Disappointment and Raw Foods
I’m disappointed. Maybe I don’t have a reason to be, but I truly am. I just found out that General Mills bought Humm Foods.
Humm Foods is a small 26-person operation located in Denver, CO, that creates my very favorite ‘fast food’ – the Larabar – a raw food bar made with fruit, nuts and spices.
Mmmm…I love Ginger Snap and Cherry Pie, but I think Lemon Bar is my favorite. Oh they are so good! I always carry one or two in my computer bag, because one never knows when they’ll be stuck in traffic or delayed for some reason and the bars are the perfect healthy food. I don’t eat fast food, so when other people would stop at some of the fast-food joint because they are in a hurry and need to eat, I just grab a bar and all is well.
I understand that the owner of Larabar had a vision to bring affordable, healthy, raw food bars to the world. I understand that she became very popular and that a big corporation can make the Larabar available to everyone. I also understand that she must be rich now and of course, she deserves it.
I just wonder if General Mills will take pride in making sure the products are actually raw and that the standards are high. Lara Merriken, the founder of Humm Foods and namesake of the ever-popular Larabar, will stay on as creative director and both she and General Mills assure us that the quality of these raw food bars won’t change.
I just wonder. It seems that all of the great, small-companies that bring us healthy food and drinks eventually sell out to a larger corporation. Even if they did keep the standard of quality and care that the small companies do (which I highly doubt), I still don’t enjoy supporting larger corporations. As much as I loved Odwalla juice back in the day, I stopped buying it when Coke bought it out for $181 million. Yes, that's right, 181 million dollars!
General Mills has not disclosed how much it is paying for Humm Foods. I imagine the news will leak out eventually.
I enjoy supporting smaller companies and people who are creating with their heart. Lara started the company in her kitchen using a food processor and a rolling pin. That's awesome.
I guess this just pushes me one more step into buying locally. If I want fresh organic healthy juice, maybe I should just invest in a juicer and buy local, organic produce and if I want raw food, maybe I should just buy a locally-grown, organic apple.
Farmer's markets here I come!
Labels: general mills, healthy, humm foods, larabar, locally-grown, organic, raw food
Return to VitaminStuff Homepage: |
3 Comments:
Hi Tim,
I just found your sight and ironically enough I just posted about LaraBars today. Thanks for the insight on its purchase. I too hope that the quality and integrity of the product does not change because it is my favorite snack. Hey would you like to post each others blogs on our sites? Great blog! I will visit again soon.
Alma
Hi Alma,
Thanks for your comment! This is actually Tena, not Tim. We have two authors for our blog, so lately I've been doing most of the writing. Nice to meet you!
I would love to exchange links. We'll get your on our blogroll soon. Thanks so much for commenting, because now I know about your blog. I look forward to reading more!
Tena
Great post on Larabars and Humm foods, I too am a big fan of Larabars,but with the buy out it looks like they added some new flavors, hopefully with the new ownership or acquisition they will maintain the same quality but unfortunately once a good solid product like this one gets bought out it seems the quality goes out also.Hopefully this will not be the case for the Larabar.
Post a Comment
<< Home