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Today in Food Manufacturing

Daily news and top headlines for food manufacturing professionals

Consumer Trends: Sugar Substitute Demand Growing

May 14, 2013 12:00 pm | News | Comments

The sugar substitute market was estimated at $10.5 billion in 2012. This value is expected to increase to $13.7 billion by 2018, with 4.5% CAGR for the forecasted period. North America was expected to lead the global sugar substitute market with share of 49.0% followed by Asia-Pacific (21.4%), and Europe (20.9%) in terms of revenue in the year 2012.

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What Food Manufacturers Need From MRO for a Reliable Plant

May 14, 2013 11:47 am | by George Krauter, Vice President, Storeroom Solutions | Articles | Comments

There are maintenance, repair and operations surveys that show that “quick response and product knowledge” combine for over 75 percent of what was important to plant management; price is less than 8 percent of the consideration and fulfillment programs just 3 percent.

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Danone Acquires U.S. Baby Food Maker

May 14, 2013 9:46 am | News | Comments

French yogurt maker Danone says it has agreed to take a more than 90-percent stake in organic baby food maker Happy Family. Although Danone is known for its yogurt, baby food is one of its fastest-growing divisions. Revenue there rose more than 15 percent last year. But with Europe's economic crisis hitting sales hard in markets close to home, the Paris-based company has been looking for opportunities to expand abroad.

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McDonald’s Adds 3 Quarter Pounders to Menu

May 14, 2013 9:44 am | by CANDICE CHOI,AP Food Industry Writer | News | Comments

McDonald's is adding three new Quarter Pounders to its menu as the fast-food chain looks to offer cheaper premium burgers while capitalizing on one of its most popular brands. The company, based in Oak Brook, Ill., says the new burgers will replace its meatier Angus Third Pounders, which were among the most expensive items on its menu at around $4 to $5.

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Company Bets on Biotech Potatoes

May 14, 2013 9:40 am | by JOHN MILLER,Associated Press | News | Comments

This month, tuber processing giant J.R. Simplot Co. asked the U.S. government to approve five varieties of biotech potatoes. They're engineered not to develop ugly black bruises — McDonald's, which gets many of its fries from Simplot, rejects those. They're also designed to have less of a natural but potentially cancer-causing neurotoxin, acrylamide.

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Venezuela Food Maker Denies Blame for Shortages

May 14, 2013 9:38 am | by FABIOLA SANCHEZ and KARL RITTER,Associated Press | News | Comments

Venezuela's biggest food company on Monday hit back at President Nicolas Maduro's claims that it's to blame for the country's persistent food shortages. The chief executive of Empresas Polar, Lorenzo Mendoza, rejected accusations by the president that the company has reduced production and is hoarding products to create scarcity.

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Supreme Court Rules for Monsanto in Patent Case

May 14, 2013 9:34 am | by JESSE J. HOLLAND,Associated Press | News | Comments

The Supreme Court said Monday that an Indiana farmer violated Monsanto Co.'s patents on soybean seeds resistant to its weed-killer by growing the beans without buying new seeds from the corporation. The justices unanimously rejected the farmer's argument that cheap soybeans he bought from a grain elevator are not covered by the Monsanto patents.

Photo of the Day: Biotech Tubers

May 14, 2013 9:30 am | News | Comments

This Friday, May 10, 2013 photo shows a genetically engineered potato poking through the soil of a planting pot inside J.R. Simplot's lab in southwestern Idaho. Simplot is seeking U.S. regulatory approval to market the potatoes — which resist browning and are designed to produce lower levels of potentially cancer-causing acrylamide when fried — to growers and, eventually, consumers.

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Don’t Give in to Bird Activity at Your Facility

May 14, 2013 9:18 am | by Patrick T. Copps, MS, B.C.E., Technical Services Manager, Orkin, LLC | Articles | Comments

Birdwatching is an activity that fascinates people; it gives avid fans a chance to relax outdoors while watching birds react with each other in their natural habitats. But around your facility, there should be little to no bird activity, as birds can wreak havoc on your property and products.

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Taking Shelf Life Extension to the Next Level

May 14, 2013 9:18 am | by CNN | Videos | Comments

A Utah man recently found a burger he had misplaced... 14 years ago. The burger looks great for its age, having been mummified since it's birthday in 1999. It hasn't molded or decayed at all in the decade and a half since it was first served.

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Washdown AC Motors

May 14, 2013 1:00 am | by Food Manufacturing Staff | Product Releases | Comments

Company introduces its new series of WSS stainless steel AC motors.

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Optimized Transducer Electronics for Scales

May 14, 2013 1:00 am | by Food Manufacturing Staff | Product Releases | Comments

The HBM AED9101D transducer electronics process signals from strain gage full bridge transducers, making them digitally available via various interfaces such as Profibus, DeviceNet or RS232/422/485, free from interference and even over greater distances.

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Food Safe LED Work Light

May 14, 2013 1:00 am | by Food Manufacturing Staff | Product Releases | Comments

Featuring heavy duty construction and a high output LED tube assembly measuring 5 feet long, the FTL-5-LED-50-HD produces over 2,000 lumens of bright but well diffused illumination that is ideal for industrial and commercial applications where portability and high output are required.

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Daily Sound Bite: Abused Iowa Workers' Award Slashed

May 13, 2013 12:36 pm | News | Comments

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Henry's Turkey Service agreed in legal briefs filed late Friday that under federal law, each plaintiff can only recover $50,000 apiece — a far cry from the $7.5 million a jury awarded each worker earlier this month. On Monday, one advocate for the men called the cap "grossly unfair."

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UK Retailers Relax Rules on Modified Feed

May 13, 2013 12:32 pm | News | Comments

Three major British grocery chains have ended their bans on providing genetically modified feed to chickens. Sainsbury's, the Co-operative Group and Marks & Spencer cited short supplies of non-GM feed as the reason for the change. A Co-operative Group statement released Monday said it is no longer "feasible" to insist on non-GM feed.

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Company Recalls Stews with Undeclared Allergens

May 13, 2013 12:30 pm | News | Comments

Acadian Fine Foods LLC is recalling 17,000 pounds of pork and chicken stews because labels don't list whey and soy as ingredients. Some people are allergic to those substances. The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service announced the recall Friday.

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Falling Prices Hurt Post 2Q

May 13, 2013 12:29 pm | News | Comments

Cereal maker Post Holdings' fiscal second-quarter net income fell 59 percent as it paid more in interest and its prices dropped. Its quarterly performance missed analysts' expectations. Shares dropped in Monday morning trading. For the period ended March 31, Post — whose cereal brands include Honey Bunches of Oats and Grape-Nuts — earned $4.3 million, or 13 cents per share.

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200 Sickened After Eating at Vegas Restaurant

May 13, 2013 12:27 pm | by MICHELLE RINDELS,Associated Press | News | Comments

A new report shows 200 people who dined at one of Las Vegas' most popular restaurants about a block off the Strip have reported food poisoning symptoms, making it the largest outbreak southern Nevada health officials have seen in at least a decade.

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$240M EEOC Verdict To Be Cut to $1.6M

May 13, 2013 12:25 pm | by RYAN J. FOLEY,Associated Press | News | Comments

A landmark $240 million verdict awarded to 32 mentally disabled Iowa plant workers who were subjected to years of abuse by their handlers will be reduced to just $1.6 million because of a federal cap, attorneys in the case agree. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Henry's Turkey Service agreed in legal briefs filed late Friday that under federal law, each plaintiff can only recover $50,000 apiece.

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Is the U.S. Ready to Take Manufacturing Back?

May 13, 2013 12:18 pm | by Patrick Van den Bossche, Pramod Gupta, Hector Gutierrez, Chui Lee — A.T. Kearney | Articles | Comments

Word on the street is that substantial portions of previously offshored manufacturing operations are due to return to the United States. A number of macroeconomic factors seem to have tipped the balance in favor of domestic manufacturing.

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