Ferrara Candy Company

Ferrara Candy Company
Private
Industry Confectionery
Headquarters One Tower Ln, ste 2700
Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, US
Area served
Worldwide
Brands Brach's  Lemonhead   Chuckles   Now and Later   Bobs Candies  Trolli USA   Black Forest   Sathers  Red Hots  Atomic Fireball  Super Bubble  Rainblo  Jujyfruit  Jawbuster  Fruit Stripe  Boston Baked Beans 
Website www.ferrarausa.com

The Ferrara Candy Company is an American candy manufacturer owned by the private equity firm Catterton Partners. The company was formed from a 2012 merger of the Illinois-based Ferrara Pan Candy Company and Minnesota-based Farley's & Sathers Candy Company. Ferrara's product line combines the long-established brands of Ferrara Pan Candy, such as Lemonheads, Atomic Fireballs, Red Hots, and Original Boston Baked Beans, with those of Farley's & Sathers, such as Brach's, Chuckles, Jujyfruits, and Now and Later.

History

The Ferrara family had been bakers in Italy. Salvatore Ferrara emigrated from Nola to New York in 1900.[1] In 1908, he opened a bakery at 772 W. Taylor, in the heart of Chicago's "Little Italy" neighborhood.[2] He sold candy-coated almonds known as "confetti" (or Jordan almonds), a popular treat at Italian weddings.[1]

When candy sales became greater than pastries, Ferrara partnered with two brothers-in-law, Salvatore Buffardi and Anello Pagano.[3] They built a two-story brick building at 2200 W. Taylor and began producing a variety of panned candies.[1] The second floor of the building was devoted to the revolving kettles that produced the pan candy, with all of the machines being driven by a giant wheel. The candy was dropped to the shipping department below through a hole in the floor.

The private equity firm Catterton Partners, owner of Farley's & Sathers Candy Company, arranged the 2012 deal whereby that well-established confectioner would merge with the Ferrara Pan Candy Company. Although Ferrara Pan Candy was only about half the size of Farley's & Sathers, the new company was christened as the Ferrara Candy Company, and was placed under the leadership of Ferrara Pan Chief Executive Salvatore Ferrara II. Catterton Partners remains the majority investor in the combined company.[4]

Ferrara Candy is headquartered in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois. It operates 5 manufacturing plants in the US and Mexico, as well as distribution centers around the US.

The company sells 92% of all mallowcremes in the US; it is the largest producer of candy canes; the largest seller of conversation hearts; produces a large portion of the jelly beans that are consumed in the United States. The company has 21 starch moguls, of 40 in the US as a whole. The company has between 700 and 800 pans operating at any given time. The company claims that it produces a million pounds of gummy candy per week in 4 manufacturing plants, 2 in the US and 2 in Mexico. The company employs approximately 1,000 people.

Timeline

Products

Atomic Fireball  A round, cinnamon-flavored hard candy invented by Nello Ferrara (1918–2012) in 1954. They are a form of jawbreaker. The outer layers of the candy are a bright red color while the interior layers are white. Atomic Fireballs have been adopted by Flight Controllers in NASA's Mission Control as the "Console Candy of Choice"[5]

Black Forest  Real fruit juice snacks and treats in fun shapes; Gummy Bears, Gummy Worms and other varieties.

Bobs Candies  Soft Mints and Sticks, Candy Canes and Mint "Lumps"

Boston Baked Beans  A sugar-coated peanut candy.

Brach's  A candy and sweets brand that produces and has invented many iconic candies including Candy Corn, Conversation Hearts, Jelly Bird Eggs, Star Brite Mints, Royals, Bridge Mix, Malted Milk Balls, Double Dipped Peanuts and others.

Chuckles  A soft jelly candy, covered in sugar and known for its original five colors (red, orange, yellow, green and black). They are now made in a number of varieties including Mini's, Red's and seasonal selections.

Fruit Stripe  A chewing gum created in the 1960s loved for its juicy fruit flavor and scent. The package is known for the bright stripes and images of Yipes, the zebra who has been the gum's mascot for decades.

Jawbuster  The original jawbreaker since 1919. They are created starting with a single grain of sugar and panned until they reach the full size. As they dissolve, they change color and flavor with each of the five layers.

Jujyfruit  Small, chewy, fruit flavored candies that come in fun fruit shapes and flavors like pineapple, raspberry, grape, banana and other citrus shapes. Also available are Jujubes which are a firmer candy dating back to 1920 in the traditional flavors of lemon, lime, violet, cherry and lilac.

Lemonheads  Introduced in 1962. Lemonheads are a round, lemon-flavored candy consisting of a sweet coating, soft sour shell, and a hard candy core. Other varieties include Appleheads, Grapeheads and Chewy Lemonheads & Friends varieties.

Now and Later  Bite-sized squares of taffy in nineteen different fruit flavors. They come in Original, Chewy and Splits varieties and are packaged in both multi-pieced bars and assorted jars.

Rainblo  The first gumballs made where the color on the outside matched the flavor on the inside.

Red Hots  A small cinnamon-flavored candy created and trademarked by the Ferrara Pan Candy Company in the 1930s.

Super Bubble  The original individually-wrapped bubble gum first introduced in 1946 and still popular in classic original, grape, apple and watermelon flavors.

Trolli (USA)  Gummy candies that are both sour and sweet in unusual shapes.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Dominic Candeloro (2003). Chicago's Italians: Immigrants, Ethnics, Americans. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 128–. ISBN 978-0-7385-2456-6.
  2. Peter N. Pero (January 2009). Chicago Italians at Work. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-0-7385-6187-5.
  3. Leslie Goddard (2012). Chicago's Sweet Candy History. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 34–. ISBN 978-0-7385-9382-1.
  4. Hughlett, Mike (24 May 2012). "Farley’s & Sathers to merge with Ferrara Pan". Star Tribune. Retrieved 10 October 2016.
  5. Atomic Fireballs in the MCC, http://www.balettie.com/atomic-fireballs/
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