on cans, cartons, and bags.
2. Deciphering the “Manufacturer Speak”
Coffee packaging can be a maze of numbers. To the untrained eye, 4125P1 08:30 looks like gibberish, but it actually tells a specific story. MZB-USA typically uses a combination of a standard “Best By” date and a Julian Date production code.
The Anatomy of a Batch Code
Let’s break down a hypothetical code: 4042P2 14:15
- The First Digit (4): Represents the last digit of the year (2024).
- The Next Three Digits (042): This is the Julian Date. It represents the 42nd day of the year (February 11th).
- The Letter/Number Combo (P2): Identifies the specific production line or facility.
- The Time (14:15): The exact time the product was sealed (2:15 PM).
Why this matters: If a recall is issued for products made at “Facility P2” between February 10th and 12th, the code above would be a direct match.

Image Description: A visual breakdown of how to read the complex alphanumeric codes used by manufacturers to track production batches.
3. How to Verify Your Specific Batch
If your coffee has a “Best By” date in 2026, take these three actionable steps to confirm its status:
Step 1: Utilize the FDA Search Tool
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the “gold standard” for recall information.
* Visit the FDA Recalls & Safety Alerts page.
* Pro-Tip: Don’t just search for “Coffee.” Search for “Massimo Zanetti,” “Hills Bros,” or “Kauai Coffee” to filter out unrelated results.
Step 2: Check the MZB-USA Digital Newsroom
Manufacturers often post more granular details than the FDA. Navigate to mzb-usa.com and look for a “Safety Notices” or “Press Releases” link, usually located in the website’s footer. They will often list the specific “Best By” dates and UPC (barcode) numbers affected.
Step 3: Call Consumer Affairs
If you are second-guessing your interpretation of the code, call the experts.
* Phone: 1-888-246-2598
* What to have ready: The product name, the size (e.g., 30.5 oz can), the UPC barcode number, and the batch code from the bottom of the container.

Image Description: Verifying product safety by checking official government and manufacturer alert systems online.
4. Immediate Steps if Your Coffee is Affected
If you confirm your batch is part of a recall, err on the side of caution. Even if the coffee looks, smells, and tastes perfectly fine, do not consume it.
- Stop Use Immediately: Do not attempt to “filter” or boil the coffee to make it safe. If the concern is foreign material (like metal fragments), no home method will fix it.
- The Retailer Route: Most major retailers (Walmart, Target, Kroger) have systems in place for recalled items. Bring the product (or just the packaging/receipt) back to the store for a full refund.
- The Manufacturer Route: If the store won’t help, Massimo Zanetti typically offers replacement vouchers or checks for consumers who provide proof of purchase or photos of the affected batch codes through their customer service portal.
5. Understanding the Risks: Why Recalls Happen
Recalls are a sign that a company’s safety “check and balance” system is working. In the coffee industry, recalls generally fall into three categories:
- Physical Contaminants: Small fragments of plastic or metal from a malfunctioning grinder or conveyor belt.
- Seal Integrity Issues: If a bag or pod isn’t sealed correctly, moisture enters, leading to mold growth long before the 2026 expiration date.
- Undeclared Allergens: Occasionally, flavored coffees may inadvertently come into contact with allergens like milk or soy without proper label disclosure.

Image Description: Common reasons for coffee industry recalls, ranging from physical contaminants to labeling errors.
Final Thoughts for the Coffee Lover
Staying informed shouldn’t be a source of stress. By taking five minutes to cross-reference your batch codes, you can return to enjoying your Kauai or Hills Bros. brew with total peace of mind. Check your pantry today, keep your receipts, and always stay tuned to official manufacturer safety notices.







