Both the Jamie Oliver Group and Wetherspoons said they stopped serving Russell Hume products on Monday.
It meant Wetherspoons had no steak or gammon for the chain's popular Tuesday steak night.
A spokesman for the Jamie Oliver Group said its restaurants had been able to source replacement meat, so the move did not result in shortages for diners.
It was believed last night that Butlins, Haven and Warner Leisure Hotels, nightclub chain Tiger Tiger, and Greene King and Marston's pubs are among other clients affected.
Russell Hume describes itself as 'one of the UK's leading meat specialists providing quality and distinction'. Its turnover was £129 million ($250m) in 2015.
But yesterday the company, which employs 400 workers at seven sites across the UK, appeared to have gone into shutdown. Its website went offline and the firm refused to respond to basic requests for information.
Chairman, David Holding was not available. A woman at his £750,000 gated house on a private road in Derby shouted 'No' and slammed the door when approached for comment.
The firm had earlier told Wetherspoons – which sells 45 million steaks a year – that the product recall was a "precautionary measure because of mislabelling".
A spokesman for the Jamie Oliver Group said: 'All Russell Hume meat was removed from restaurants as soon as we were notified.
'"We also switched suppliers. We have very strict higher welfare and food standards and to ensure our suppliers uphold these standards, we have an independent team that audits all our key suppliers, including meat."
A Wetherspoons spokesman said the chain had acted "proactively" by removing the products very quickly, adding that its pubs should be serving the missing menu items again within a week, this time sourced from "an alternative supplier".
Last night Greene King, the UK's largest pub retailer, said: "We only take a handful of products from Russell Hume and have contingency plans in place which means we can continue to serve our customers as normal."
The FSA said in a statement yesterday that "there is no indication that people have become ill from eating meat supplied by Russell Hume".
It added: "However, we are concerned about the poor practices in place at their premises so that is why we have taken proportionate action to ensure no meat can leave their sites at present.
"We are continuing to assess the situation. Distribution of meat from Russell Hume is to a range of outlets, including hospitality and catering businesses, and care homes and schools.
"All unused meat supplied by Russell Hume has been withdrawn from the businesses that they supply until they can provide assurances."
Russell Hume did not respond to several requests for comment.