Archive for ‘Operations’

Cookies for the People! Good Business Case Study: Coppenrath Cookie Bakery

By , 15 March, 2012,

German Sweets Tour: Niederegger | Coppenrath

German Candy Industry Report: Part 2

Did you ever wonder who makes those European cookies you see at the drugstore with cute patterns printed on or a tablet of chocolate…and how they get to our store shelves at some insanely low price like $1.99?

I have. So it was no minor thrill to visit one such bakery, in Northern Germany. In my second report from an epic mid-sized confections tour with German Sweets , learn about Coppenrath Fein Bakerei, a several generation old, family bakery whose intention is to produce natural, excellent baked goods at a price accessible to any consumer.

The answer to that first question came from Andreas Coppenrath: volume. Coppenrath sells in about 100 countries, with 15,000 tons of cookies annually emerging from a relatively small factory where, in the high season, 250 people work. While this may sound like a lot, their reach in the U.S. is limited by their capacity to serve our nationwide chains…as we found with many of Germany’s old family owned sweets businesses. (As someone who enjoys discovering products abroad we can’t get at home, it’s not necessarily a bad thing!)

On our factory tour, Andreas particularly impressed me with his leadership skills, openness about the operations, and innovation. For example, 6-packs of Sponge Cakes for tart bases get sold alongside strawberries. We loved their cookies (especially one reminiscent of a Milano but with coconut).

Andreas left no question unanswered — with something to illuminate bakers and food manufacturers of all sizes:

Some Background – “Honor the past and go for the future.”

This sixth-generation family business started in 1825. World War II might have felled the company, but Andreas’ grandmother, suddenly a single mom in 1942 after her husband died, managed to keep it going with eight kids, all the while harboring Jewish locals in her cellar. The town memorialized her with a street in her name.

Coppenrath cookiesToday Coppenrath is the leading producer of speculaas (or speculoos, in Wikipedia and the Netherlands), a seasonal spice cookie pressed by brass rollers into shapes like windmills, kids, and animals. “Speculaas” may ring a bell. It is also the magic ingredient used in “cookie spread” as well as a filled chocolate currently sold at Trader Joe’s.

Secrets to Sweet Success

Employees are trained in bakery — rather than only in a rote production method — so they can understand if the smell, texture, and result work or how small changes might affect the recipe.

Keep employees very happy. Production workers get a daily 3-4% of salary bonus based on meeting production goals. Andreas has an open door policy. No wonder some employees have been there 40 years.

One line, many cookies. They can switch heavy brass rollers to imprint patterns. At a high enough volume Coppenrath can produce various designs and co-pack for others who want custom designed cookies.

The company prototypes products not in small batches but on the production machines to see what the real result would be.

Much equipment has wheels so it can move around as needed. In one shift they can produce 40,000 packages. In 24 hours, 100,000 600-gram packs.

They source flour from several mills. Flour quality and flavor varies by wheat growing region. They blend to their specification and choose the flours that fit the best. They visit their suppliers to check the facilities.

Challenges

Ingredients prices have skyrocketed (worldwide, really), with sugar increasing from 500 to 900 Euros per ton in one fell swoop. 2011 was the worst year.

Every market has different taste. English market likes colored cookies. Netherland fatty cookies. The more north you go in Germany the more popular dark chocolate. Milk chocolate and sweeter taste, more so in the south. The solution? Pick your market and develop products accordingly.

The UE requires ingredients traceability. For example, eggs can be tracked down to the specific chicken.

International labeling is also tricky. Some countries allow a sticker with their language and others require it printed on.

Packaging Innovations and Challenges

Coppenrath’s resealable packaging for cookies in trays struck me as brilliant. You peel back the top, lined with sticky stuff on the edges, then peel it back closed when you’re done. This format is great for snacking, keeping the product fresh, and making it easier to open the package.

Andreas conducts in-store research himself, going to departments unrelated to his products, like toilet paper. He looks away then quickly turns to the product display to see what catches his eye.

After observing and learning that packaging where a person on the package looking directly at you (or the camera) is the most eye catching they developed a counter top display case with single serve cookies. (It’s true! Check store shelves and you’ll find a striking number of people gazing back into your eyes like the Brawny man.) Each pack includes a thought-provoking saying or quote.

They produce efficient, useful packaging. In a year they use one million meters of cookie packaging, all printed at once. Folding cardboard cookie tray gets assembled automatically without glue, making it perfectly recyclable.

Mixed cases in 1/4 pallet sizes allow an in-store standalone display simply by un-shrink wrapping. This is particularly popular in small stores. Six-packs of cookies in plastic carry packs with a handle are popular at warehouse stores. Cookie totes!

My favorite tidbit: Cookies with chocolate can ship packed below the water line in containers as refrigeration.

US Availability

Coppenrath sells through four importers in the U.S. Look them up at Coppenrath Fein Bakerei.

How to Make Bean to Bar Chocolate the DIY Way

By , 12 October, 2011,

Visiting Dandelion Chocolate‘s Palo Alto laboratory–cleverly tucked into a suburban garage, for now anyway–felt like a live immersion into Instructables or of course the Maker Faire. Nary had Todd started giving me a tour that I whipped out the old video recorder to capture the charming and clever mechanisms he had built to make a bean to bar chocolate which is quickly gaining a following in the Bay Area and beyond.

See how a few tools, wood, and hardware store parts can come together to make much of the small scale machinery needed to start tinkering with making chocolate. Disclaimer: The DIY part works mostly for prepping the cacao beans, not so much for making the actual chocolate. Although surely there is someone hacking together their own conches and other refining equipment.

Choose Your Food Business Investors Carefully

By , 26 August, 2011,

It is with dismay we face another great artisan confectioner and patissier in San Francisco closing, related to issues with the business investment. First, it was Charles Chocolates (who aims to re-open) and now Tell Tale Preserve Co.–both known for superlative products. Take choosing investment partners than a marriage (e.g., don’t run off to Vegas for a shotgun signing).  See what Richard Branson has to say and consider the possibility of community investment.

Third Coast Coffee Roasting Tour in Austin

By , 13 June, 2011,

Ironically the photos of my Third Coast Coffee Roasters tour in Austin contain no coffee. While I’m definitely enjoying my morning cup, it was a few other aspects of the operation that delighted me enough to post this here virtual tour.

Third Coast Coffee is a member of Cooperative Coffees, “a green coffee importing cooperative, comprised of 22 community-based coffee roasters in the USA and Canada, who are committed to building and supporting fair and sustainable trade relationships for the benefit of farmers and their exporting cooperatives, families, and communities.” (Seems like a good life list goal is to visit all 22 members!)

 

The cupping room is designed white for sensory deprivation--making the coffee the main stimulant in the room.

 

direct coffee trade map

A wall map pin points growers which members of Cooperative Coffees visit to directly purchase the green coffee.

Coffee grounds stay close to home, as compost for a vege garden behind the roastery.

And finally, a different rubber stamp for each coffee variety which they make in house. This thrilled me no end. They use a little oven to bake the rubber and, well, you'll have to ask them for the details.

If you’re in Austin and like to seek out coffee roasters, pop in. There’s no fancy cafe, just good coffee and good people. 4402 S. CONGRESS AVE #109 • AUSTIN TEXAS • 78745 • 512-444-7820