At least 11 people have died after drinking coconut wine in The Philippines, including some who were celebrating at a Christmas party.
Authorities also say more than 300 others were treated in hospital after consuming lambanog in Laguna and Quezon, south of the capital Manila.
Many were admitted after Laguna's mayor, Vener Munoz in Rizal, urged people to see medical advice following the deaths between Thursday and Sunday.
Lambanog is popular in provinces and often consumed during holidays and celebrations.
Unregulated production and sales of the beverage are common in the southeast Asian country, and it is often made illegally with dangerous additives.
Jonas Del Rosario, a spokesperson from the Philippine General Hospital, said: "Lambanog (coconut wine) is being fermented from the sap of a coconut flower.
"If it is fermented, it produces methanol during the fermentation. Sometimes, the lambanog being sold has too much methanol content."
The country's food and drug administration has previously warned about the dangerous and prohibited use of methanol as an additive in home brews.
Its department of health said blood tests and samples of leftover lambanog would be collected and analysed.
Main image: Philippine General Hospital in Manila, The Philippines | Image: Facebook/Philippine General Hospital