2016 NEPA MADE
Transcription
2016 NEPA MADE
MADE Below: Workers at Reilly Finishing Technologies stack powder coated perforated sheet metal onto pallets. Special section Sunday, April 24, 2016 Reilly Finishing Technologies in Nanticoke provides plating and powder coating services to companies across the nation. // Page 9 Pete G. Wilcox | Times Leader NEPA MADE 2 Sunday, April 24, 2016 Mark Guydish | Times Leader Giant crayons decorate the square in front of the ‘Crayola Experience’ building in downtown Easton, about 80 miles from Wilkes-Barre. Times Leader Mark Guydish | Times Leader ‘Crayologist’ Ashlyn Moyer gives a live-theater demonstration about how Crayola crayons are made. Crayola factory pumps out 13 million crayons per day By Mary Therese Biebel mbiebel@timesleader.com EASTON — If you lined up the 2.5 billion crayons Crayola has made so far, a perky “crayologist” explained, you could encircle the globe six times and, thanks to the Crayola factory in this Lehigh Valley community, 13 million new crayons make that imaginary line longer every day. Those are some of the fun facts visitors can learn when they visit downtown Easton for a family-friendly “Crayola Experience” that offers four floors of crafts, coloring and room to run around. “They could easily spend five hours here,” mom Amanda Bupp, of Quakertown, said as she watched 4-year-old Hailee and 3-year-old Bryson draw pictures on a “Doodle Board” — one of the many stations where children can show their creativity. “Just a few more seconds,” James Pedersen, of Branchburg, New Jersey, told his 3-yearold daughter, Veronica, as she waited for a timer to signal the crayon she had placed into a molding machine had melted, cooled and was ready to emerge in the shape of a tiny dinosaur. For another mini project, Veronica and her sister, Cynthia, 2, maneuvered paper under dripping wax to create abstract art. On a recent Thursday afternoon, children did not have to wait very long — or at all — to work at the stations, but staffer Matthew Follin said the place gets very busy on weekends and during the summer. But it certainly seems worth waiting for a chance to place a token in a machine and personalize a crayon, perhaps taking home one you’ve named after yourself or a friend. And kids seemed to love the “Water Works” display, in which they could propel toy boats shaped like Crayola crayons through an 85-foot water table canal, complete with a system of locks. Another popular area is the “Crayon Factory” where children and their parents can watch a live-theater demonstration of some 1200 crayons coming out of their mold. The recipe for Crayola crayons hasn’t changed since 1903, “crayologist” Ashlyn Moyer told the families. It’s still non-toxic wax, clay and pigments that Hailee and Bryson Bupp, of Quakertown, draw pictures on a ‘Doodle Board’ at bring about the basic rainbow the Crayola Experience facility. plus such exciting new colors as Mauvelous, Jazzberry Jam, Timberwolf, Purple Mountains’ Majesty and Electric Lime. The manufacturing facility that actually produces the 13 million crayons each day is just outside of Easton, 5.5 miles away from the Crayola Experience. But the place for families to see how crayons are made and take home their own artwork is in downtown Easton, at 30 Centre Square. Reach Mary Therese Biebel at 570-991-6109 or on Twitter @BiebelMT James Pedersen, of Branchburg, New Jersey, watches his 3-year-old daughter, Veronica, remove a little wax dinosaur from a drawer. The dinosaur is made from a crayon that was melted and reformed. NEPA MADE Times Leader Sunday, April 24, 2016 3 Now more reasons than ever to become a Service Electric Subscriber: #1. Only $39.99 per month. 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Reilly recently made significant capital improvements which include a Wagner Prima Cube Super Powder Coating Booth and totally automated Anodize/Chemical Film plating line. Reilly Finishing Technologies is certified in over 10 specialty areas including the National Aerospace and Defense Contractors Accreditation Program and AS9100. Both of those qualifications attest to the highest quality standards in the metal finishing business. The company employs 100 local people. Larry Marianacci, Vice President of Finance, Sales and Administration at Reilly said the business is “large enough to service major industrial projects and small enough to maintain that “family friendly” work environment.” Kathy Kobylarz, HR Manager for Reilly Finishing Technologies, said the company promotes from within. Reilly’s award winning finished products are shipped both nationally and internationally. Reilly provides finishing services to a broad spectrum of customers from the aerospace, transportation, defense, oil-gas-water, construction, commercial storage, as well as other varied industries. 570-735-7777 • 130 Alden Road, Nanticoke, PA 18634 • info@reillyfinishing.com Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 5 Giving a shout out for our Peeps By Mark Guydish mguydish@timesleader.com You think you know a lot about Peeps. For example, only a rookie is unaware that manufacturer Just Born, Inc. is actually named after founder Sam Born, a Russian who immigrated to the United States via France and shifted his candymaking business from Brooklyn to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where it thrives as Easter’s most popular candy. Even if you didn’t have the data and had to guess, you’d probably bet that each year enough of the ubiquitous sweets are made to circle the earth — three times, reportedly. And you’ve likely heard of experiments proving the confection didn’t dissolve in water, acetone, sulfuric acid or sodium hydroxide. Even when tests showed the mallow mushed in phenol, the eyes eerily remained. But unless you’ve got a PhD in Peepsology, you are more likely to have filled out a perfect March Madness bracket than to know the endless iterations of the candy that ate Easter. (BTW, if Peepsology doesn’t exist, it probably should — we’re talking to you, Lehigh U., and wouldn’t “Pulverizin’ Peeps” be a more memorable mascot than the Mountain Hawks?) A few lesser known tidbits: • Neither Oscar Mayer nor the pope have anything over the marshmallow chicks. Yes, Virginia, the Peepsmobile is real. • Nor does Apple have anything over the sugar-coated faux fowl. You can, indeed, walk into a brick-and-mortar Peeps & Company store, though they are sparse (at Center Valley and at the corporate headquarters in Bethlehem). No “genius bar,” but, then, Apple doesn’t sell Peeps T-shirts, hats, slippers, sneakers, aprons, bracelet charms, golf balls or hoodies (Peeps hoodies presumably give you tweet cred). • Remember the silly 1980s video game “Joust” in which knights lanced at each other astride flying ostriches? Well, Peeps can beat that image out of your head. Take two Peeps, stick a toothpick in each, face them in a microwave and nuke the birds for a round of “Peeps jousting.” As the snacks expand, the toothpicks move forward. First Peep to pierce his partner wins. Seriously. YouTube it. • Any Peeps person knows Just Born makes other candies, including Hot Tamales, Peanut Chews, Jelly Beans, assorted chocolate-enhanced sweets and, of course, Mike and Ike. Some may even know Mike and Ike split up for a spell, with one name crossed out on every box sold (making them Mike or Ike?). But did you know there have also been Peeps milks and Peeps lip gloss? Which raises the questions, how do you milk a Peep, and was the gloss for humans — or marshmallows? • Peeps are clothes. You can find images of Peeps dresses, pants, hats and even bras (giving a whole new meaning to the phrase “peep show”). Keep this in mind, Lady Gaga, during your next Easter season concert. • Peeps are art, or at least aspire to it. Peeps have been used in all kinds of works, most popularly in dioramas — multiple companies and agencies sponsor annual Peeps diorama contests. The biggest may be from the Washington Post, which recently marked a decade of dioramas by posting past images, including “Everybody Peeps”: Upstairs, two marshmallow bunnies sit on toilets, reading; below, pipes run the refuse to “fluffer” jars of marshmallow. The ultimate in recycling? • And lastly (actually, as some 2 billion Peeps are now sold annually, there may never be a “lastly”), no props to Peeps would be complete without mentioning the December PeepsFest in Bethlehem, complete with the Peeps Chick Drop to ring in the New Year. True, the drop actually happens many hours before midnight, but that’s just in keeping with the fact that, no matter how old they are, Bethlehem-bred Peeps are forever “Just Born.” Reach Mark Guydish at 570-991-6112 or on Twitter @ TLMarkGuydish Not only is the story of Peeps sugar coated, you can get them chocolate coated, too. The question for macho men is: Do chicks go for guys in a Peepsmobile? Submitted photos Submitted photos 6 Sunday, April 24, 2016 NEPA MADE Times Leader Hershey factory makes well-known candy products By Travis Kellar tkellar@timesleader.com HAZLETON — Do you have a sweet tooth? Was it particularly hard to resist that Kit Kat during Easter? Chances are, that scrumptious treat came from right here in Northeastern Pennsylvania. The Hershey Company, which produces everything from traditional Hershey Bars to Twizzlers, has a plant on Scotch Pine Drive. Hershey spokesman Jeff Beckman said products produced at the factory include Kit Kats, Cadbury and Caramello Bars, Hershey’s Drops and Hershey’s Milk Chocolate Bars. According to the Greater Hazleton CAN DO’s website, the factory produces approximately 100 million pounds of chocolate every year. According to Hershey’s website, the company obtained the factory after purchasing the U.S. confectionery operations of Cadbury Schweppes on Aug. 25, 1988. Along with the plant in Hazleton, Hershey also obtained plants in York and Naugatuck, CT. Hershey entered into a licensing agreement with Cadbury at the time to manufacture, market and distribute Cadbury’s American confectionery brands. Beckman said the plant employs nearly 500 people for year-round operation with spring and summer being the busiest times at the factory. “The plant is an important part of Hershey’s North American manufacturing network,” Beckman said. Reach Travis Kellar at 570-991-6389 or on Twitter @TLNews Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 7 Family, tradition drive history in serving sweet treats By Joe Dolinsky jdolinsky@timesleader.com The Mayans may have dropped the ball as far as their prowess in predicting certain doom, but don’t ever say they didn’t get it right when it comes to chocolate. Renowned thinkers say the South American civilization’s best and brightest innovators served a sugarless liquid version of the crushed cocoa bean to its elite. Though it was a far cry from the sweet treat we know today, it was good enough a few thousand years ago to be immortalized on the walls of ancient temples and dubbed the “food of the gods.” While Northeastern Pennsylvania’s history of chocolate doesn’t stretch back quite as far, few would argue it’s not as rich. Chocolate shops bearing family names anchored neighborhoods for decades and many still satisfy taste buds today. A heartfelt hobby One thing Gertrude Hawk always said, according to her grandson: “Everything we make has to be the best, because every box has my name on it.” “I think people who work at our place making the product do still hear those words,” David Hawk said. “People care, and that’s because there is a real person that’s behind all this.” The Gertrude Hawk chairman of the board recalled fondly the attitude of his grandmother, who 80 years ago, founded the business that has today ballooned into a third-generation, multi-state and multi-faceted franchise employing 600 people in about 60 stores. Gertrude Hawk, her grandson said, started making chocolates in her kitchen in 1915 to get by during the Great Depression. She would have never dreamt the business would come this far, he said. The chocolates, staples of Easter, First Holy Communions and Valentine’s Days for decades, are only a fraction of what allows the business to thrive, David Hawk said. Specialized products made for ice creams are made and sold to just about every ice cream manufacturer in the country, right down to the miniature fish found in every pint of Ben & Jerry’s “Phish Food.” Hawk said the area has a strong heritage of “little chocolate shops” and that tradition keeps customers loyal to their product. All othe shops that made up that fraternity stood the test of time because of their product and people recognize that, he said. Meanwhile, Gertrude Hawk Chocolates continues to live up to customers’ standards, he said. “Seeing it grow and develop and seeing our family participate in the business and the generations that grew along with it, it’s been a very rewarding thing to see,” Hawk said. Humble beginnings Chocolate is in the Mootz family bloodline. Before Michael Mootz Candies, there was Mootz’s Imported & Domestic Groceries in Pottsville. During one Eas- ter holiday, co-owner Catherine Mootz made a batch too many of chocolate and decided to sell the leftovers in the store. The treats were a hit with customers, who demanded more and more of the product. To meet the demand, Mootz Candies was born in 1919. Today, Jason Mootz is the fourth generation to run the family owned company which, in October 2012, moved to a larger location at 1246 San Souci Parkway in Hanover Township to accommodate the needs of its growing business. The store went from a 5,600 squarefoot space in a strip mall to an 8,000 square-foot space to expand its retail end and add more parking for customers, said Mootz, 33. “We used to be a sign in the middle of other signs,” he said. “Here, it’s all up to us.” The move also let the business dip into ice cream sales, Mootz said, with an old school feel behind its “clean and classic” design. Mootz credited his family for molding the business into what it is today, but said it continues to evolve. A website was launched in 2002 that lets customers, especially those who moved out of the area, order Mootz candies online. Mootz believes the demand for chocolate is a testament to the quality of shops in the area. “We’ve got a great history in this area,” Mootz said. “There’s no question about that.” Reach Joe Dolinsky at 570-991-6110 or on Twitter @ JoeDolinskyTL Bill Tarutis | For Times Leader Gertrude Hawk Chocolates store supervisor Emily Reichart makes pecans glazed in cinnamon sugar and vanilla at the store in Kingston. Michael Mootz Candies chocolates. Submitted photo Bill Tarutis | For Times Leader Chocolate-dipped strawberries by Gertrude Hawk Chocolates. 8 Sunday, April 24, 2016 NEPA MADE Times Leader Local craft breweries a growing business By John Erzar jerzar@timesleader.com Fred Adams | for Times Leader Mark Lehman and Chris Miller make a toast in their new back bar at Breakers Brewery on Northampton Street in Wilkes-Barre Township. Fred Adams | for Times Leader Mark Lehman stirs the hops in a batch of beer brewing while Chris Miller watches. It’s not about thinking outside the box. It’s about thinking outside the case — as in a case of that mass-produced beer made by global breweries like Budweiser, Coors and Miller. Craft beer breweries, sometimes put under the umbrella of microbreweries, have put a dent in the industry over the past decade. While craft beers will likely never win the David vs. Goliath battle, the little guys have landed several punches. The area is the home of three craft breweries — Breaker Brewing Company in Wilkes-Barre Township, North Slope Brewing Company in Dallas and Susquehanna Brewing Company in Pittston. These new beer makers are all a short distance from the Stegmaier Brewery, which was founded in 1857 and is one of the oldest beer producers in the nation. According to Brewers Association statistics for 2015, craft breweries have seen a 12.8 percent growth in one year. Dollar sales have grown by 15 percent and craft breweries make up 12.2 percent of the market. “It’s a return to local interests,” said Fred Maier, who helped start Susquehanna Brewing Company in 2010. “It’s kind of funny talking to my dad and him talking to his dad where 50 or 60 years ago if it came from St. Louis or Milwaukee, it had to be better. Then, if it came from Germany, it had to be better. “We kind of lost the appeal of freshness in our beer.” Another reason for the uptick is craft breweries can offer variety because of their smaller operations. Breaker Brewing Company opened in 2013 in the former St Joseph’s Monastery & School on Northampton Street. Founders Chris Miller and Mark Lehman started home brewing and decided to turn the hobby into a business. “People just want variety,” Miller said. “A lot of beer traditionally — Miller, Bud, Coors — are all pretty much the same type. It’s a light lager or pilsner. Once people realize there is a lot more to beer, just like wine, you get into it and you get hooked. Then you start looking for some more wild, crazy type of beers. And brewers are making them. The crazier the beer is, the more sought after it is.” Breaker’s beers include a chocolate peanut butter porter and a strawberry banana wheat ale. Those not too daring could try something closer to mass-marketed beer. “If people come in and mention what they like, we can try to match them up to what we have on hand,” said Vanessa Warren, who opened North Slope on Route 309 in the former Dough Company building about a year ago. “We always have Gateway, which is like a much better Heineken. A lot of people love it. It has a lot higher alcohol content. If they like the place, they’ll come back and try other beers.” Craft breweries cannot offer beers other than the ones they make because of licensing. Then again, why would you go to a craft brewery for a Miller Lite? The idea is to try something different and, perhaps, unexpected even to the brewers themselves. “You don’t always know exactly how they’ll turn out,” Miller said of the craft beers. “Some turned out better than expected. Unless something really goes wrong, none of them are really bad. We just might not make it again. It’s just a matter of opinion.” Reach John Erzar at 570-991-6394 or on Twitter @TLJohnErzar NEPA MADE Times Leader Sunday, April 24, 2016 9 Reilly Finishing Technologies provides plating, powder coating services By Melanie Mizenko mmizenko@timesleader.com NANTICOKE — If you’ve ever wondered where the metal finishing and powder coating of General Electric’s airplanes come from, look no further than Luzerne County’s backyard. Reilly Finishing Technologies in Nanticoke has local and national contracts to provide plating, and powder coating services to companies across the nation. Reilly Finishing Technologies began as Reilly Plating Company in 1969, under the eye of Charles M. Reilly. The first building was a garage on New Hancock Street in Wilkes-Barre. In 1970, the business made the move to Alden Road, Nanticoke. Harveys Lake resident Joseph Reilly, current owner of the company, bought out his father in 1990 as well as added to the facility. “We’re successful because we’re so spread out (in what we do),” Reilly said. The closest other plating company is Triple Cities Metal Finishing in Binghamton, New York. Reilly Finishing Technologies recently spent $500,000 on a Wagner Prima Cube Super Booth, which Operations Manager Doug Krafjack calls “Joe’s pride and joy.” The super booth sprays colored particles onto a surface, which are then heated and fused into a smooth coating. The end result, according to Krafjack, is a uniform surface, which looks like a painted surface. The booth joins the “custom made” lines that coat with electroless nickle — a smooth uniformed finish which does not build up on edges and plates — tin and zinc, among others. Reilly Finishing Technologies is certified in over 10 specialty areas, including the National Aerospace and Defense Contractors Accreditation Program and AS9100. Both of those qualifications We've got you covered... Inside and Out with Paints and Stains outline requirements for working on aerospace products. The company employs around 100 people, most who live within walking distance of the facility. “(There is a) great work ethic in Nanticoke,” Reilly said. Larry Marianacci, vice president of finance, sales and administration at Reilly Finishing Technologies, said the business is “big enough for many projects and small enough for everyone to work together.” Because there is an “art” to the coating of products, Reilly said the employees take pride in their work. “Everyone listens to each other,” Marianacci said. Kathy Kobylarz, office manager, said the company promotes from within. Kobylarz said the company is family and community oriented. Marianacci said Reilly bought parcels of land next door to building No. 2; the company uses one for warehousing and the other as an employee break room. “We take care of our own,” Reilly said. “What we raise, goes back out,” according to Kobylarz. She noted the company sponsored West Side Playground playground equipment last year and is in the works of sponsoring computers in police cars for a local police department. Kobylarz also highlighted the Christmas Tree Lane in Nanticoke the company sponsors during Christmas. Most products, though coated locally, are shipped nationally and internationally. Some of the company’s contracts include painting bus ceilings for a bus line in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and coating store shelves for a North American box store. Reilly is most proud of the contract for the coating of a military-contracted valve, which they’ve had for eight years. Reach Melanie Mizenko at 570-991-6116 or on Twitter @ TL_MMizenko NEW FOR Choose from a variety of Interior and Exterior Paints and Stains to fit your needs. PETRO HARDWARE & SUPPLY CO. The helpful place. 640 Main Street, Inkerman, PA 570-654-6725 PENN-LEE FOOTWEAR 161 - 163 E. MAIN ST.(Miners Mills Section) of WILKES-BARRE OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY 9-7 • SATURDAY 9-5 • SUNDAY 12-5 PHONE (570) 825-5346 “JUST ONE MILE DOWN THE STREET FROM THE SIDE ENTRANCE TO MOHEGAN SUN/POCONO DOWNS” 10 Sunday, April 24, 2016 NEPA MADE Times Leader Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 11 Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader Spring Hills Farm, North Abington Township, produces pure maple syrup, which can be purchased in its sugar house near Dalton, from the Everything Natural store in downtown Clarks Summit and at several locations in Philadelphia. Small orders are also shipped throughout the US and Canada. Susan Constantine, left, and Devaki Chayut look out the door of the Spring Hills Farm sugar house in North Abington Township where, on average, between 500 and 600 gallons of maple syrup are made each year. This is one sugary sweet business By Elizabeth Baumeister ebaumeister@timesleader.com NORTH ABINGTON TWP. — Although Vermont and Canada are known for maple syrup production, Northeastern Pennsylvania has its own share of sugar shacks, one of which is Dalton in Lackawanna County. Spring Hills Farm, previously a dairy farm, was purchased by Robert and Louise Hull in 1945 and is now owned by their four daughters, Susan Constantine, Margaret Hull, Lucy Hull and Elizabeth Zeitlyn. Constantine’s daughter Devaki Chayut and her husband, Uri Chayut, run the maple syrup operation. Chayut said the best part about making maple syrup is the manual labor involved. I really love the physical aspect,” she said. “I really love to work hard and I really love to be outside.” It’s a good thing, because there is hard work aplenty. The self-proclaimed tree hugger explained the process begins with the tapping of trees when the freeze-thaw cycle is just right. When the ground freezes and warms up, the sap is drawn up through the trees. When it freezes again, a “re-setting of the pump” occurs, bringing a “fresh surge of sap.” The sap will continue to run for about one or two days. “We collect it in huge tanks,” Chayut explained. “We have them as large as a 1,000 gallon capacity, and we collect the sap and pump it up to a holding tank.” It is then boiled in an evaporating tank fueled by wood. Someone must be present at all times, as the fire needs to be stoked every 10 to 15 minutes in order to maintain the correct temperature and density. “It’s a very technical and delicate process,” Chayut said. “We’re doing readings with gauges all the time – on temperature and on density and sugar concentration.” “And at the same time that they’re boiling, which has to be during a run when the temperature is right, they have to also be collecting from all the different tanks so that things aren’t overflowing,” added Constantine. “Because when it runs, it can run.” After the syrup comes out of the evaporator, it is filtered again and brought to the proper temperature for canning. In a good year, 40 gallons of sap will produce one gallon of syrup. This year, it took 60 gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup. Chayut said this is due to a lower sugar content, one factor of which may be the incredibly mild winter. She said this year’s production was average, but required an earlier start and more effort than usual. “We saw the earliest boil that we have ever seen in our 20 years of making syrup,” she said. “We boiled in January. We’ve never boiled in January.” The process normally begins in March. Chayut said it was because of the foresight of her cousin Dylan Zeitlyn, of Vermont, that her family was prepared to begin tapping early this year in order to collect every drop. Credit is also due to Zeitlyn for the start of the maple syrup operation in 1994. “He had this beautiful realization that we had all these sugar maples,” Chayut said. “He was in a sort of maple syrup culture there in Vermont where it occurred to him that with so many sugar maples he knew we had here on the family farm, we could try something.” So they did. And it worked. Spring Hills Farm now produces about 500 to 600 gallons of syrup during an average year and more than 700 gallons in a good year. The syrup is made, bottled and labeled on the farm. A small amount is offered for sale via the honor system from the sugar house. It is also sold at several locations in the Philadelphia area and can be found on the shelves of Everything Natural in downtown Clarks Summit. The family also maintains a flock of about 35 Jacob sheep for its wool and a small flock of chickens for its eggs. They grow vegetables to supply the family’s own kitchen and also recently began growing blueberries to sell. The farm’s other main product is its Christmas trees, which area families cut down during the holiday season. Reach Elizabeth Baumeister at 570-704-3943 or on Twitter @AbingtonJournal. 12 Sunday, April 24, 2016 NEPA MADE Times Leader Natives stock up on Middleswarth potato chips whenever they can By Derek Levarse dlevarse@timesleader.com Middleswarth employee Wayne Folk stacks boxes of potato chips at the company’s headquarters in Middleburg. It’s a line the Middleswarth family hears all the time. Whether it’s a holiday or a vacation, plenty of people who grew up in Northeast Pennsylvania need to satisfy their snack craving. And those distinctive bags of Middleswarth can be tough to find outside the area. All the more reason to stock up when you can. “We hear that quite a bit,” company vice president Bret Middleswarth said. “Whether they’re home for the holidays or they’re coming back from somewhere like Florida, they always say they make sure to buy some to take back there with them.” Bret Middleswarth is the fourth generation to work for the business his grandfather, Bob, founded. The company, Ira Middleswarth & Son Inc., is named after his great grandfather. While the company started in Snyder County back in 1942 — first in Beavertown and now with headquarters in Middleburg — its presence in Wilkes-Barre is large. The chips are available in most any grocery store or convenience mart, as well as at many bars. Between Middleswarth and Wise Foods in Berwick, this corner of the state has its own strong representation in the so-called Pennsylvania “snack belt,” joining other well-known brands such as Herr’s and Utz. Middleswarth is a smaller company, particularly compared to Herr’s of Allentown and Wise, which are both available up and down the East Coast. But Middleswarth’s following is no less loyal. The company got some notable, if brief, national profile this past winter when a bag of their chips was used as a prop in an episode of the sitcom “Modern Family.” Viewers across Pennsylvania spotted the familiar red “M” logo and recognized it despite the bag being in the background of a scene. “Oh, we got quite a bit of attention,” Bret Middleswarth said. “They had it on the radio, on TV. A couple articles on it. It was really great exposure for a small company like us. It was definitely a big hit.” Locally, Middleswarth has a distributor right across the Susquehanna River on State Street in Larksville. “We have a pretty good following in the Wilkes-Barre area,” Bret Middleswarth said. “It’s slowly been growing over the years.” Bret asked his father, company president Dave Middleswarth, how long the company has had a foothold in Luzerne County. “Been about 50 years,” Dave said. “That’s important,” Bret said. “A lot of people grow up eating a brand of chips. It’s hard to change, like a leopard can’t change his spots.” It’s easy to see how nostalgia can take hold with a person’s snack choice. Seth Matthews, of Wilkes-Barre, had picked up a large bag of BarB-Q flavor Middleswarth chips — best known by “The Weekender” label — while home from college in March. “I have to get a bag whenever I come home,” Matthews said while waiting in line at a grocery store. “These have always been my favorite.” “That,” Bret Middleswarth said, “is one of the nicest things you can hear. It always tickles you. It shows you’re doing something right.” Reach Derek Levarse at 570-991-6396 or on Twitter @TLdlevarse Locally Owned and Operated TV & APPLIANCES 639 Wyoming Ave, Kingston • 570-287-9631 1313 Wyoming Ave, Exeter • 570-655-8801 Those familiar large bags of Middleswarth chips — dubbed “The Weekender” — are ready to be shipped out across Pennsylvania. Visit us on the web at www.voitektv.com Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 13 Affordability and local connection keeps Wise Snacks thriving for 95 years By Tom Venesky tvenesky@timesleader.com BERWICK — With distribution that spans the entire East Coast, Wise Snacks has remained true to its local roots. The business was established by Earl Wise in 1921 in Berwick, where it has remained ever since. Even after a fire destroyed the original manufacturing plant in 1944, Wise chose to remain in Berwick, a decision that has benefited both the company and the community. Jeremy Bjork, chief marketing officer for Wise Snacks, said the Berwick plant employs 900 and purchases some of its potatoes from Pennsylvania farmers. “We want to stay true to our heritage,” Bjork said. “When you’re committed to a community all those years, it’s natural to give back in terms of employment opportunities and community outreach.” The Berwick location benefits the company, as well. With a location in northeastern Pennsylvania, Wise is able to distribute its products up and down the East Coast and as far west as Pittsburgh and Cleveland. That broad distribution has allowed Wise to form close relationships with several distributors, such as Mr. Paul Enterprises in Kingston. Bill Jones, president and CEO of Mr. Paul Enterprises, said his company has been a distributor for Wise since 1986, delivering products to several hundred retail outlets from Tunkhannock to Washingtonville, throughout Luzerne County and into the Poconos. Jones said sales of Wise products have increased annually for the last four years and they deliver two tractor trailer loads every week. Being local is one reason why Wise has remained popular, Jones said. The other factor is price. “Our pricing is consumer friendly,” he said. “There’s a loyalty to the brand from people who have grown up here because Wise buys local, employs local and is distributed by local people.” Bjork said Wise is in the process of expanding into Texas and Mexico and recently built another manufacturing facility in Fort Worth. But he Aimee Dilger | Times Leader Terry Boyer, manager of the Wise facility in Berwick, poses near a portrait of Earl Wise Sr., the company’s founder. Pounds of potatoes Aimee Dilger | Times Leader Terry Boyer, manager of the Wise facility in Berwick, poses near a portrait of Earl Wise Sr., the company’s founder. added the Berwick plant remains a central part of the company’s business. “Being located in Berwick works well for us where we’re strongest, which is the northeast United States,” Bjork said. When Jones began distributing for Wise, the company offered 25 products. Today, that figure is over 100 and the company continues to change to meet the needs of consumers. According to Jones, Wise recently began offering new flavors that will be rotated every six months. The flavors are based on the top-selling items from food trucks in the region, and they include hot dog and taco-flavored potato chips. Being able to adapt in a snack food business that is highly competitive is one reason why Wise has thrived, Jones said. But being local and affordable is why it’s remained in business for so long. “Wise products start local and they stay that way,” Jones said. “The brand is becoming more national, but it’s staying popular locally because it’s remained cost effective with affordable prices.” Reach Tom Venesky at 570-991-6395 or on Twitter @TLTomVenesky To meet the demand for its products, Wise Snacks uses 2.3 million potatoes each week, and 119 million pounds every year. Terry Boyer, operations manager for the plant in Berwick, said Wise Snakcs buys potatoes from farmers in Florida beginning in May and processes them within 24 hours after being dug. In August, Wise Snacks starts buying potatoes from local farmers and farms in New York. During the winter months, four farms in New York supply potatoes to Wise Snacks from on-farm storage facilities. Some of the potato chips Wise makes. Aimee Dilger | Times Leader 14 Sunday, April 24, 2016 NEPA MADE Times Leader Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 15 NEPA MADE 16 Sunday, April 24, 2016 Times Leader Senape’s Bakery ‘pitza’ meant to be eaten right out of the box By Jennifer Learn-Andes jandes@timesleader.com The “pitza” prepared at Senape’s Bakery in Hazleton is ready to eat right out of the box. “You can heat it up if you want to, but it’s not meant to be eaten that way,” said bakery owner Mary Lou Marchetti, 73. “We wait until it’s cold to pack it.” The unchanged and secret recipe used for decades involves bread dough topped with a special tomato sauce and mixture of cheeses that allow it to stay unheated for up to three days with no added preservatives, Marchetti said. The double stack of slices comea in a white box tied with string. The “Senape’s Original Pitza” is among several locally made boxed pizzas sold in Luzerne County grocery stores. Others include pizzas made by Longo’s Bakery in Hazleton and Nardone Brothers Baking Co. in Wilkes-Barre. Marchetti has worked at the bakery since it was purchased from the Senape family in 1965, and became owner in 1979. The Senape family established the bakery in 1926, which became the home of the original cold pitza, the company’s website says. The cold “pitza” is often described as “pitz” in the Hazleton area. “If you didn’t grow up in the coal region, you probably never have heard of cold-cut pitza,” the website says. Marchetti said she regularly receives requests from Hazleton area natives to ship the “addicting delicacy” throughout the country Fred Adams |For Times Leader Senape’s Bakery in Hazleton regularly receives orders to ship its cold pitza to natives who have relocated to other states and countries, workers say. Melissa Rossi, a 40-year employee at Senape’s Bakery in Hazleton, displays a box of the company’s ‘original pitza.’ and even internationally. She takes pleasure that a new generation is embracing a food that is part of Hazleton’s history. “I’m not ready to retire, but when I am, I’d want to put it in the hands of someone who will keep the pitza exactly like it is,” Marchetti said. Longo’s Bakery started making cold pitza after Joe Longo purchased the bakery from Nick Dalo in 1967, the company’s website says. Longo had previously worked at Senape’s, Marchetti said. The Longo version was topped with Parmesan and Romano cheese, cut into squares and packed 12 slices to a box, the site says. “This item became a regional favorite among blue collar workers and remains as a staple in many Northeast homes today,” the site says. Longo’s acquired the brand name and routes of Mama Nardone’s Pizza in Wilkes-Barre in 1997. This boxed pizza is made with a more conventional pizza cheese that requires baking prior to eating, the site says. Founded in 1942, according to its website, Nardone Brothers’ products are served in schools and other institutions around the country in addition to area grocery stores. The boxed Nardone pizza contains directions to cook it in the oven, although some Wyoming Valley residents have been known to avoid that step. Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes. Fred Adams |For Times Leader A customer leaves Senape’s Bakery on West 17th Street in Hazleton, known for boxed ‘cold pitza’ and other baked goods. Fred Adams |For Times Leader A rack full of fresh boxed pitza at Senape’s Bakery in Hazleton. The pitza, meant to be served cold, is baked seven nights a week with no preservatives used. Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 17 Building a better coffee with Electric City Roasting Company Owner Mary Tellie talks classes, Costa Rica and coffee THROOP — At Throop’s Electric City Roasting Company, owner Mary Tellie may offer you a cup of Helsar De Zarcero coffee — then tell you the name of the Costa Rican farmer who grew the beans. Tellie spends six to eight weeks a year traveling to farms and buying beans. She expects to process 100,000 pounds of coffee this year; up exponentially from her 60 pound start in 2003. Tellie opened Scranton’s Zummo’s Café that same year, but soon saw a need to separate her roasting business from Zummo’s. A permanent home, complete with laboratory space and a classroom, was created for Electric City Roasting Company. “I needed a place where I could demonstrate, for example, if you wanted to open a café, we could train you so that you can learn how to prepare drinks correctly,” Tellie said. “You’re not going to roast coffee, you’re going to get that from us, but you need to understand a little bit about what you’re tasting. I think our area has an amazing work ethic and if we can train coffee professionals, I think that would be a marvelous thing.” Electric City Roasting Company’s classroom isn’t just attracting local students; it’s attracting coffee scholars from faraway places, thanks to the organization that has named Tellie its incoming chair: Specialty Coffee Association of America’s Roasters Guild. “The initial goal for the roasting side is to legitimize the craft of roasters,” said Roasters Guild Founding Member Mike Ebert. Ebert, an Elcro Village, Illinois resident who owns Firedancer Coffee Consultants, visits SCAA accredited classrooms like Electric City Roasting Company’s to teach classes on topics like cup tasting and coffee buying. Tellie utilizes her resources to focus on buying and distributing quality coffee; she travels, samples and purchases the beans, then she sends them to a contract roasting company in Ohio. Outsourcing her roasting was a tough decision, but it allows Tellie to put things like equipment maintenance and insurance in the hands of someone else. After the beans are roasted to her exact specifications (all recipes are developed in-house), they’re shipped back to Throop, packaged and distributed to places like Scranton’s Adezzo, Wilkes-Barre’s Westmoreland Club and area Wegmans supermarkets. Tellie’s future plans include the expansion of Electric City Roasting Company’s educational aspect, partnerships with local colleges and continuing research into cold brew coffee. The incoming chair of SCAA’s Roasters Guild continues to push forward for the same reason she found her place in the coffee industry: the people. “It’s the relationships I’ve found in this industry,” Tellie said. “Whether it is at the origin with the farmers or whether it’s with the producers in the mills or equipment folks or folks like Mike Ebert. Somewhere in there is the reason I did it; I can’t really put my finger on it. For whatever reason, this is where I’m supposed to be.” Reach Gene Axton at 570-991-6121 or on Twitter @ TLArts Z-FORCE® SX SERIES ® SIGNATURE CUT® SERIES ZERO-TURN RIDERS LAWN TRACTORS SELF-PROPELLED WALK-BEHINDS Steering wheel control and four-wheel steering from our patented Synchro SteerTM technology offers stability. Exclusive Performance Package with engine options, including fuel-saving Cub Cadet EFI on LX42. Mow at your own speed with the MySpeedTM variable-drive system. 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Images may not reflect dealer inventory and/or unit specification. † Builit using the highest quality components sourced locally and globally. © 2016 Cub Cadet FULL LINE_Q 80733431 By Gene Axton gaxton@timesleader.com NEPA MADE 18 Sunday, April 24, 2016 Times Leader The Beekeeper’s Daughter is the place to get raw honey By Jimmy Fisher jfisher@timesleader.com Pete G. Wilcox | Times Leader Rob McGinley holds up a honey comb to the light. Spring is here! Cho CChocolate ho Soft Serve and CChocolate Choco Chocol ocol Soft Yogurt are back! Choose From Over 60 Varieties of Choos Hand-d Hand-dipped nd-d Hard Ice Cream & Yogurt TRY OUR NEW • Chocolate Caramel Crunch ice cream Chocolate ice cream with a caramel swirl and chocolate covered pretzels • Chocolate Caramel Crunch Sundae Chocolate ice cream topped with warm caramel sauce and chocolate covered pretzels • Pretzel Crunch Blitz Soft serve ice cream or yogurt blended with chocolate covered pretzels 827 Exeter Ave., West Pittston 570-655-5579 • Open Daily til 10pm • Table Service Available 80733669 2015 PLAINS TWP. — Honey bottling is not a common profession in the Wyoming Valley, which makes The Beekeeper’s Daughter a one-of-a-kind business. Originally from Dallas, The Beekeeper’s Daughter was started in 2010 by Hannah Burgess for the purpose of bottling the honey created from the thousands of bee hives her family owns. “We didn’t used to bottle our honey, just sell it to other companies who would bottle it for us,” she said. “I came along and said that we should start bottling our own product. I started The Beekeeper’s Daughter and started bottling our honey instead of selling it to larger corporations.” Burgess’s family owns 4,200 beehives in different regions of Florida where her dad, William Perry, Jr. and various employees collect honey in the fall and winter months and have it transported back to Pennsylvania. In the spring and summer, the bees are transported to farms in northern Pennsylvania and southern New York where Burgess’s brother, Rob McGinley, travels to collect honey. After the honey is taken to The Beekeeper’s Daughter, it is kept in containers at temperatures between 90 and 110 degrees. Burgess does nothing to the honey, meaning she does not add or subtract anything to detract its natural flavors. Although her dad, brother and other employees can collect honey straight from the beehives, Burgess cannot go anywhere near the bees. “I’m allergic,” she said. “At our farm (in Dallas) there were bees flying around, which is a little more dangerous wheras down here (in Plains Township) we can bottle safely and people can come and go.” Last May, Burgess decided to open her store in its current location at 60 Maffett St. in Plains Township as it is a better location for wholesaling, she said. The 6,000 square foot building includes a small storefront for customers to purchase honey, candles and other gifts. Other parts of the building include areas where Burgess and her brother keep inventory of honey, make beeswax bars, bottle the honey and relax in a lounging area. Although The Beekeeper’s Daughter has been in Plains Township for almost a year, Burgess said the shop didn’t open until about five months ago. “The place needed work so it needed time to set up,” she said. “This place was empty for five years and a whole bunch of stuff needed to be done, so we had a lot of work to do. We didn’t open the shop until around Thanksgiving.” Burgess said the family still does some work in its old Dallas location in terms of extracting honey, but honey is bottled in Plains Township now. Beekeeping and honey making is not a hobby of the Burgess family — it’s a legacy. Starting with her great-grandparents owning a regular farm in Dallas, it was Hannah’s grandfather William Perry Sr. who started the family business of beekeeping after his parents obtained a beehive. “My grandfather ended up getting really into it and started out as a bee inspector,” she said. “He would inspect beehives and then it just kind of went from there.” Today, the family business is continuously growing and has even gotten to the point where Burgess said they’ll sell honey to other beekeepers to help them out. Beeswax and honey products from The Beekeeper’s Daughter can be found in local stores such as Hillside Farms in Dallas, House of Nutrition in Luzerne, Thrive Wellness in Kingston, Wegman’s in Wilkes-Barre, Purple Squirrel Pastry in Pittston and many more. The product may be purchased online at igourmet.com and northeastsnacks. com. Reach Jimmy Fisher at 570-704-3972 or on Twitter @ SD_JimmyFisher Times Leader NEPA MADE Sunday, April 24, 2016 19 Diamond Manufacturing focuses on local laborers By Patrick Kernan pkernan@timesleader.com WYOMING — After over 100 years in business, Diamond Manufacturing, headquartered in Wyoming, continues to operate in Northeastern Pennsylvania for one reason: the people, so says David Simpson, the company’s president and chief operating officer. Diamond Manufacturing, which is, according to Simpson, North America’s largest steel perforator, got its start perforating steel for the coal-mining industry but, in recent years, has set its sights on other goals. “We’ve diversified our business, and we’re doing much more sophisticated work today,” Simpson said, explaining that Diamond perforates steel for companies in fields as varied as appliances, agriculture and energy. The company accomplishes this diverse range of business by having locations in Indiana, Texas, Tennessee, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Indiana. According to Simpson, these location choices were strategic. For example, the Texas location services Mexican customers, while the Indiana location focuses on Chicago businesses. Simpson insists the headquarters in Wyoming is vital to the company’s overall success. This stems from the sheer amount of business that flows through the local location. “This is where about half of the production of our company comes out of,” Simpson said of the headquarters. “This plant here can do things that many of our competitors and many of our other plants can’t do.” Simpson said the company’s success comes in spite of difficulties facing the steel perforation industry in the Northeast United States, since steel is primarily manufactured in the Midwest and the southern United States. “The toughest part of our job is freight costs,” he said. “Steel has to travel from those locations, travel all the way here and we ship it back to almost where it came from.” In spite of the high costs, Simpson said the people are what make operating in Northeast Pennsylvania valuable. Diamond Manufacturing’s focus on staff comes from previous president, Rusty Flack, whose family owned the business for “four generations,” Simpson said. Flack, according to Simpson, invested in both the facility itself and in the people working there. After Flack’s passing in 2011, Diamond Manufacturing became a part of Reliance Steel, a publicly traded company based in Los Angeles. Simpson said that, in spite of Flack’s absence, workers are still the focus. “I’ve been here for 30 years,” he said, stating there are others who have worked at the company even longer. “If you treat employees right, they won’t want to leave.” The emphasis on Northeast Pennsylvania runs deep, extending to Diamond Manufacturing’s other facilities around the country. “We think the work ethic in this area is the greatest work ethic we’ve found in the country,” Simpson said. “So we try to take our own people and put them in some higher positions throughout the country.” Reach Patrick Kernan 570-991-6119 or by email at pkernan@timesleader.com 20 Sunday, April 24, 2016 NEPA MADE Times Leader