Foodies used to pay more for turkeys with a back story. Now, more birds are getting one.
Jennie-O Turkey Store, a subsidiary of Hormel Foods Corp. and the nation's second-largest turkey brand, said Thursday it will start using labels that let consumers trace its whole-bird turkeys to their home farm.
With its size and influence, Jennie-O's new label is helping turn what had been an attribute of premium foods into something mainstream as more consumers seek information about food.
The news came a few days after Minnetonka-based Cargill Inc. announced expanded traceability for a limited number of its Honeysuckle White turkeys during the holiday season. Willmar-based Jennie-O is going further by making all of its fresh and frozen whole birds traceable year-round.
"Jennie-O's announcement is proof that this is not a niche trend but something with legs," said Laurie Demeritt, chief executive of consumer foods research firm the Hartman Group.
Jennie-O has been working for a year to make its turkey supply traceable and around 52 farms are currently included in the program. Minnesota raises more turkeys than any other state, around 45 million annually, according to the U.S. Agriculture Department. The majority of Jennie-O's turkey are raised in the state and neighboring Wisconsin.
Last year, Jennie-O processed more than 1.2 billion pounds of turkey meat, leading Cargill's 1 billion pounds and trailing only Butterball LLC, which processed nearly 1.4 billion pounds, according to Watt PoultryUSA, a trade publication.
When a consumer enters the code listed on a whole turkey's package at the Jennie-O website, they will be taken to a page giving them the region of the farm — such as "west central Minnesota" — pictures of the family and a quote from the farmer. The company's tracking program doesn't include ground turkey, "Oven-Ready" birds or other Jennie-O branded turkey items bought in the meat aisle.