Fonterra lifts forecast milk price mid-point, advance rate
Fonterra has bumped up its forecast farmgate milk price for the season on the back of rising commodity prices and a strong balance sheet.
DAIRY ENTREPRENEUR Peter Cullinane, principal of Lewis Road Creamery, Mangatawhiri, believes Jersey is to milk what Angus is to beef.
In a first for New Zealand, his company will launch organic Jersey milks said to offer a ‘from-the-farmgate’ taste.
Cullinane says his Organic Jersey Milk is the first 100% Jersey whole milk available on supermarket shelves, bearing the distinction of richer flavour and creamier texture; and it has no connection with permeate or palm kernel expeller.
“It’s milk the way it should be,” Cullinane told Dairy News. “My fundamental belief is that Jersey is to milk what Angus is to beef.”
It’s the first time a milk producer has separated out Jersey milk from other milks.
“I use the analogy of a winemaker combining all the various grape varieties into one big tub and making a generic product called ‘wine’, rather than celebrating each varietal,” he adds.
“As a dairy producing nation, we would expect the milk we produce to be something special. But with the big [companies’] focus on technology and volume, more emphasis seems to go into the packaging than the product inside. We’re [focused] on quality ahead of quantity and [will offer] New Zealanders a less processed and better tasting option.”
In standard practice, milk producers combine the milk of various cow breeds then break the resulting product down into its constituent parts before ‘reassembling’ it.
Cullinane says milk should not be treated as a commodity but instead celebrated as an example of New Zealand dairying at its best.
Lewis Road Creamery products are bottled by Green Valley Dairy, also at Mangatawhiri. The milk comes from dedicated Jersey herds and undergoes minimal interference during its journey from milk shed to bottle.
And it is free of permeates, Cullinane says. “New Zealand lags behind other countries [in supplying] mainstream permeate-free milk. In other markets there’s been resistance to the addition of the watery, green-coloured by-product of the milk production process. We don’t see any reason why it should be in our milk.
Neither is PKE used to produce the milk.
Compared to milk from Friesians, Cullinane says, Jersey milk contains less water and lactose, and more beta-casein, protein and calcium.
The new Organic Jersey Milk comes in four varieties: non-homogenised, homogenised, light and calcium enriched low fat.
The milk bottles are traditionally shaped and recyclable.
Lewis Road Creamery is also launching Organic Jersey Cream and Organic Jersey Double Cream with higher-than-average 48% butterfat.
In August 2012 it launched its Premium Butter and Artisan Butter earlier this year.
Says Cullinane, “We’re on a mission to shake up the dairy aisle and deliver produce that tastes like dairy produce used to, and should, taste.”
Prices: milk, 750ml, RRP $3.19; cream, 300ml, RRP $3.99; double cream, 300ml, RRP $4.49, in Auckland supermarkets, wider distribution to follow.
Among the regular exhibitors at last month’s South Island Agricultural Field Days, the one that arguably takes the most intensive preparation every time is the PGG Wrightson Seeds site.
Two high producing Canterbury dairy farmers are moving to blended stockfeed supplements fed in-shed for a number of reasons, not the least of which is to boost protein levels, which they can’t achieve through pasture under the region’s nitrogen limit of 190kg/ha.
Buoyed by strong forecasts for milk prices and a renewed demand for dairy assets, the South Island rural real estate market has begun the year with positive momentum, according to Colliers.
The six young cattle breeders participating in the inaugural Holstein Friesian NZ young breeder development programme have completed their first event of the year.
New Zealand feed producers are being encouraged to boost staff training to maintain efficiency and product quality.
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