advertisement
 
Most Viewed
 
UPCOMING EVENTS

Nutrition Business Journal Summit
July 20-23, Dana Point, Calif.
REGISTER HERE

UNFI West TableTop Show
Sept. 1-2, Reno, Nev.
REGISTER HERE


VIEW ALL EVENTS

 

General Mills buys LaraBar
June 17, 2008
  

By Jane Hoback

Humm Foods, Denver-based maker of fruit and nut nutrition bars LaraBar and LaraBar Jocalat, was acquired by General Mills on June 11. The brands will be part of the Minneapolis food giant's Small Planet Foods, the natural and organic products group that includes Cascadian Farm and Muir Glen.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Lara Merriken, who founded Humm Foods in 2002, will stay on as creative director of the 26-employee company.

"We are excited about this announcement," said Michele Meyer, president of Small Planet Foods, in a statement. "LaraBar is an exceptional brand that is experiencing rapid growth because of the quality and uniqueness of LaraBar products. Lara is clearly the brand champion of LaraBar, and we are thrilled to have her join us as we grow the business together."

Merriken came up with the idea for namesake all-natural raw fruit and nut bars while she was hiking in Colorado's Rocky Mountains. Her vision was to create a business centered on delivering an all-natural nutrition bar made of fruit and nuts, with unique flavors and few ingredients. She developed the bars with what she jokingly calls "a sophisticated manufacturing arm...what amounted to be a Cuisinart and a rolling pin. The first batch of bars I produced for retail had to be sealed by hand—all 500 of them."

The business, which started out distributing the bars at Vitamin Cottage and Wild Oats stores, has grown to a category-leading position in the single-serve natural health bar segment. The bars now are sold at Trader Joe's and some conventional grocery chains throughout the U.S.

"I'm pleased to see LaraBar joining strong and successful brands like Muir Glen and Cascadian Farm," Merriken said in a statement. "I see this move as important to the future, and I'm excited to work with Small Planet Foods to continue to grow the LaraBar business."

Humm Foods' makes 14 LaraBar flavors, which contain fruit, nuts and spices and include such flavors as Cherry Pie, Cashew Cookie, Cocoa Mole, Ginger Snap, Lemon Bar, Cinnamon Roll, Key Lime and Pistachio. Humm also makes six Jocalat flavors containing chocolate, fruit and nuts and include chocolate hazelnut, chocolate cherry and chocolate mint.

General Mills' brands include Cheerios, Betty Crocker, Pillsbury, Green Giant, Haagen-Dazs, Nature Valley and Old El Paso. The company posted annual net sales of $12.4 billion in fiscal 2007. With its Cascadian Farm and Muir Glen brands, Small Planet Foods holds the No. 1 or No. 2 position in 14 major organic categories in the United States, according to General Mills

.
Rate this:
Recent Comments
Well Lara Bar is now added to my no buy list as well as as Cascadian Farms and Muir Glen. Thanks for the info
Posted By: Kathryn on June 17, 2008
No doubt they'll start adding high fructose corn syrup. Very disappointing, Lara!
Posted By: lisa on July 02, 2008
Why does everything good and neat have to be taken over by that "Big Guys"? "Darn you! Darn you all to hell!" I wish not everything was driven by money these-days. We needed more small-business type companies like Humm foods, and now that they're owned by a huge company the quality will probably not me as monitored, and they'll probably start using fillers eventually. *sigh* guess I can continue making my own. If you'd like recipes for your own larabars check this one out: http://recipes.sparkpeople.com/recipe-detail.asp?recipe=294964
Posted By: Melancholy on July 03, 2008
It sounds like they started the business only to make money. No real vision. Dissapointing!
Posted By: who on July 11, 2008
very very disappointing! i will be making my own or buying other brands for sure. too bad, too, cuz larabars were a family favorite!
Posted By: jane on July 19, 2008
Congrats to you Lara Bar for making it amongst the big companies feeding frenzy. You deserve to have made it. You worked hard and if everyone who is pointing the finger of disappointment could create a company such as yours' and grow as fast as you did they too would sell and retire from this crazy world to hopefully pursue higher goals that could assist in the planets wellbeing. Bravo to you. As they say in India " The dogs may bark but the caravan keeps rolling on"
Posted By: Kaliya on July 23, 2008
Just reconfirms that buying fresh, organic, mostly local fruits and vegetables is the best way to go :) I don't need anyone else to prepare my food for me. Peace everyone
Posted By: John on July 26, 2008

We will be sure to watch the ingredients and the manufacturing process very carefully now since we sell the product online. Kaliya doesn't seem to realize that the large food manufacturers only see this as a profit-only venture. We've watched them attempt to join the "health food" craze and create organic products with lots of sugar added. That's not good for our children.

Posted By: Kevin on August 06, 2008

Yes, once the buyout takes place  -- especially in quality product such as the Larabar that was produced by humm foods -- it's almost a given that because of the volume large companies produce, the quality will surely degrade. I guess only time will tell.

Posted By: Jeff Patterson on October 01, 2008

I'm def not buying LaraBars anymore, lost one loyal customer.

Posted By: Velia Robles on February 13, 2009

Guess I'll have to start making my own. I don't trust huge companies to keep the integrity of the product : (

Posted By: Michelle Sharkie on June 12, 2009
advertisement
 
  Latest From The Blog
Does the vitamin A used in sunscreens cause cancer?
July 26, 2010 3:43 PM

In the Environmental Working Group's 2010 Sunscreen Guide, the group called out vitamin A as a po ...

How humane is your meat counter?
July 21, 2010 5:01 PM

Humane certified may be the next "local" considering the certification's recent attention in the ...


View All The Latest Blogs