WBAY: COUNTDOWN TO CHRISTMAS: Eggnog for the Holidays

WBAY: COUNTDOWN TO CHRISTMAS: Eggnog for the Holidays

A fifth-generation family in the Fox Valley is celebrating 110 years in business this year, and every December, thousands of customers enjoy one of their holiday specialties: Eggnog

Lamers Dairy is the largest producer of eggnog in Northeast Wisconsin.

“This is a good time of year because it’s something that we do that’s a little bit special and unique and a little bit different than just fluid dairy milk,” said Eric Mcguire, the VP of Business Operations at Lamers Dairy.

“We’ve been doing it ever since we’ve been in business, it’s a holiday treat and I think this year when I look at the numbers, we’ll be somewhere in the neighborhood of 25,000 gallons of just eggnog,” said Mark Lamers, the President of Lamers Dairy.

As one of only three fluid milk plants left in the state of Wisconsin, Lamers is all about quality, and it’s found the right formula for a successful business model.

“In our programs with our farmers, what we do is we pay them an extra premium for producing the highest quality milk possible and by doing that our customers have come to recognize that good quality product, so they support us,” said Lamers. “As long as you keep putting out a good quality product, people will keep buying it.”

While the vast majority of milk from dairy farms in the state goes into cheesemaking, Lamers has five farms, all within 30 miles, that supply their award-winning milk.

“It all starts on the farm, until the day I die I’m going to give all the credit to our farmers because I always think it’s like a computer, garbage in, garbage out, so if we don’t get that good quality milk into our processing facility, we can’t make a good product,” said Lamers. “If we can make people’s lives better by producing a good quality product, makes them feel better, then that’s all part of it too.”

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Dairy Star: Bottling milk for over a century

Dairy Star: Bottling milk for over a century

Lamers Dairy supporting local family farms since 1913

The Post Crescent: The secret to success: Kosher milk, glass bottles help Lamers Dairy reach 110 years

The Post Crescent: The secret to success: Kosher milk, glass bottles help Lamers Dairy reach 110 years

Alexandria Bursiek Kloehn Appleton Post-Crescent | USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN
KIMBERLY — On Dec. 13, 1913 Jacob Lamers Sr. and Petronella Lamers opened Lamers Dairy. 110 years later, the dairy is still bottling milk in the same place it all started in Kimberly. h In 1913, the Lamers sold milk from their own dairy farm, distributing raw milk in preserve cans to Kimberly residents on foot. Only a year later, milk was delivered by horse and buggy in the business’ first milk cart.
Now, Lamers Dairy bottles milk from seven Northeastern Wisconsin farms, the farthest of which is only 30 miles from the Lamers Dairy plant and retail store at N410 Speel School Road in Appleton. The plant is one of only three bottling plants left in Wisconsin, said Mark Lamers, president of Lamers Dairy. According to the Federal Milk Marketing Order Program, there are nine plants left in the upper midwest — only 15 years ago, there were 27. The other Wisconsin plants are owned by Kemps and Kwik Trip, which bottles its own milk products.
Two factors lead to long-term success Lamers attributes the business’s longevity to the quality of the milk they receive from local farms and their dedication to serving niche markets.
Lamers said he is frequently asked, “why is it your milk tastes so much better than the competition?” His answer, “I firmly believe it always starts on the farm, we pay our producers a premium to get us the highest quality milk possible … We try to support the community and support the local family farms.”
Last month, the plant processed roughly 1.8 million pounds of milk, its most ever. For comparison, the plant processed a million pounds for the first time in 2013. Today, Lamers Dairy has 36 full and part-time employees and bottles five days a week. In addition to milk products, the plant also produces other dairy bases for small Wisconsin businesses. For example, the plant premixes the ice cream base for Kelley Country Creamery. The Fond du Lac-area business then adds their own flavoring to the base they received from Lamers.
Twenty percent of Lamers milk products are bottled in glass bottles, something Eric McGuire, the company’s vice president of business operations, says makes them different from other bottlers in the state.
The use of glass bottles allows the company to play on the nostalgia of the past, since plastic and even cardboard milk packaging has been the norm for decades. Additionally, the glass bottles, McGuire said, are more sustainable. Customers who use them are encouraged to return the bottles for a discount on future products and they are cleaned and reused. In May, the plant purchased a new bottle cleaning machine to make the process more efficient.
“It’s developed into a niche market for us,” Lamers said. “People like that they can return it and there’s not empty plastic bottles going back to the landfill.”
Additionally, Lamers said, milk tastes better from a glass bottle.
“For me, I always think milk tastes better in glass,” he said. “It holds its integrity, its flavor, a little bit better.”
Another niche product Lamers offers is kosher milk. The dairy has been selling the product for more than 30 years and still distributes the milk to the Orthodox Jewish community, mostly in the Chicago area but also to Detroit, St. Louis and some western states.
Lamers said niche markets really appeal to Lamers Dairy because of their size, being a small business makes them a great fit for small or unique orders — something that’s been true for decades.
In 1999, Tom Lamers, the then-sales manager for the dairy, was quoted in the Post-Crescent. “ The reason these guys are calling us is because the big guys (in bottling) won’t do it,” he said about the dairy’s sale of glass bottled milk and Kosher milk. “And the little guys aren’t around anymore.”
Five generations push business to more than 200 retail stores
Despite the dairy’s age, the business has remained in the family. Today it’s run by fourth and fifth generation family members.
McGuire, who is a fifth-generation family member, said Lamers reached out to him roughly 18 years ago about working for the family business.
“I thought there’s an opportunity to really contribute to the family history and family legacy,” McGuire said.
Both McGuire and Lamers said they are excited to see the next generation of family members and employees take on the business.
“It’s definitely our intent to keep things in the family and keep growing and focusing on the development of our people,” McGuire said.
Lamers Dairy products are available in more than 200 retail stores in the Midwest or at the retail location in Appleton.
More information can be found at lamersdairyinc. com. The Lamers Dairy retail store is open 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Saturday.
Alexandria Bursiek Kloehn is a business reporter for the Appleton Post-Crescent.
You can reach her at abursiekkloehn@ gannett.com.

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Lamers Dairy brings back Cones for a Cause in June to benefit St. Joseph Food Program

Lamers Dairy brings back Cones for a Cause in June to benefit St. Joseph Food Program

Cones for a Cause will join a lineup of activities from Lamers Dairy during June Dairy Month.

Lamers Dairy in Appleton, WI, is proud to bring back its Cones for a Cause program during June Dairy Month. As a company committed to giving back to the local community, Lamers Dairy has pledged to give proceeds from the 2023 Cones for a Cause campaign to St. Joseph Food Program which helps local families in need.

In celebration of June Dairy Month, small soft serve ice cream cones will be discounted to 50-cents each (cash only) at the Lamers Dairy Country Store on Speel School Road in Appleton. Lamers Dairy’s delicious soft serve ice cream is made with their award-winning rBGH-free milk and cream produced from local family farms in Northeast Wisconsin.

“All month-long proceeds from our Cones for a Cause program will support St. Joe’s, a program we appreciate and believe in,” said Mark Lamers, President, Lamers Dairy. “Serving the people of Wisconsin and giving back to the community is at the heart of what we do—it has been for the past 110 years.”

The Cones for a Cause program will be part of a lineup of other activities and store promotions happening at Lamers Dairy throughout the month of June.

June Dairy Month began in 1937 as a national campaign to promote drinking milk and has since become an annual month-long tradition to recognize and honor the dairy industry.

Glass Bottle Deposit Raising from $1.50 to $2.00

Glass Bottle Deposit Raising from $1.50 to $2.00

Effective April 1, 2022, Lamers Dairy returnable glass bottle deposits will be raised from $1.50 to $2.00.

Since the price of our bottles is increasing, we’re finding it necessary to raise the deposit amount. In doing so, we still promise to provide you the highest quality, freshest milk possible, at a price you can afford.

We will refund $2.00 deposits for any bottle returned as of April 1 as well. As always, remember that you can return your rinsed glass bottle to our Country Store, the retailer from which you purchased the product, or better yet, ANY retailer that sells Lamers Dairy products in glass bottles!

We appreciate your business and continued support!