everything. If you thought you nearly lost your mind during the shutdown, just remember you had bagels and cream cheese, could you have survived without it? That’s kind of scary. I’ll try the best I can. I don’t know, like some kind of Andrew yang, Bill de Blasio strangeness, right? But a new york institution is now under threat because of supply chain issues. At Tompkins Square bagels in the East Village and all across the city, there is a cream cheese scare. We have espresso, jalapeno cheddar birthday cake and this will probably get us too about Wednesday. I thought maybe maybe maybe late tomorrow. So what I’m being told from my suppliers, um there’s a big issue with trucking getting class eight truckers and we’re also being told that the shipping containers because we get these big £100.50 pound blocks. So my guys are telling me those are all like stuck on ships like you know, import the Kraft Heinz company, one of the top producers of cream cheese says not to panic as more people continue to breakfast at home and use cream cheese as an ingredient and Easy desserts. We expect this trend to continue as such. We’re shipping 35% more product to foodservice partners, such as bagel shops versus a year ago at Tompkins Square bagels. They’ve got plans to readjust to hustle scramble. You know, we’re new Yorkers, we’ve been scrambling and hustling for two years now with the pandemic. Like we’ll find a way. There’s always butter. It’s not the same. It’s not know, people are gonna get upset. That might be the recipe for anarchy in the city, in the East Village, Stefan kIM Channel seven, Eyewitness News.
This year hackers have unleashed cyberattacks against pipelines, ferry boats, meat packers, even police departments. And now they’ve come for the cream cheese.In October, a cyberattack against the largest U.S. cheese manufacturer contributed to a nationwide cream cheese shortage shortly before the holidays, Bloomberg News reported, endangering holiday treats for millions.Bloomberg reported the attack targeted plants and distribution centers. As a result, Wisconsin-based Schreiber Foods was unable to fully operate for several days — just as it was heading into its peak busy period before the Thanksgiving, Hanukkah and Christmas holidays.The company is one of the country’s largest marketers for dairy products, including cheese slices, yogurt and the all-important cream cheese, with annual sales of more than $5 billion.The brutally-timed attack compounded existing problems: Schreiber Foods said every cream cheese producer was already struggling to keep up adequate supply.Even before the cyberattack and holiday demand peak, manufacturers were struggling because of labor shortages and supply chain disruptions for raw materials, packaging and trucking. Cream cheese isn’t like some other goods that can be stockpiled. No one keeps huge globs of it on hand, and there’s certainly no strategic reserve for cream cheese, as there is for oil in the United States and maple syrup in Canada.”While that event definitely didn’t help matters, it’s really world events that are the biggest driver of what’s happening with cream cheese,” said Andrew Tobisch, communications director for Schreiber Foods.The company said it expects the shortage to be short-lived, Tobisch said. But it will take “a little more time” to resolve, he added, though he did not supply a time frame.Last year, demand for cream cheese jumped 18% compared to 2019, as more people were baking at home during shutdowns. Kraft said it’s stayed at that high level in 2021.The cream cheese shortage has pushed restaurants and suppliers to get creative. For example Kraft, which owns Philadelphia cream cheese, recently said it would reimburse some customers who buy a different dessert because they can’t find cream cheese in time to make holiday cheesecake.And Junior’s Cheesecake in New York, which typically goes through 4 million pounds of cream cheese a year to make its signature product, has been forced to occasionally pause production of its famous cheesecakes due to the shortage. New York City bagel shops have also reportedly struggled to get enough supply.
This year hackers have unleashed cyberattacks against pipelines, ferry boats, meat packers, even police departments. And now they’ve come for the cream cheese.
In October, a cyberattack against the largest U.S. cheese manufacturer contributed to a nationwide cream cheese shortage shortly before the holidays, Bloomberg News reported, endangering holiday treats for millions.
Bloomberg reported the attack targeted plants and distribution centers. As a result, Wisconsin-based Schreiber Foods was unable to fully operate for several days — just as it was heading into its peak busy period before the Thanksgiving, Hanukkah and Christmas holidays.
The company is one of the country’s largest marketers for dairy products, including cheese slices, yogurt and the all-important cream cheese, with annual sales of more than $5 billion.
The brutally-timed attack compounded existing problems: Schreiber Foods said every cream cheese producer was already struggling to keep up adequate supply.
Even before the cyberattack and holiday demand peak, manufacturers were struggling because of labor shortages and supply chain disruptions for raw materials, packaging and trucking. Cream cheese isn’t like some other goods that can be stockpiled. No one keeps huge globs of it on hand, and there’s certainly no strategic reserve for cream cheese, as there is for oil in the United States and maple syrup in Canada.
“While that [cyberattack] event definitely didn’t help matters, it’s really world events that are the biggest driver of what’s happening with cream cheese,” said Andrew Tobisch, communications director for Schreiber Foods.
The company said it expects the shortage to be short-lived, Tobisch said. But it will take “a little more time” to resolve, he added, though he did not supply a time frame.
Last year, demand for cream cheese jumped 18% compared to 2019, as more people were baking at home during shutdowns. Kraft said it’s stayed at that high level in 2021.
The cream cheese shortage has pushed restaurants and suppliers to get creative. For example Kraft, which owns Philadelphia cream cheese, recently said it would reimburse some customers who buy a different dessert because they can’t find cream cheese in time to make holiday cheesecake.
And Junior’s Cheesecake in New York, which typically goes through 4 million pounds of cream cheese a year to make its signature product, has been forced to occasionally pause production of its famous cheesecakes due to the shortage. New York City bagel shops have also reportedly struggled to get enough supply.