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Cilantro is one of those foods that people either love or hate. There never seems to be a middle ground.

And now its detractors have a real reason to pooh-pooh the taste. The herb – at least some bushels coming from Mexico – are actually grown in poo.

The Food and Drug Administration announced on Monday that it is banning imports of some fresh cilantro from Puebla, Mexico, after a government investigation found human feces and toilet paper growing in fields there.

The FDA announced the partial ban after cilantro imported from the state of Puebla was linked to 2013 and 2014 outbreaks of stomach illnesses in the United States. The FDA said health authorities in Texas and Wisconsin suspect cilantro from the region also is responsible for more illnesses this year.

Following up on the outbreaks, U.S. and Mexican health authorities investigated 11 farms and packing houses in Puebla over the last three years. The FDA said it discovered "objectionable conditions" at eight of those firms, including five that were linked to the U.S. outbreaks. The FDA said the officials discovered the feces and toilet paper in fields and found that some of the farms had no running water or toilet facilities.

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The investigation also found dirty containers that had held cilantro and, at one firm, water that tested positive for the cyclospora parasite that caused the stomach illnesses.

In its "import alert" issued Monday, the FDA said it suspects the contamination came from "contact with the parasite shed from the intestinal tract of humans" in the fields, contaminated water or harvesting, processing and packing activities.

The ban will only affect certain shipments of fresh cilantro from Puebla from April through August, corresponding to the timing of the outbreaks. The summer ban will continue in future years unless a company can prove to health authorities that its product is safe.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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