300 million: Pounds of chocolate ingredients produced yearly at Blommer Chocolate Co.’s East Greenville, Pa., plant.
45 percent: Percentage of the nation’s cocoa beans processed by Blommer.
$13.3 billion: U.S. retail sales of chocolate used in candy in 2000.
$20.6 billion: Sales of chocolate used in candy in 2013.
SOURCES: Blommer Chocolate Co., National Confectioners Association
That chocolate Easter bunny you’re buying — or, if that isn’t your thing, that artisanal dark chocolate, that chocolate milk, or that chocolate chip cookie — chances are that, no matter what it is, no matter whose name is on it, Blommer Chocolate Co. was involved.
“About 70 percent of our business is making bulk ingredient chocolate for all the brands you know,” said Peter Blommer, president and chief operating officer of the family-run company, now in its 75th year and third generation.
“Any brand on the shelf, any place you see a chocolate ingredient, there is a high likelihood that it’s our ingredient,” he said, sitting in his office at the East Greenville, Pa., plant, where the perfume of chocolate is omnipresent, even in the distant corners of the parking lot.
300 million: Pounds of chocolate ingredients produced yearly at Blommer Chocolate Co.'s East Greenville, Pa., plant.
45 percent: Percentage of the nation's cocoa beans processed by Blommer.
$13.3 billion: U.S. retail sales of chocolate used in candy in 2000.
$20.6 billion: Sales of chocolate used in candy in 2013.
SOURCES: Blommer Chocolate Co., National Confectioners Association
Globally, chocolate is the world’s favorite sweet, but chocolate company owners such as Blommer see trouble on the horizon. “Our concern is that (demand) will outpace the supply of beans,” he said.
Blommer Chocolate Co., a Chicago-based company, processes 45 percent of the nation’s cocoa beans, the National Confectioners Association said.
The reason the Blommer name isn’t as well-known as Hershey’s, or Asher’s, is because companies like those are Blommer’s customers, turning the raw material processed by Blommer into bunnies, truffles, and all the other chocolate flavorings, candies, and food products sold in stores.
At Blommer’s East Greenville plant, 250 employees produce nearly 300 million pounds of chocolate ingredients a year in a 300,000-square-foot factory on approximately 25 aromatic acres on the northern edge of Montgomery County.
Companywide, Blommer’s processes 200,000 metric tons of cocoa beans a year, Blommer said. Other plants are in Chicago, California, and Canada.
Blommer’s East Greenville plant runs three shifts seven days a week — no surprise, given chocolate’s global popularity.
In the United States, retail sales of chocolate used just in candy have risen from $13.3 billion in 2000 to $20.6 billion in 2013, according to the National Confectioners Association.
With demand expected to grow as China and India become wealthier and able to afford small luxuries such as chocolate, Blommer and other companies are turning their attention to the cocoa harvest.
Blommer counts the “long-term sustainability of the cocoa farming sector” as the chief risk to his company’s business.
“Thirty to 40 percent of the crop is lost to pest and disease every year,” Blommer said, “(because) the farmers are not applying a lot of the best practices of farming, whether it’s use of fertilizers, using the proper planting material … (or) pruning to keep the tree at the right canopy height.”
Cocoa can only be grown near the equator, often in undeveloped countries, such as Cote D’Ivoire in West Africa — Blommer’s main source for beans — and Ecuador, where Blommer buys 25 percent of the South American nation’s harvest.
“These small family farms might have 5 acres of cocoa trees,” he said.
Because yields and profits are so low, farmers’ children aren’t eager to take over the family farm, moving instead to cities for more opportunity, he said.
In the past, he said, increased demand could be met by farming more acres, but that puts pressure on rain forests.
Blommer, along with the rest of the chocolate industry, is devoting increased resources to agricultural training, said Larry Graham, president of the National Confectioners Association.
“The core of our program is farmer field schools,” Blommer said.
“We try to understand what issues they are having, what diseases they are seeing, and train them to combat them,” he said.
For example, he said, “we are training them on how to graft a productive tree’s material onto a nonproductive tree — that’s basic side-grafting, which is commonly used in agriculture and has been used for centuries, but is widely unknown in West Africa.”
A half-world away in East Greenville, the beans are roasted and turned into chocolate liquor, which is not an alcoholic beverage, but the basic cocoa product, a liquid form containing cocoa butter and cocoa solids.
Based on the customers’ needs, those elements are combined in various proportions at Blommer’s.
Chocolate itself consists of chocolate liquor combined with extra cocoa butter, sugar and milk powder.