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January 21, 2004
The Muskegon Chronicle
By Dave Alexander
The surge in low-carbohydrate dieting has prompted Cole's
Quality Foods Inc. in Muskegon to begin producing an "ultra"
garlic bread that offers fewer than half the carbohydrate grams
of the traditional frozen bread product.
Production of Cole's Ultra Garlic Bread began the first weekend
of this month, with the new frozen garlic bread scheduled to be
shipped at the end of this month, showing up on national grocery
shelves in early February.
While introductory weeks of diets such as South Beach and Atkins
call for avoiding all bread products, low-carb garlic bread could
be part of a balanced maintenance diet under the two most popular
diet approaches today, Cole's officials said.
The new garlic bread made from oat fiber and wheat gluten has
led Cole's to hire 10 new employees at its Muskegon production
plant, allowing the company to become a seven-day-a-week operation.
Ultra is currently produced on the weekends.
Cole's currently employs 150, and if Ultra takes off in the market
another 10 employees will be hired, according to company President
Scott Devon. If sales of Ultra succeed and more production capacity
is needed, plant expansion is possible in Muskegon, Devon said.
The low-carb garlic bread was quickly developed, tested, produced
and marketed -- six months from idea to shelf. The cost of Ultra
Garlic Bread will range from $2.49 to $2.99 a loaf.
"We've read all about the Atkins and low-carb craze,"
Devon said. "The diets have hit the point of mass acceptance.
And those are diets that do not include bread. We took that not
as a threat but as an opportunity."
The first standard for Cole's was to produce a bread product that
tasted good, Devon said.
Then that taste had to be produced within a "low-carb"
formula. A 1-ounce slice of Cole's traditional garlic bread made
from wheat flour has 11 grams of carbohydrates compared to Ultra's
5 grams.
With Ultra, the bread's garlic flavoring is delivered in a pure
butter mixture instead of with soybean oil, cutting down the saturated
fats, Devon said.
"Low-carb diets work," said Toni Bloom, a nutritional
consultant who helped Cole's develop the product.
"But sticking with that approach beyond the induction phase
is key.
Ask any person on a low-carb diet what they miss most -- or better
yet, what food they cheat with most -- and they'll likely say
... bread."
With a trademark slogan of "carb sense, ultra taste,"
packaging was developed for the October National Frozen Food Association
convention in Las Vegas. Without even having sample products,
major grocery store customers lined up to order Ultra. Samples
were provided in November.
With sales of more than $50 million, Cole's has roughly 30 percent
of the national frozen garlic bread market, sharing similar percentages
with its top competitors, Pepperidge Farms and New York Garlic
Bread.
In West Michigan, Cole's products are found at Meijer, Spartan
stores and Plumb's. Nationally, Cole's is distributed through
Wal-Mart's Superstores, A&P, Super Value and Kroger.
Cole's invented frozen garlic bread in 1973. The company now distributes
14 different frozen garlic bread products from its Muskegon manufacturing
plant, 1188 Lakeshore.
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle. Used with permission
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