14 CapitalPress.com May 12, 2017 Dairy Subscribe to our weekly dairy email newsletter at CapitalPress.com/newsletters Glanbia, Southwest Cheese win awards By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Glanbia Nutritionals and Southwest Cheese scored 14 medals at the 2017 U.S. Championship Cheese con- test in Green Bay, Wis., in April. The awards include five gold, five silver and four bronze medals, Glanbia re- ported in a press release. This year’s competition saw a record-setting 2,303 cheese entries from 33 states. Southwest Cheese in New Mexico was awarded medals in the following cat- egories: • Gold — Fresh Asiago, Pepper Jack Medium Heat, Pepper Jack Ghost Pepper and Habanero Cheddar. Courtesy of Glanbia Accepting awards for Southwest Cheese and Glanbia Foods at the 2017 U.S. Championship Cheese Contest are, back row from left, Ricardo Rivas, David North, Rudy Jozelic, Dave Perry, Matt Vanic, Shawn Harrison and, front row from left, Victor Vazquez, Eric Denton and Danny Clayton. • Silver — Monterey Jack, Pepper Jack, Pepper Jack Medium Heat and Ha- banero Cheddar. • Bronze — Habanero Cheddar and Pepper Jack Medium Heat. The Glanbia Nutrition- als’ Twin Falls plant and Cheese Innovation Center were awarded medals in the following categories: • Gold — Gouda Green Olive and Pimento. • Silver — Colby Jack. • Bronze — Reduced Fat Cheddar and Havarti Garlic. Their gold medal Gouda Green Olive and Pimento Cheese submission landed Glanbia in the category of the 20 best overall entries for the top U.S. Champi- on award. This is the first time Glanbia has qualified for additional judging from over 2,300 entries. Southwest Cheese swept the Pepper Jack Medium Heat and Habanero Cheddar categories receiving gold, silver and bronze medals in both flavors. “These results show how collaboration and respect from our farmers to our oper- ations, commercial team and innovation center can deliver fantastic results that make us the customer’s champion,” said David North, senior site director of Southwest Cheese in Clovis, N.M. Southwest Cheese is a joint venture between Glan- bia and dairy cooperatives Dairy Farmers of America, Select Milk Producers and Greater Southwest Agency. Glanbia’s cheeses are available for purchase at the Glanbia Cheese Market- place at 131 Main Ave E. in Twin Falls, Idaho. California FMMO will stabilize milk production, analyst predicts By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Moving from a state marketing order to a feder- al order will likely stabilize California’s milk produc- tion, which has been falling about 2 percent a year, a bank analyst says. James Williamson, assis- tant vice president and ana- lyst with the RaboResearch food and agribusiness team, also said the FMMO would raise the price for milk — although not by the 48 cents per hundredweight that USDA is projecting through 2025. The increase would come from a change in the base formula used to calculate Tim Hearden/Capital Press File Cows are milked at VanderWoude Dairy near Merced, Calif. An analyst says a new federal milk marketing order would increase prices paid for California milk but not as much as USDA predicts. prices, he said. He doesn’t hard number but milk price would slightly because have a said the increase proces- sors will have the ability to pool and depool their milk. That “will change how milk is handled in the state,” 19-2/#7 he said. Under the current state order, the vast majority of milk is pooled and proces- sors must pay minimum reg- ulated prices on that milk. Rabobank’s analysis shows USDA’s projection for milk prices is “probably optimistic” because a feder- al order would give proces- sors much more flexibility, with the ability to pool and depool on a more opportu- nistic basis, said Roland Fu- masi, RaboResearch senior analyst. When processors depool, they are no longer required to pay minimum regulated prices and can essentially pay any price for the milk they are buying, Williamson said. Early on, the loss of mandatory pooling was a deal-breaker for producers, but that no longer seems to be the case, he said. The ability to depool milk could be beneficial to both producers and proces- sors in the long run, he said. The pool includes milk for all uses, such as Class 1 fluid milk and Class III cheese milk, and produces a weighted average price, or blend price, that is paid to producers. If a minimum regulated price on a certain class of milk is higher than the blend price, processors might choose to depool their milk. For example, if the blend price were $15 per hun- dredweight and the Class III regulated price was $18 per hundredweight, a cheese processor could depool his milk and instead pay his milk producers $16 per hun- dredweight. In that scenario, both the processor and the producers win. Another reason William- son thinks USDA’s milk price estimate is too high is the vast majority of Cal- ifornia milk goes through the hands of cooperatives, which don’t have to pay their producers minimum regulated prices. That’s a rare occurrence now but could happen more often if the cooperatives sell excess milk to processors outside the pool who aren’t paying regulated minimum prices, he said. While he’s considered other impacts of a feder- al order for California as well, overall he thinks the increase in milk prices will stabilize milk production and help offset the rising costs of labor and envi- ronmental regulations, he said. Dairy Markets Lee Mielke Dairy prices climb out of doldrums By LEE MIELKE For the Capital Press M ost dairy prices moved higher last week despite a lot of product coming to Chicago. Cash cheddar blocks closed the first Friday of May at $1.60 per pound, up 12 cents on the week, 29 1/2-cents above a year ago, and the highest price since Feb. 15. The barrels finished at $1.45, up 3 1/4-cents on the week, 15 cents above a year ago when they plunged 11 1/4 cents, but were a much higher than normal 15 cents below the blocks. Four cars of block traded hands on the week at the CME and a whopping 54 cars of barrel. Monday saw the blocks lose a penny and hold there Tuesday at $1.59. The barrels were unchanged Monday but gained a penny Tuesday, ad- vancing to $1.46 on 10 trades. FC Stone’s May 4 Early Morning Update stated, “It’s not shocking that heavier vol- ume is being brought to the exchange as heavy milk flows and ramped-up cheese pro- duction are testing capacity levels and have pushed inven- tories into record territory.” Dairy Market News re- ported that milk remains readily available for cheese producers in the Midwest. Inventories are generally re- ported as long. Ample milk supplies are placing pressures on some Western manufac- turers. Inventories are also heavy, especially for barrels. Butter closed May 5 at $2.1075 per pound, up a quarter-cent on the week and 5 3/4-cents above a year ago, with 43 cars sold last week, the highest total since August 2014. The butter ticked up 2 cents Monday but gave back 2 1/4-cents Tuesday, slipping to $2.1050. 19-2-#18