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Aplets & Cotlets, Cashmere

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  • Aplets & Cotlets, Cashmere

    APLETS & COTLETS, CASHMERE
    Mike Irwin

    The Wenatchee World (Washington)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    July 10, 2011 Sunday

    July 10--Location: 117 Mission Ave., Cashmere.

    Owner: Liberty Orchards, Inc., a family-owned corporation
    Year started: 1920.

    Number of employees: 50 to 150, seasonal.

    Products: Most famous for Aplets & Cotlets, our original products from
    the 1920s. The company also makes a full line of fruit and nut candies
    (which sell as well as well as Aplets & Cotlets), and high-quality
    chocolate candies with fruits and nuts as the prime ingredient.

    Are all materials or ingredients made in the U.S.A.? No. While most of
    the company's raw materials and packaging are grown or manufactured
    in the U.S., Liberty also purchases supplies from around the world,
    especially raw ingredients like tropical fruits and nuts which do
    not grow in the U.S. climate.

    What separates Liberty's products or services from competitors? "We're
    unique in the U.S. candy industry," said company president Greg
    Taylor. "We compete primarily in the high-quality gift segment of
    the industry, which is dominated by fancy chocolates." So, during
    the holiday season, Aplets & Cotlets and Fruit Delights are often
    the only non-chocolate alternative for consumers, Taylor said.

    How'd you get started in the business? Founders Mark Balaban and
    Armen Tertsagian were young Armenian immigrants who settled in
    Cashmere in the early 1900s and bought an apple orchard, which they
    named Liberty Orchards. After a few years, they began to wonder what
    else they could do with their apples besides selling them as fresh
    fruit. They developed a method for drying apples, which led to a
    big business with the U.S. military during World War I. In 1920,
    they developed a candy made from their apples, which was based on
    the eastern Mediterranean confection, Locoum, which they had loved
    as children. They named it Aplets.

    What's the future of Liberty Orchards? The company has developed a
    new nutrition-energy bar -- Orchard Bar -- designed to compete against
    Clif, PowerBar and others in the rapidly growing nutrition bar market.

    Taylor said that Orchard Bars are loaded with fruits, nuts, seeds,
    and soy nuggets, "and taste better than anything on the market."

    Source: Greg Taylor, president of Liberty Orchards.

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