Мы в Telegram
Добавить новость
ru24.net
Grist
Май
2024
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27
28
29
30
31

Behind the ‘butter board’: How the dairy industry took over your feed

0
Grist 

A vast constellation of celebrities, from Kelly Ripa to the McDonald’s mascot Grimace, have helped push dairy sales.

For the past year and a half, you may have heard a lot about butter. It started with a viral video of influencer chef Justine Doiron carefully slathering two sticks of butter directly onto a wooden cheese board, seasoning the thick layer with flaky sea salt and lemon zest, arranging torn herbs and red onion across the surface, and finally finishing the dish with flower petals and a drizzle of honey. This was the butter board, a TikTok trend that quickly reached escape velocity and was featured by The New York Times, CNN, and the Today Show.

On high-end restaurant menus, the once-humble bread-and-butter course snowballed into $38 tableside “butter service,” and 14-inch cylinders of creamy, imported carved-to-order butter earned prominent placement in restaurants’ open kitchens. By early March, New York Magazine could declare that “butter has become the main character.”

A wooden board covered with pats of butter and herbs
A butter charcuterie board with fresh herbs. Getty Images

What accounts for butter’s spectacular renaissance in American cuisine? According to the U.S. dairy industry, it’s their own public relations campaign that started the spread. The industry marketing group Dairy Management Inc., has claimed credit for the butter board in industry press, because it paid Doiron as a sponsor at the time of her video. While Doiron’s original butter board video did not include an advertising disclosure — and, according to Dairy Management, was not itself technically part of the partnership — the chef posted a Dairy Management ad two days before her viral post and was part of the industry group’s “Dairy Dream Team” of paid influencers at the time. (Doiron did not respond to an interview request, but Dairy Management told Grist that her contract has since expired.)

Dairy Management, whose funding largely consists of legally mandated fees collected from farmers, is one of a constellation of government-supported dairy marketing groups that also includes the Fluid Milk Board, a beverage-focused entity whose promotion arm has paid Emily Ratajkowski, Kelly Ripa, Amanda Gorman, and more than 200 others to promote milk on social media. (The milk board also recently sponsored a section in New York Magazine’s The Cut, focused on women in sports.) In recent years, Dairy Management has partnered with mega-influencer MrBeast at least twice, filming him as he toured a dairy farm and paying him to promote a dairy-focused competition in the video game Minecraft.

In perhaps dairy promoters’ biggest coup of last year, the limited-run McDonald’s Grimace shake went viral after TikTok users began crafting miniature horror films featuring the bright purple beverage. Dairy Management has a longstanding partnership with McDonald’s; beginning in 2009, it placed two dairy scientists at the fast food chain to help incorporate more dairy into the menu. Less than a decade later, 4 in 5 McDonald’s menu items contained dairy, according to a Dairy Management board member. Dairy Management has even funded research to help improve McDonald’s notoriously glitchy milkshake machines.

“My hope is that farmers, when they see a new milkshake or a new McFlurry at McDonald’s, that they know that it’s their new product,” Dairy Management CEO Barb O’Brien said on a podcast in December.

A spokesperson for McDonald’s told Grist that they could not independently confirm the proportion of their offerings that contain dairy due to variations in local menus, but added that the fast food chain makes its own menu decisions. “Our partnership with [Dairy Management] helps McDonald’s ensure the quality and great taste of the dairy-based items on our menu, and deepen relationships with the thousands of dairy farmers who supply milk, cream, butter, and cheese to restaurants across the U.S.,” the company said in an emailed statement to Grist. 

@dzitkus

Do NOT drink the Grimace millshake

♬ original sound – Dylan Zitkus

Partnering with food companies to roll out products that contain ever-escalating quantities of dairy is one of the industry group’s tried-and-true strategies. In the last couple of years, Dairy Management has partnered with Taco Bell to launch a frozen drink mixing dairy with Mountain Dew and a burrito with ten times the cheese of a typical taco. The organization also assisted with last year’s rollout of pepperoni-stuffed cheesy bread at Domino’s and supported marketing efforts for General Mills’ Oui line of yogurts. 

Thirty years after the era-defining “Got Milk?” campaign — itself a project of the California Milk Processor Board — the U.S. dairy industry’s PR machine appears to be getting a second wind. The point of all these efforts is straightforward: The dairy promotion boards’ mission is to increase demand for their products. They spend hundreds of millions of dollars, collected from farmers and milk processors, on annual research and advertising in hopes of growing the market for dairy domestically and abroad.

A line chart showing U.S. quarterly per capita dairy consumption between 1995 and 2021. Quarterly consumption of milk-equivalent fat has risen from approximately 140 pounds to approximately 170 pounds.
Clayton Aldern / Grist

However, as dairy consumption and production continue to grow, so too does the industry’s environmental footprint. In 2019, the EPA estimated that U.S. dairy cattle emitted 1,729,000 tons of methane each year, pollution roughly equivalent to 11.5 million gasoline-powered cars being driven over the same period. A United Nations report found that the dairy sector’s global greenhouse gas emissions rose by 18 percent between 2005 and 2015. 

Meanwhile, it’s not entirely clear that all these efforts are helping the average dairy farmer. The number of U.S. dairy farms has fallen by three quarters in the last 30 years, as farmers’ costs rise and milk prices fluctuate. Many small and mid-sized dairy farms have been driven out of business and farmers’ net returns fall below zero year after year. In 2000, farms with more than 2,000 cattle produced less than 10 percent of milk, but by 2016 farms of this size were responsible for more than 30 percent of U.S. production. The diverging trend lines have prompted some farmers to question whether the focus on market growth above all else — which has been accompanied by increasing climate pollution and the collapse of small dairy herds — is still the best policy.

Ever since Congress passed the Dairy Act in the 1980s, farmers have been required to pay 15 cents per hundred-weight of milk (equivalent to a little less than 12 gallons) toward industry promotion programs overseen by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, or USDA. Ten cents is sent to local promotion entities and the remaining five cents go to the national Dairy Board, which promotes all dairy products. (Eggs have their own $20 million program.) Farmer contributions to the national program totaled $124.5 million in 2021. 

The Dairy Board in turn sends money to Dairy Management Inc. Milk processors work under a similar structure, paying their own assessments to the Fluid Milk Board, which works exclusively on promoting a category that includes milk, flavored milk, buttermilk, and eggnog. The Fluid Milk Board received $82.4 million in processor fees in 2021. Its marketing arm is called MilkPEP.

In an emailed statement, a Dairy Management spokesperson told Grist that “all dairy research, promotion content and information not only complies with all regulations and standards, but also seeks to help consumers make informed decisions about the foods they choose for themselves and their families, including nutritious, sustainably produced dairy.” 

The financial structure of these efforts is complicated, but the end result is that these programs, which are known to farmers as “checkoffs,” bring in more than $200 million each year in the dairy industry alone. As a result, the industry takes care to note its accomplishments. For instance, in the first eight years the checkoff of partnered with Domino’s Pizza, the average store increased its cheese use by 43 percent.

Other promotional efforts, however, have amounted to slickly-produced flops. Last year, the Fluid Milk Board hired actor Aubrey Plaza to hawk “wood milk” in an apparent effort to lampoon plant-based milk alternatives, which resulted in a formal complaint filed by a group of physicians who advocate for plant-based diets. Another effort involved a Board-funded website featuring Queen Latifah, which was devoted to combating the seemingly fictional phenomenon of “milk shaming.”

A balding man in a got milk shirt stands in front of a yellow van while drinking milk
‘The Office’ actor Brian Baumgartner poses for a 2023 promotional photo for “Never Doubt What You Love,” a pro-dairy parody news campaign created by the California Milk Processor Board. Rachel Murray for CMPB / Getty Images

Some recent industry-funded persuasion campaigns have been more subtle. In 2021, the fluid milk checkoff sponsored a wellness weekend for top editors from Bustle, New York Magazine, Marie Claire, and others at a $750-per-night Hamptons resort where they participated in workouts led by a celebrity trainer and “partook in milk-forward meals.” Congressional disclosures indicate that the Fluid Milk Board held USDA-approved advertising and marketing contracts with Vice Media and Food52 in 2021. A spokesperson for MilkPEP told Grist that these were branded editorial contracts to develop milk-inclusive recipe content. 

There’s some evidence that all this marketing has worked. A recent USDA report delivered to Congress claimed that farmers earn $1.91 for every dollar spent on “demand-enhancing activities” for fluid milk, $3.27 for every dollar spent promoting cheese, and $24.11 for every dollar spent boosting butter. An independent evaluation by the Government Accountability Office in 2017 likewise found that, between 1995 and 2012, the fluid milk program returned $2.14 for every dollar spent.

After decades of growth, per-capita U.S. dairy consumption reached an all-time high in 2021, though fluid milk consumption has been steadily declining since the 1970s. This presents formidable challenges for climate action: Meat and dairy consumption is responsible for a full 75 percent of the country’s diet-related greenhouse gas emissions, even though animal products account for only 18 percent of calories consumed. 

And even setting aside climate concerns, small-scale farmers worry that this emphasis on demand growth might actually end up edging them out of the market. They say that the checkoffs have unfairly benefited a few big producers, supercharging their growth while driving others out of the industry.

“[The checkoff is] set up to be entirely demand-side,” said Wisconsin farmer and former Dairy Board member Rose Lloyd. “You’re not allowed to talk about price, you’re not allowed to talk about supply. It’s a wasted effort.”

Lloyd and her family maintain a herd of 350 cows, and while checkoff assessments represent less than 1 percent of her revenue, she says she feels like she’s paying to reinforce a structure that’s working against her farm and her community. For example, she’s watched a neighboring dairy farm quadruple in size to supply mozzarella to a nearby factory that produces frozen pizzas. The local infrastructure has struggled to contend with the waste produced by all those additional cows.

“We have massive water quality issues,” she told Grist. “It’s a real crisis right now on all the legs of sustainability: ecologically, socially, economically.” 

Some farm groups are holding out hope that they can persuade Congress to pass a form of supply-management legislation that limits total milk production, which they are pitching as a win-win for small-scale farmers and the environment. If the government placed a cap on the amount of dairy produced in the United States, the idea goes, such a policy could theoretically ensure that a market exists for all the dairy produced. 

A similar model has functioned in Canada for decades. Each year, annual dairy demand is forecasted based on the previous year’s sales figures. The resulting estimate is divided among provincial boards, which in turn distribute production quotas to individual farmers. In exchange for promising not to market more milk than the quotas allow, farmers are guaranteed minimum prices for their products — meaning they’re somewhat insulated from the seasonal price fluctuations and rising costs that plague their U.S. counterparts. 

To maintain this delicate balance, Canada prevents an influx of cheap imported milk using high tariffs. In part for this reason, the system is not without controversy. Critics argue that the policy pushes up dairy prices, and the quota licensing system can make it hard for new producers to enter the market.

A woman herds cows inside a red barn
A farmer moves cows into a barn for their evening milking near Cambridge, Wisconsin, in 2017. Scott Olson / Getty Images

Still, the system has enough admirers that some are hoping it will be adopted in the U.S. Earlier this year, representatives from the National Family Farmers Coalition, or NFFC, flew to Washington, D.C., to try to persuade legislators to adopt supply-management legislation through their proposed “Milk from Family Dairies Act” in the next Farm Bill. The bill would establish price minimums and quota-like “production bases” for farmers. Farmers would have to pay additional fees to export their product, and the policy would raise import fees where possible.

Antonio Tovar, senior policy associate at NFFC, said the proposal has garnered support from environmental groups who see supply management as a means of reducing emissions from feed and trucking. 

Nevertheless, Tovar is clear-eyed about the bill’s likelihood of passage, at least in the near term. “I have to be honest with you, I’m a little bit pessimistic about these proposals being included in the next Farm Bill,” he said, citing Congressional gridlock and limited political will to pursue the change.  

In the meantime, the dairy checkoff has set its sights on the export market. Specifically, it’s promoting pizza — which one executive called “a strong carrier for U.S. cheese” — in the Middle East and Asia. In Japan, the checkoff and Domino’s launched a “New Yorker” pizza topped with a full kilogram of cheese and served with a packet of seaweed and maple syrup. The New Yorker was subsequently rolled out in Taiwan. 

Domestically, there are still some fast-food menu items that haven’t yet been topped with a slice of American cheese or shaken with milk. In a 2022 blog post, Dairy Management Inc., chair Marilyn Hershey pointed out that 80 percent of the 2 billion chicken sandwiches sold in the U.S. each year do not contain a slice of cheese. 

The checkoff, she wrote, was engaging with Chick-fil-A, Raising Cane’s, and McDonald’s to change that.

Correction: This story has been corrected to remove language suggesting that dairy promotional groups engage in political lobbying.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Behind the ‘butter board’: How the dairy industry took over your feed on May 10, 2024.




Moscow.media
Частные объявления сегодня





Rss.plus



С чего начинается любое заболевание?

Афиша театра кукол Бурятии "Ульгэр": Россия, Культура, Театр, Дети - Спектакль "Курочка ряба"

Количество пользователей-инвесторов на платформе «Атомайз» превысило 72000

Эксперт по семейному капиталу Светлана Петрова: «Мой путь предпринимателя был прямой, как стрела»


Славный Пушкин

Стресс и РПП от телефона во время еды: доктор Кутушов предостерегает от последствий

Генеральным директором «585*ЗОЛОТОЙ» стал Дмитрий Лазарев

Новая коллекция ювелирных украшений Dior


Shocking moment idiot films himself invading pitch and taunting Spurs in major security breach before Newcastle friendly

Precision in Motion: Exploring Baltic Bearing Company-Riga

Move over Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham the real England champ is a 15 yr old SUBBUTEO star

LIV Golf’s Sergio Garcia misses out on U.S. Open spot, but still has chance to play


Астана остается без российских денег. Россия закручивает Казахстану сразу несколько гаек.

Мобильный принтер этикеток iMove T3Pro - лёгкий, производительный, компактный

Приморье - Парк Драконов

Работники транспортных прокуратур совместно с воспитанниками «Семейного центра Можайский» посетили парк «Патриот».


Helldivers 2 studio wants to slow down the pace of updates: 'We feel a slightly lower cadence overall will benefit both us, you, and the game'

Bungie wins a little walkin' around money in first of its kind jury trial against Destiny 2 cheat maker, but the victory will likely make it even easier for game companies to keep taking cheaters to court

'Y'all killed it': Survive the Undead, a community-made PvE zombie mode, is bringing players back to Halo Infinite

Microsoft reckons its new Prism x86 emulation for Arm PCs is as good as Apple's Rosetta


Виставку «Світ Велетнів» в парку Боздош (м.Ужгород) продовжено до 30.06.2024 року

Estischool - Школа за британською програмою


В ТРЦ «Нора» прошёл квиз для музыкальных энтузиастов

В Москве мужчина зарезал собутыльницу и скрылся с места преступления

"Спартак" и "Оренбург" сыграли вничью в заключительном матче РПЛ

Собянин: Уникальные сервисы в центре "Профессии будущего" упрощают поиск работы




То в жар, то в холод: что нужно знать про летние десерты

Пути назад больше нет: россиян ждет рекордное повышение тарифов на ЖКХ

Нано-опера выбрала своих героев

«ИМЕНЕМ ЗАКОНА»: «СВЯТОЙ ЛЕНИН» ОТМЕНЯЕТ НАЛОГИ С ЗАРПЛАТ НАРОДА!


Жизненные перипетии Лянки Грыу

Твердые гарантии: что составляет основу ядерного щита России

Калмыкия приняла участие в глобальном спортивном шествии в Москве

"Зенит" стал чемпионом России сезона-2023/24


Россиянки Хромачёва и Сизикова пробились в финал парного турнира в Рабате

В пригороде Парижа открыли корты имени Даниила Медведева

Хромачёва и Сизикова пробились в финал турнира WTA в Рабате в парном разряде

Россиянка Рахимова вышла в полуфинал турнира WTA в Рабате


Деньги вместо бесплатного участка могут получить многодетные семьи

Калмыкия приняла участие в глобальном спортивном шествии в Москве

Мал, да продал: число небольших компаний-экспортеров выросло в 1,5 раза

Пути назад больше нет: россиян ждет рекордное повышение тарифов на ЖКХ


Музыкальные новости

Спектакль "Курочка ряба" театра кукол Бурятии "Ульгэр": Россия, Культура, Театр, Дети

Нейромонах Феофан, Инстасамка и Баста выступят летом в рамках ПМЭФ-2024

Юрий Лоза связал шансы Валиевой стать певицей с объемом вложений в раскрутку

Моргенштерн* подкачался к лету — рэпер поделился новыми фото



В ТРЦ «Нора» прошёл квиз для музыкальных энтузиастов

Собянин: Уникальные сервисы в центре "Профессии будущего" упрощают поиск работы

Компактные ирригаторы, электрические щетки и насадки ДиФреш по старым ценам с доставкой в РФ

Футболист Тарасов показал средний палец водителю автобуса в Москве


"Спартак" и "Оренбург" сыграли вничью в заключительном матче РПЛ

КУРОЧКА РЯБА - спектакль театра кукол Бурятии "Ульгэр": Россия, Культура, Театр, Дети

За шаг до вылета: ФК «Урал» продолжит биться в стыковых матчах после проигрыша ЦСКА. ФОТО

Мария Шахова при поддержке ИРИ продолжает разрушать стереотипы о России


Футболист Тарасов показал средний палец водителю автобуса в Москве

Мать случайно заперла ребенка в автомобиле у Красной площади

Крупное ДТП парализовало движение автомобилей на юге Москвы

На МКАД в Москве загорелся автомобиль


Москва не собирается просить о восстановлении порушенных Токио двусторонних отношений

Лукашенко лично проводил Путина в аэропорт Минска

Силуанов предупредил о зеркальном ответе на незаконное использование активов РФ

Путин разорвал договор с олигархами, заключённый в конце 90-х, считает Хазин





Народная артистка РФ Маргарита Терехова попала в реанимацию

«Маски» гипотиреоза: признаки проблем с щитовидной железой, о которых не все знают

Врач Терушкин: базовые симптомы проблем с «щитовидкой» связаны с усталостью

Врачи предупредили о распространении «плотоядной болезни». Насколько она опасна


"Он такое любит". В Киеве рассказали, как генералы обманывают Зеленского

Панасыч, а местечковые то не знают...

Рогов рассказал о последствиях сброса воды на ДнепроГЭС


Футболист Тарасов показал средний палец водителю автобуса в Москве

Более двух тысяч спортсменов поучаствовало в параде на ВДНХ в Москве

"Спартак" и "Оренбург" сыграли вничью в заключительном матче РПЛ

ЦСКА обыграл "Урал" в заключительном матче РПЛ


И драники, и сало: Лукашенко угостил Путина в Минске национальными белорусскими блюдами

Путин и Лукашенко во время визита главы РФ в Минск работали и общались 14 часов

Побывавший с визитом в Белоруссии Путин пригласил Лукашенко в гости

Путин пригласил Лукашенко в Россию



Собянин рассказал о масштабных планах благоустройства на юго-востоке Москвы

Мэр Москвы рассказал про сервисы в центре "Профессии будущего"

Собянин: Работы в пяти корпусах нового кластера Бауманки практически завершены

Собянин: В центре «Профессии будущего» обучают 75 востребованным специальностям


Синоптик предупредил об аномальной жаре в начале лета в Москве

Утиные выводки направились из гнезд в водоемы столицы

Греть и поливать. Во Дворце пионеров рассказали, как защитить растения от заморозков

Москвичам пообещали аномальную жару до +29 градусов на следующей неделе


Нано-опера выбрала своих героев

Пути назад больше нет: россиян ждет рекордное повышение тарифов на ЖКХ

Жизненные перипетии Лянки Грыу

Твердые гарантии: что составляет основу ядерного щита России


В День памяти северных юнг губернатор Архангельской области Александр Цыбульский обратился к северянам

Футболисты Поморья подвели итоги спортивного сезона

Эксперт Президентской академии в Санкт-Петербурге о решении жилищного вопроса архангелогородцев

«Ростелекома» установил 1222 камеры для наблюдения за ходом государственной итоговой аттестации в Оренбургской области


Музыкально-литературная гостиная «Щедрый талант Елены Гнесиной»

Массовая драка произошла на одной из улиц Симферополя

Библиотечная лужайка «Хорошие книги читай – о жизни побольше узнай», к Общероссийскому дню библиотек.

Книжная тематическая полка « Русский писатель марийской земли»


Нано-опера выбрала своих героев

Деньги вместо бесплатного участка могут получить многодетные семьи

Калмыкия приняла участие в глобальном спортивном шествии в Москве

Центр компетенций по кибербезопасности появится в Мурманской области












Спорт в России и мире

Новости спорта


Новости тенниса
Ролан Гаррос

В Париже стартует «Ролан Гаррос» открытый чемпионат Франции по теннису






С 1 июня. В России повысили налог с зарплаты и других источников дохода

Центр компетенций по кибербезопасности появится в Мурманской области

Нано-опера выбрала своих героев

Пути назад больше нет: россиян ждет рекордное повышение тарифов на ЖКХ