Jump to content

Odwalla

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 209.10.89.3 (talk) at 14:29, 21 January 2008. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

File:Odwalla-Logo.png
The Odwalla Inc. logo

Odwalla (pronounced Oh-dwa-la) is a juice company founded in Santa Cruz, California in 1980 by Greg Steltenpohl, Gerry Percy, and Bonnie Bassett. It is now headquartered in Dinuba, CA. Formerly a publicly traded company, Odwalla was acquired by the Coca-Cola Company in 2002 for $181 million.[1]

The Odwalla brand includes juices, smoothies and similar health beverages, as well as protein bars. Odwalla helped popularize the flash pasteurization technique, which eliminates harmful bacteria without the associated taste and nutritional loss accompanying traditional pasteurization.

The name Odwalla was taken from that of a character in the song Illistrum by Malachi Favors as performed by the Art Ensemble of Chicago.[2]

In their first years of operation, Odwalla was contracted to supply the original Mac development team with fruit juice[3].

E. coli outbreak

In 1996 Odwalla was shaken by a limited outbreak of the E. coli O157:H7 bacterium on the West Coast causing one death of a toddler and 66 illnesses which resulted in the recall of 1,000 units of its unpasteurized apple juice and beverages containing apple juice.[4] Thirteen Odwalla apple juice products were pulled from the shelves on October 31 as part of a voluntary recall in cooperation with the FDA.[5] This recall touched 4,600 retail locations in the U.S. and British Columbia, cost $6.5 million and took 48 hours. Following the event, Odwalla introduced flash pasteurization to its manufacturing process to address safety concerns. Due to the lack of prior pasteurization and numerous food safety violations, Odwalla was found responsible and criminally negligent for the death.[6] The juices reappeared on the shelves on December 5, 1996 under the label "flash-pasteurized" and are reportedly safe for the elderly and children to consume. It won an award for best independently owned business in California in 1999.

References