Type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Wholesale – Packaged Food Manufacture |
Founded | Cashmere, Washington (1918) |
Headquarters | , |
Products | Candy, Confections, Fruit products |
Revenue | $8,100,000[1] |
Number of employees | 80 |
Website | www |
Liberty Orchards is a packaged food products company located in Cashmere, Washington. Founded as an apple farm in 1918 by Armenian business partners[2] Armen Tertsagian and Mark Balaban,[3] the company moved into canning and then confectionery during the 1930s and 1940s.[4]
On March 16, 2021, Liberty Orchards president Greg Taylor announced that the company would close permanently on June 1, 2021.[5] The company was sold to KDV Group, a Russian food conglomerate, in late May.[6]
Product line
Aplets & Cotlets are Liberty Orchards' oldest and best known products. These two types of confection are mainly sold together in a single box; they are produced from a recipe for locoum using local apples and apricots.
Other flavors produced by the company include pineapple with macadamia nuts, strawberry with walnuts, orange with walnuts, peach with pecans, blueberry with pecans, and raspberry with pecans. They also produce sugar-free, nut-free and chocolate-covered varieties, as well as a number of traditional filled chocolates (truffle, caramel, and mint, for example). In 2009, the company has introduced a cherry-pecan locoum, as well as four varieties (mango, strawberry, watermelon and papaya) dusted with a sweet-sour-spicy coating.
Although many of these confections are marketed under American-style brand-names, they are referred to on product packaging as "Rahat Locoum." Since 2012, the company has also marketed a line of confections with special packaging under the name "Turkish Delights," which includes traditional Middle Eastern flavors such as rose-pistachio, orange-blossom-walnut, mint, and rose-lemon.
Local community interaction
Liberty Orchard products are widely distributed via national chain stores and on the internet.
In September 1997 Liberty Orchards was criticized for threatening to move production out of Cashmere unless the town met certain demands that the company hoped would increase their brand profile. These were reported by The New York Times at the time:
- "They want all road signs and official correspondence by the city to say 'Cashmere, Home of Aplets and Cotlets'. They have asked that one of the two main streets in town be changed to Cotlets Avenue, and the other one be renamed Aplets Avenue. The candy maker also wants the Mayor and Council to sell City Hall to them, build new parking lots and possibly go to the bond market to start a tourism campaign on behalf of the worldwide headquarters of a company that says its story is 'America in a nutshell'."[7]
Notes
- ↑ Staff. "LIBERTY ORCHARDS COMPANY, INC". Dun & Bradstreet Credibility Corp. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
- ↑ "The Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History - HistoryLink.org".
- ↑ "Aplets & Cotlets, Fruit Delights, Orchard Bars, Fruit & Nut Candies". Liberty Orchards. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
- ↑ Liberty Orchards Aplets & Cotlets: Aplets & Cotlets are born...
- ↑ Ian, Dunn (March 16, 2021). "Liberty Orchards Company to close June 1 after 101 years in business". The Wenatchee World. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ↑ Ryder-Marks, Mia (June 24, 2021). "Aplets & Cotlets maker sold to Russian company". Capital Press. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
- ↑ "Cashmere Journal; Old-Fashioned Town Sours On Candymaker's New Pitch". The New York Times. 6 October 1997. Retrieved 16 January 2016.