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Darigold is one of the five largest dairy farmer owned cooperatives in the U.S., with 1200 farmer-owners. Darigold services the West Coast, and produces dried milk products (Lynden, WA, and Caldwell, ID), cheese (Sunnyside, WA), and fluid milk (Seattle, Portland, Medford, Boise), and condensed and evaporated milk at Chehalis, WA.
Harvest Select Catfish has been in business since 1991, selling a safe, quality, American made product. In the South, family, good food and good company are a way of life. It`s no secret that one of the most popular dishes in our part of the world is a southern tradition… a delicious catfish lunch or dinner. Harvest Select, one of the south`s most respected catfish processors, is a privately owned and operated, vertically integrated company. We have over 200 dedicated, trained personnel operating our processing plant in Uniontown, Alabama. Our company was founded in 1991 by five west Alabama farmers with 75 employees. Today the company has the capability to produce over 750,000 pounds weekly. We operate as a responsible and sustainable, vertically integrated company, directly involved in all key phases of our operations. This hands-on approach allows us to produce and distribute the finest quality U.S. farm-raised catfish on the market, while doing it in a cost efficient, environmentally responsible manner.
We focus on the microbes that have evolved in conjunction with plants over millions of years to optimize their health and maximize their productivity.
Peter Pan Seafoods, Inc. is one of the leading companies in the Manufacturing sector.
Three Twins was born in San Rafael, California in 2005 when Founding Twin Neal Gottlieb set out to craft delicious, affordable and accessible ice cream exclusively using incredible organic ingredients. Before writing the business plan for Three Twins Ice Cream, Founding Twin Neal Gottlieb was sharing an apartment with his twin brother, Carl, and Carl`s wife, Liz, who is also a twin. The trio dubbed their apartment “Three Twins” and when it came time to start the company, Neal knew just what to call it. Though it`s been a pretty great ride for more than a decade, that doesn`t mean there haven`t been some bumps along the way: landlords too nervous to take a chance on an ice cream entrepreneur with little money and limited experience, 90-hour weeks making and selling scoops and trying to keep a business afloat, cold, rainy winters (remember those?) with dismal sales.