It’s Sunday — prime hash brown eating day — so consider this a handy piece of news you can use.

Apparently the farm that supplies the potatoes that get turned into hash browns is a little too close to a driving range, causing a number of golf balls to be “farmed” along with the potatoes. So many of them were involved that it forced a product recall affected a number of products.

Via a statement on the FDA’s website:

McCain Foods USA, Inc. announced today it is voluntarily recalling retail, frozen hash brown products that may be contaminated with extraneous golf ball materials, that despite our stringent supply standards may have been inadvertently harvested with potatoes used to make this product. Consumption of these products may pose a choking hazard or other physical injury to the mouth.

The statement goes on to say that the recall affected two products “Roundy’s Brand, 2 lb. Bag of Frozen Southern Style Hash Browns (UPC 001115055019) and Harris Teeter Brand, 2 lb. Bag of Frozen Southern Style Hash Browns (UPC 007203649020),” and that they were distributed in Illinois, Wisconsin, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, District of Columbia, Delaware, Florida, Georgia and Maryland.