FOOD, milk, and waterborne outbreaks of infectious hepatitis have been well substantiated in past years. Recently, raw shellfish was incriminated in several serious outbreaks of the disease. Other foods, such as meat, coldcuts, cheese, mayonnaise, custard, orange juice, frozen strawberries, salad, and garnishes also have been incriminated; however, when such foods were involved, investigations revealed that contamination was caused either by food handlers or by grossly unsanitary conditions, such as the backflow of sewage. Documented reports of outbreaks of hepatitis are summarized in the Hepatitis Surveillance Reports of the National Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Ga. Our report deals with a small, foodborne outbreak of hepatitis with an unusually high attack rate. This outbreak was recognized during routine surveillance for hepatitis by the Memphis-Shelby County Health Department.