Dairy

The cold spring in the northern hemisphere threatened to put the chill on Unilever's ice cream sales

Unilever results to suffer from cold spring

By Mike Stones

The cold spring and problems in emerging markets are likely to put a chill on Unilever’s second-quarter and half-year results, predicts City analyst Investec.

James Lambert's R&R Ice Cream is to close its Leeds factory by the end of the year

R&R Ice Cream to close Leeds factory

By Mike Stones

Europe’s biggest own-label ice cream manufacturer R&R Ice Cream is to close its Leeds factory before the end of the year.

Richard Clothier is battling Simon Baldry, Mark Allen, Fiona Kendrick, James Lambert and John Stevenson for the title Personality of the Year

Personality of the Year Award

Wyke Farms boss in Personality of Year battle

By Mike Stones

De-listed Morrisons supplier Richard Clothier, boss of Wyke Farms, is in a head-to-head battle with five other food and drink industry leaders to win Food Manufacture’s Personality of the Year award.

Dairy Crest is finalising investment for its Davidstow creamery

Dairy Crest targets baby food market

By Rod Addy

Dairy Crest will make demineralised whey powder at its Davidstow creamery – a key component of baby food, which had significant market potential – it claimed in an interim management statement.

Fortifying milk with important nutrients such as vitamin D for products aimed at kids offers a good way to add value to milk, Tetra Pak claimed

Growth opportunity in flavoured milk underplayed

By Rod Addy

Tetra Pak may be downplaying UK dairy processors’ potential for growth in the flavoured milk market, Andy Smith, UK and Ireland marketing manager at the firm, has claimed.

Manfredi: are consumers getting value for money

‘The price of premium ice cream is too high’

By Gary Scattergood

Many of the luxury ice cream products on supermarket shelves are overpriced despite their soaring retail popularity, claims the boss of a family-owned ice cream firm that serves the foodservice sector.

Dairy protein firms have welcomed the new method

Protein shake-up

By Paul Gander

Do new ways of assessing and scoring protein quality reflect the complexity of the debate? Paul Gander asks some of the experts

Dairy manufacturers promised lower costing ingredients

Creamy yet clean-label, cost-effective starch

Ingredion's new functional native starch - Indulge 1720 - is a clean-label co-texturiser designed to enable dairy manufacturers to deliver thick and creamy - yet cost-effective - indulgent yogurt products.

Rick Pendrous, editor, Food Manufacture

Can new labels change consumer behaviour?

By Rick Pendrous

The government has at last published its hybrid front-of-pack (FoP) nutritional labelling scheme, to widespread applause from health campaigners, major retailers and some manufacturers - although not all - that have supported it.

Clothier claims there are 'points of difference' between his brand and its competitors

Old and the new

By Gary Scattergood

Wyke Farms is combining history and modern marketing to sustain its rise, reports Gary Scattergood

Suncream churns out 13M litres a year

Cream of the crop

By Gary Scattergood

Sustained value success has funded Suncream Dairies' move upmarket, Rebecca Manfredi tells Gary Scattergood

Dairy Crest said the sale would help reduce its exposure to the less profitable 'middle ground' market

Dairy Crest finds potential milk delivery buyer

By Rod Addy

Dairy Crest is consulting staff on plans to parcel out its milk delivery business in the north west of England to Creamline Dairies and Mortons Dairies in a deal worth £1.15M in cash.

'Health mark' labelling has given the impression imported Cheddar was made in the UK

Departing trade boss targets domestic sourcing

By Rod Addy

Outgoing Dairy UK director general Jim Begg has hit out at misleading labelling implying all the ingredients of dairy products are sourced from the UK when this is not the case.

Positive sign: the NFU has taken out an advert to praise dairy processors that have signed the voluntary code of practice

Dairy processors targeted in farmers’ name and shame list

By Mike Stones

The National Farmers Union (NFU) has upped the pressure on dairy processors to sign its Dairy Industry Code of Best Practice for contractual relations by publishing a name-and-shame list of firms that have refused to sign.

Heinz makes a variety of baby food products at the Kendal plant

Concern over future of Heinz Kendal

By Rod Addy

Doubts over Heinz Kendal’s future viability have been raised by the union Unite after the company announced the loss of 45 jobs across production and management there.

Firms will have to fight cheese’s demonisation

Red label on pack spells danger for dairy processors

By Laurence Gibbons

Dairy companies will be forced to educate consumers about the real nutritional benefits of their products to counter their demonisation by the Department of Health (DH) backed single hybrid front-of-pack labelling system, according to the Dairy Council.

Labels 'must not include pictures of infants or other pictures or text which may idealise the use of such formula'

Infant pictures ban on baby formulas backed by MEPs

By Gary Scattergood

The European Parliament today threw its weight behind the banning of child pictures on baby formula packaging and the abolition of dietetic foods which EU chiefs said had been “cannibalised by marketing tools”.

Cheese maker's latest starches to reduce production time

Hard cheese saves time and money

KMC has developed two CheeseMaker speciality starches that enable producers to make recombined parmesan and other hard cheese alternatives easily and quickly. Traditionally, 12-16 litres of raw milk are necessary to process a parmesan cheese and it needs...

Voting for the Personality of the Year award is now open

Top of the food chain

By Rick Pendrous, Gary Scattergood, Mike Stones

Which of the six candidates below, shortlisted by the Food Manufacture editorial team, do you think has done the most over the past year to raise the profile of the food and drink industry? You can have your say by visiting our web site at foodmanawards....

Badger cull row: Are badgers victims or villains?

Badger cull: RSCPA again accused of ‘bullying and hypocrisy’

By Mike Stones

The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) has again been accused of “bullying and hypocrisy”, after Freedom Food – its wholly owned subsidiary – wrote to farmers in the new badger cull areas, warning those who allowed the cull...

Mothers' diets and lifestyles before and during pregnancy can affect their infants’ risk of succumbing to disease

Obesity during pregnancy poses lifetime health risk for babies

By Rick Pendrous

A woman’s diet and lifestyle before and during pregnancy, and her baby’s diet in early life, can affect the infant’s risk of succumbing to disease later on and this will have important implications for the food industry, a new scientific report has concluded.

Allen: consumers want to buy more British produce

UK Cheddar mark ‘dupes consumers’

By Gary Scattergood

UK Cheddar manufacturers are being hampered by rules that “give the impression” foreign cheese is actually produced in Britain, claims the boss of Dairy Crest.

Unilever is calling for collaboration to cut vehicle numbers on the road

Unilever to cut emissions with dual-fuel trial

By Gary Scattergood

Manufacturing giant Unilever is to begin trialling dual-fuel technology for its fleet of vehicles in a bid to slash carbon emissions and cut costs, while also pressing for more collaboration between food firms to reduce the number of vehicles on the road.

The right churn

By Gary Scattergood

Relentless pursuit of efficiency measures has enabled Mark Allen to transform Dairy Crest into a brand-focused plc, reports Gary Scattergood

Savings on a plate. Rodda's have recorded a 17% waste reduction in the past 12 months

Engage staff to cut waste: Dairy boss

By Laurence Gibbons

Engaging staff and treating machines like marathon runners are the keys to reducing waste, according to dairy firm Rodda’s.

Milk supplies are on 'a knife edge', said Richard Clothier

Why milk suppliers are living on a knife-edge

By Gary Scattergood

Milk supplies are on a “knife-edge” and the next four weeks will be critical for manufacturers – with a sustained period of heavy rain likely to see prices soar, says the md of cheesemaker Wyke Farms.

Judy Buttriss, director general, British Nutrition Foundation

Butter takes on margarine

By Judy Buttriss

Just as the Department of Health is lining up its new pledges on saturated fat, a study in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) has generated headlines such as 'swapping the butter for margarine may be bad for your health'.

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