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by YeBanKo 587 days ago
It actually lists milk as an ingredient. So even if you are have doubts if its milkless butter, the ingredient list can clarify it.
2 comments

If you see that on a product, you'd expect that the thing was made with milk, but does not contain any as far as you need to worry about allergens, and that it's tested to be safe.

It's a valid case in the truth table where somebody with a milk allergy should be safe to eat it

Does any such food product actually exist? Not even just for milk, but for any of the FDA's nine major allergens?
You will find that even butter often does not have milk in the ingredients list. E.g. Kerrygold: "pasteurized cream, salt"

In this case, the Kirkland's listed "sweet cream" and not milk.