After a visit from the Food and Drug Administration earlier this year resulted in a recall of more than 60 of its products, Owings Mills ice cream manufacturer Totally Cool, Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Friday.

The FDA detected listeria around one of the company’s production lines during an unannounced inspection in late May, and on June 21 directed Totally Cool, Inc. to shut down all of its product lines — a move that forced the ice cream manufacturer to lay off 68 of its 71 employees and “suffer the loss of all revenue streams,” according to the bankruptcy filing last week in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland.

Acknowledging the potential for products to be contaminated with the bacteria listeria, Totally Cool, Inc. recalled products in late June from brands including Taharka Brothers, Dolcezza, Hershey’s, Friendly’s, Jeni’s and more.

The FDA “did a very extensive on-site inspection and they only found a trace of listeria on one line of the production equipment,” said Irving Walker, an attorney at Cole Schotz P.C. representing Totally Cool, Inc. “To this day, we don’t know of a single consumer who ever became sick from eating a product manufactured by Totally Cool.”

In its bankruptcy filing, Totally Cool, Inc. estimated its assets fall between $500,001 and $1 million; its estimated liabilities are around $1 million to $10 million.

A business can reorganize its debts while still in operation by filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Totally Cool, Inc. CEO Michael J. Uhlfelder is authorized and directed to pursue selling “some or all of” the company’s assets, according to the filing.

Totally Cool, Inc. has not reopened since June, Walker said, noting that the business started in 1992.

“They’ve got a great reputation in the industry for being a co-manufacturer for private-label, highly regarded, well-known brands. And it was successful and profitable for all those years,” Walker said. “The hope is that somebody will buy it and re-employ people and reopen the plant.”