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Jif (lemon juice)

Jif is a brand of natural strength lemon juice prepared using lemon juice concentrate and water, whereby the concentrate is reconstituted using water.[1] After reconstitution, it is packaged and marketed. It is sold in the United Kingdom and Ireland by Unilever. Jif is used as a flavourant and ingredient in dishes, and as a condiment. Two tablespoons is around the equivalent of the juice of one lemon. The product has a shelf life of six months.

Jif
A Jif lemon with the label attached
Product typeLemon juice
OwnerUnilever
Produced byUnilever
Introduced1956; 68 years ago (1956)
MarketsUnited Kingdom and Ireland
Previous ownersReckitt and Colman

Jif is packaged in lemon-shaped squeezable containers and in bottles. Development of the plastic container began in the 1950s; it was one of the original blow moulded containers used for food applications. Jif brand lemon juice was established in 1956.

The "Jif Lemon case" occurred in the 1980s, when the US company Borden introduced lemon juice packaged in a similar container to the UK. Reckitt & Coleman sued Borden for passing off. The case was settled in 1990 for Reckitt & Coleman.

Jif is sometimes used on pancakes, and was marketed from 1985 to be used on pancakes for Shrove Tuesday, with the slogan "Don't forget the pancakes on Jif Lemon Day".

Formulation edit

Jif
Nutritional value per 5 ml
Energy1 kcal (4.2 kJ)
0.1 g

Source:[1]
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.

Jif is prepared from reconstituted lemon concentrate and water as primary ingredients, and is formulated to be the same strength as natural lemons.[2] The concentrate is reconstituted using water. The product contains the food preservative E223 (sodium metabisulphite).[3] Jif has a shelf life of six months.[3] Two tablespoons is the equivalent of the juice of one lemon.[3]

Nutrition information edit

A 5 ml serving size of Jif provides 1 kcal (kilocalorie) of energy and 0.1 grams of carbohydrate.[1]

Uses edit

Jif is used as an ingredient and flavourant in dishes and foods, and as a condiment, such as on pancakes. It may be used to add flavour to salads, sauces, fish and seafood,[3] among other foods. It can be used in recipes that require or recommend the use of lemon juice.

Packaging edit

 
The size of a Jif lemon juice container, compared to oranges

Aside from its plastic, lemon-shaped containers containing 55 ml of juice,[4][5][6] usually known as "jiffy lemons" or "jif lemons", Jif lemon juice is also sold in bottles.[1] The plastic container is a squeeze pack container, whereupon squeezing the container releases juice from its nozzle.[7] Jif containers were embossed with the brand name "Jif" in 1956, the same year the company came into existence.[8] Contemporary Jif containers have the phrase "Jif real lemon juice" embossed on the side of the squeeze pack.

The Jif plastic containers were originally made from polythene, and were one of the original and first blow moulded containers used for food applications.[9] The plastic containers served to replace glass bottles used to package lemon juice.[9] The plastic container was the brainchild of Edward Hack, and the container's design was undertaken by Bill Pugh, the chief plastics designer at Cascelloid. In its development, Pugh carved a core made of wood, covered it with fresh lemon peel to give it a realistic texture, and then cast a plaster mould.[10][11][12] This led to the realistic-looking container that significantly resembles a lemon.

Some sources have stated that similar plastic lemon packaging existed in Italy at the time of the end of World War II, prior to the time of the packaging design in the United Kingdom.[8][13]

History edit

Hax, Realemon and ReaLem brands edit

Edward Hack developed the original idea and model of lemon juice being contained inside lemon-shaped and coloured packaging in the 1950s.[13][14] The product was then designed and produced by Cascelloid Ltd.[13][14] Hack presented Cascelloid with a fresh lemon he acquired at Covent Garden, upon which to base the plastic container.[13][14] Hack had performed significant searches at several markets to find an optimal model.[13][14] Cascelloid stated that Hack reviewed and evaluated the entire inventory of lemons at Fortnum and Mason's, Selfridges, Harrods and Covent Garden, the latter of which involved examining three cases of lemons that contained around 300 lemons in each case.[13][14] Stanley Wagner had been brought up in the wholesale fruit business, his father having a very substantial company in Spitalfields Market. Bill Pugh, the chief plastics designer at Cascelloid, based in Leicester, and former Royal Air Force pilot, created a prototype of the blown lemon-shaped plastic shaped container[12] based upon Hack's idea sometime in the 1950s,[13] as well as other types of blown containers.[8][11] Pugh's experimented with the initial design until he was satisfied with its appearance.[12] This plastic lemon product was then used for Hax lemon juice.[8][13] Edward Hack, Ltd. produced and marketed Hax brand squeezable plastic lemon containers filled with two ounces of Sicilian lemon juice.[13][15] Per Edward Hack, Ltd., the juice was unfiltered, had no water added to it, and contained a preservative to prevent spoilage.[13] Retailers could purchase the product in packs of six bags that contained 12 squeeze packs each, totalling 72 units.[13] Upon introduction to the marketplace, Hax juice and the plastic lemon design received some press coverage.[13][15][16] The Hax logo used on Hax lemon juice dates back to at least 1935, at which time it was used in advertisements for Hax brand iodine pencils and Hax brand aspirin.[13]

The plastic lemon container and the idea of marketing lemon juice in this manner was also undertaken independently by Stanley Wagner, a businessperson in the frozen food industry, and also a former Royal Air Force fighter pilot.[11] Wagner's plastic lemon was produced by Shipton, a plastics company.[11] Wagner was with the company Coldcrops, Ltd., which produced Realemon.[8] The Realemon trademark was developed and used for a lemon juice product based upon reconstitution in the 1940s.[17] Realemon was later renamed to ReaLem by Coldcrops.[8] Hax lemon juice was the first to be packaged and marketed in said lemon-shaped container, with Coldcrops following shortly thereafter with their own design.[13] It is of intrigue to some that both Pugh and Wagner were both former Royal Air Force pilots.[8][11]

Over the course of a ten-month period from mid-1955 to early 1956 more than six million of the plastic juice lemons were sold by Coldcrops. This initially began under the brand name "Realemon", and then after an objection by the then Board of Trade, the name was changed to "ReaLem" and marketed with the slogan "juice in a jiffy".[8] The Board of Trade objected because it was perceived that Coldcrops was possibly passing off their product as the Realemon brand from the United States.[13] During this same time period, Hax was marketing tomato ketchup and brown sauce in custom-shaped plastic containers, for use on restaurant tables. After a long argument about plastic containers, the two companies agreed that they would not compete with one-another, and Coldcrops took the marketing rights for plastic lemons under the ReaLem brand.[8] Coldcrops would market ReaLem lemon juice[18] and agreed to not enter other plastic container markets.

Jif brand edit

Reckitt and Colman approached Stanley Wagner to buy Coldcrops, and after a very long negotiation a deal was concluded.[8][11] A letter from Barclays Bank dated 21 June 1956 reads " Dear Mr Wagner, I have pleasure in enclosing two copies of the Draft for £......... credited to your account, which the Bank will be pleased if you will accept as a souvenir of this most successful transaction". The deal transferred ownership of the packaging and concept from Coldcrops to Reckitt & Coleman, and the new Jif-brand lemon juice was launched in 1956.[11][19] All parties were delighted, Stanley Wagner with a substantial sum of money, for those days and a large profit from the six million lemons that had been sold, Reckitt's even more so because the negotiating team had permission to pay far more for the business than they were able to achieve. Lemon farmers in Sicily were also pleased, because the demand had increased for Sicilian lemon juice, which was largely a by-product of Sicilian lemon oil production. For many years, whilst producing lemon oil, Sicilians had found little use for the juice. Now there was a rapidly growing market for their near-waste product. In 1970, Jif continued to be prepared with lemon juice from Sicily.[20] Later on, Unilever acquired the Jif brand in 1995 for the price of £250m, when it purchased Colman's of Norwich.[21]

At the time of Jif's product launch in 1956, it was marketed with the tagline 'Real lemon juice in a Jif'.[11] In 1956, Jif was the sole brand of lemon juice packaged in a squeeze pack container in the United Kingdom.[7] The new Jif brand used the packaging developed by Shipton Plastics, ( a manufacturer of telephone casings), quite independently of Hack and Cascelloid, developing the plastic lemon for ReaLemon whilst Cascelloid were concentrating on tomato ketchup containers.

Competitors edit

The U.S. company Borden acquired the rights to the ReaLemon brand of lemon juice in the United States in 1962 when it purchased the ReaLemon-Puritan Company for around $12.4 million.[17] ReaLemon had begun production in the U.S. in the 1930s.[11][22]

Sales of ReaLemon realized successful profits in Europe in 1975, at which time Borden expanded into the United Kingdom market, purveying a 250 ml bottle of lemon juice.[11] By 1980, ReaLemon comprised around 25% of the U.K. lemon juice market.[11] In response to this competition, Reckitt & Coleman began producing Jif in 150 ml- and 250 ml-sized bottles.[11] Borden then began making plans to market ReaLemon in a lemon-shaped package that was similar to Jif's packaging.[8][11] This resulted in a lawsuit initiated by Reckitt & Coleman against Borden, based upon the notion that ReaLemon was attempting to copy Jif's packaging in attempts to mislead consumers, by passing off their product as Jif.[8][11]

The case became known as "The Jif Lemon case", and was settled in 1990 in the Court of Appeal.[11] It was ruled that a sufficient public recognition of Jif's packaging was existent, which created an established reputation for the brand.[11] The ruling stated that consumers would be "likely to believe that the ReaLemon was a Jif Lemon when they saw it on a supermarket shelf."[11] The ruling in Reckitt & Colman's favour occurred even though Reckitt & Colman did not register the plastic lemon packaging.[8]

Marketing edit

Jif is sometimes used on pancakes.[23] An advertising campaign introduced the catch-phrase "Don't forget the pancakes on Jif lemon day,"[24] in reference to Shrove Tuesday,[25] which is also referred to as Pancake Day. The campaign and slogan was devised by Reckitt and Colman's advertising agency, Foote Cone and Belding.[8] The Jif lemon-shaped packaging aligned Jif with the consumption of pancakes on Shrove Tuesday in consumers' minds, creating a strong link between the product and Shrove Tuesday.[11] Jif and pancakes is a popular combination on Shrove Tuesday.[26] In 2000, over 80,000 Jif lemons were being produced per day to meet consumer demand for Pancake Day, beginning five weeks prior to Pancake Day.[8][13][14] This occurred despite fresh lemons having greater availability during this time compared to other time periods.[8] The adverts were shown throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s decades on television screens in Ireland and United Kingdom.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Product Detail Information: JIF Lemon Juice 250ml". Unilever Food Solutions United Kingdom. 24 August 2015. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  2. ^ International Media Law: A Monthly Bulletin on Rights, Clearances and Legal Practice. Oyez Longman. 1987. p. 56. They also bore the legends 'ReaLemon' and 'natural strength'. But the court decided that a shopper would select the JIF product by its shape and would be unlikely to notice the JIF legend. Accordingly, the defendants had insufficiently distin- ...
  3. ^ a b c d "Jif Squeezy Lemon Juice". Tesco. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  4. ^ Campbell, D.; Cotter, S.; Studies, Center for International Legal (1997). Unfair Trading Practices. Comparative Law Yearbook Ser. Set Series. Springer Netherlands. p. 169. ISBN 978-90-411-0721-3.
  5. ^ Flint, M.F.; Thorne, C.D. (1997). A User's Guide to Copyright. Butterworths. pp. 40–42. ISBN 978-0-406-04608-6. The court found that Jif was, and had for a long time, been the only lemon-sized squeezy pack of lemon juice on the market. Jif, as a brand name, was well known among shoppers generally. Shoppers, generally, were well aware ...
  6. ^ "Accountancy". Volume 105. Society of Incorporated Accountants and Auditors. 1990. p. 51. Retrieved 12 December 2015. Each pack held 55ml of juice and looked like a real lemon in shape, size and colour. It had a yellow removable cap at one end over the nozzle and the word 'Jif printed on the lemon, with a loose green triangular label with 'Jif printed on it, held ...
  7. ^ a b Wadlow, C. (2011). The Law of Passing-off: Unfair Competition by Misrepresentation. Intellectual Property Library – Sweet & Maxwell. Sweet & Maxwell. p. 728. ISBN 978-0-414-04232-2.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p . Sun Branding Solutions. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  9. ^ a b McDermott, C.; Design Museum (London, England) (1998). Design Museum Book of Twentieth Century Design. Overlook Press, Peter Mayer Publishers. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-87951-852-3. For many people, the Jif lemon is the definitive pack design: functional, easy to use and highly distinctive. ... It was one of the earliest food applications for blow-moulded polythene, replacing glass bottles for lemon juice. By the 1950s ...
  10. ^ Danovich, Tove (March 16, 2015). "Looks Matter: A Century Of Iconic Food Packaging". NPR. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Jif Lemon". Marketing. February 22, 2012. Retrieved 13 December 2015. (subscription required)
  12. ^ a b c "Obituary: Bill Pugh". The Independent. June 30, 1994. Archived from the original on 2022-06-08. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Davis, Deborah; Ludacer, Randy (July 23, 2015). "The HAX plastic lemon pack". Box Vox. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "Unilever Archives". Unilever (on Facebook). Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  15. ^ a b Bottling: A Quarterly Supplement to the Brewing Trade Review. 1954. p. 196.
  16. ^ "The Princess Royal receives a Hax "lemon"". The Chemist and Druggist. June 25, 1955. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  17. ^ a b The Federal Reporter. West Publishing Company. 1982. p. 505. Sometime in the 1940s the ReaLemon trademark was developed and used for the reconstituted lemon juice product. At that time ... Borden purchased the ReaLemon-Puritan Company in 1962 for approximately $12.4 million. Borden has ...
  18. ^ Court of Customs and Patent Appeals. The Court. 1955. pp. 111–112. Appellant is a customshouse broker for the Realem-on-Puritan Company which imports practically all of the concentrated lemon juice entering this country. It is engaged in reconstituting the juice to its original strength, then bottling and selling ...
  19. ^ "Food Processing". Volume 58. Techpress (FPI) Limited. 1989. p. 50. Retrieved 12 December 2015. It appears that since about 1956, Colmans have sold lemon juice under the name JIF in a particular type of lemon squeeze ...
  20. ^ Home Economics. Forbes Publications. 1970. p. 29.
  21. ^ Shepherd, John (May 10, 1995). "Slow recovery hampers Unilever". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-06-08. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  22. ^ Party Line. Lulu.com. 1945. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-9794477-0-9. REALEMON® Juice AND REALIME® Juice Both are Borden products and are very handy and convenient whether you ... ReaLemon® Juice was introduced in 1935, and distributed by the Realemon-Puritan Company and ReaLime® Juice in ...
  23. ^ Naylor, Tony (February 17, 2015). "Recipes for success: how to eat pancakes". The Guardian. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  24. ^ "Jif Lemon Day television advertisement". YouTube. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  25. ^ Glyn-Jones, A. (1996). Holding Up a Mirror: How Civilizations Decline. Imprint Academic. pp. 405–406. ISBN 978-0-907845-60-7. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  26. ^ Dimbleby, Henry; Baxter, Jane (February 28, 2014). "Back to basics". The Guardian. Retrieved December 12, 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Aplin, T.F.; Aplin, T.; Davis, J. (2013). Intellectual Property Law: Text, Cases, and Materials. Text, Cases, and Materials Series. OUP Oxford. pp. 276–282. ISBN 978-0-19-964330-1.
  • Smartt, U. (2014). Media & Entertainment Law 2/e. Taylor & Francis. p. 431. ISBN 978-1-317-80816-9. In the Reckitt & Colman ('Jif Lemon') case, the HL issued a permanent injunction preventing Borden from marketing a lemon-shaped container to sell 'squeezy' lemon juice, which the US firm had done since 1985. Reckitt & Colman had ...
  • Torremans, P. (2013). Holyoak and Torremans Intellectual Property Law. OUP Oxford. p. 566. ISBN 978-0-19-964331-8.
  • FoodManufacture.co.uk (March 30, 2011). "Unilever says Colman's investment may cut jobs". FoodManufacture.co.uk. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  • "Frozen Foods". Journal of the Frozen Food Industry. February 1963.

External links edit

  • HAX Packs. Box vox.
  • How Much Juice In One Lemon?

lemon, juice, brand, natural, strength, lemon, juice, prepared, using, lemon, juice, concentrate, water, whereby, concentrate, reconstituted, using, water, after, reconstitution, packaged, marketed, sold, united, kingdom, ireland, unilever, used, flavourant, i. Jif is a brand of natural strength lemon juice prepared using lemon juice concentrate and water whereby the concentrate is reconstituted using water 1 After reconstitution it is packaged and marketed It is sold in the United Kingdom and Ireland by Unilever Jif is used as a flavourant and ingredient in dishes and as a condiment Two tablespoons is around the equivalent of the juice of one lemon The product has a shelf life of six months JifA Jif lemon with the label attachedProduct typeLemon juiceOwnerUnileverProduced byUnileverIntroduced1956 68 years ago 1956 MarketsUnited Kingdom and IrelandPrevious ownersReckitt and ColmanJif is packaged in lemon shaped squeezable containers and in bottles Development of the plastic container began in the 1950s it was one of the original blow moulded containers used for food applications Jif brand lemon juice was established in 1956 The Jif Lemon case occurred in the 1980s when the US company Borden introduced lemon juice packaged in a similar container to the UK Reckitt amp Coleman sued Borden for passing off The case was settled in 1990 for Reckitt amp Coleman Jif is sometimes used on pancakes and was marketed from 1985 to be used on pancakes for Shrove Tuesday with the slogan Don t forget the pancakes on Jif Lemon Day Contents 1 Formulation 1 1 Nutrition information 1 2 Uses 2 Packaging 3 History 3 1 Hax Realemon and ReaLem brands 3 2 Jif brand 3 3 Competitors 4 Marketing 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksFormulation editJifNutritional value per 5 mlEnergy1 kcal 4 2 kJ Carbohydrates0 1 gSource 1 Units mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Jif is prepared from reconstituted lemon concentrate and water as primary ingredients and is formulated to be the same strength as natural lemons 2 The concentrate is reconstituted using water The product contains the food preservative E223 sodium metabisulphite 3 Jif has a shelf life of six months 3 Two tablespoons is the equivalent of the juice of one lemon 3 Nutrition information edit A 5 ml serving size of Jif provides 1 kcal kilocalorie of energy and 0 1 grams of carbohydrate 1 Uses edit Jif is used as an ingredient and flavourant in dishes and foods and as a condiment such as on pancakes It may be used to add flavour to salads sauces fish and seafood 3 among other foods It can be used in recipes that require or recommend the use of lemon juice Packaging edit nbsp The size of a Jif lemon juice container compared to orangesAside from its plastic lemon shaped containers containing 55 ml of juice 4 5 6 usually known as jiffy lemons or jif lemons Jif lemon juice is also sold in bottles 1 The plastic container is a squeeze pack container whereupon squeezing the container releases juice from its nozzle 7 Jif containers were embossed with the brand name Jif in 1956 the same year the company came into existence 8 Contemporary Jif containers have the phrase Jif real lemon juice embossed on the side of the squeeze pack The Jif plastic containers were originally made from polythene and were one of the original and first blow moulded containers used for food applications 9 The plastic containers served to replace glass bottles used to package lemon juice 9 The plastic container was the brainchild of Edward Hack and the container s design was undertaken by Bill Pugh the chief plastics designer at Cascelloid In its development Pugh carved a core made of wood covered it with fresh lemon peel to give it a realistic texture and then cast a plaster mould 10 11 12 This led to the realistic looking container that significantly resembles a lemon Some sources have stated that similar plastic lemon packaging existed in Italy at the time of the end of World War II prior to the time of the packaging design in the United Kingdom 8 13 History editHax Realemon and ReaLem brands edit Edward Hack developed the original idea and model of lemon juice being contained inside lemon shaped and coloured packaging in the 1950s 13 14 The product was then designed and produced by Cascelloid Ltd 13 14 Hack presented Cascelloid with a fresh lemon he acquired at Covent Garden upon which to base the plastic container 13 14 Hack had performed significant searches at several markets to find an optimal model 13 14 Cascelloid stated that Hack reviewed and evaluated the entire inventory of lemons at Fortnum and Mason s Selfridges Harrods and Covent Garden the latter of which involved examining three cases of lemons that contained around 300 lemons in each case 13 14 Stanley Wagner had been brought up in the wholesale fruit business his father having a very substantial company in Spitalfields Market Bill Pugh the chief plastics designer at Cascelloid based in Leicester and former Royal Air Force pilot created a prototype of the blown lemon shaped plastic shaped container 12 based upon Hack s idea sometime in the 1950s 13 as well as other types of blown containers 8 11 Pugh s experimented with the initial design until he was satisfied with its appearance 12 This plastic lemon product was then used for Hax lemon juice 8 13 Edward Hack Ltd produced and marketed Hax brand squeezable plastic lemon containers filled with two ounces of Sicilian lemon juice 13 15 Per Edward Hack Ltd the juice was unfiltered had no water added to it and contained a preservative to prevent spoilage 13 Retailers could purchase the product in packs of six bags that contained 12 squeeze packs each totalling 72 units 13 Upon introduction to the marketplace Hax juice and the plastic lemon design received some press coverage 13 15 16 The Hax logo used on Hax lemon juice dates back to at least 1935 at which time it was used in advertisements for Hax brand iodine pencils and Hax brand aspirin 13 The plastic lemon container and the idea of marketing lemon juice in this manner was also undertaken independently by Stanley Wagner a businessperson in the frozen food industry and also a former Royal Air Force fighter pilot 11 Wagner s plastic lemon was produced by Shipton a plastics company 11 Wagner was with the company Coldcrops Ltd which produced Realemon 8 The Realemon trademark was developed and used for a lemon juice product based upon reconstitution in the 1940s 17 Realemon was later renamed to ReaLem by Coldcrops 8 Hax lemon juice was the first to be packaged and marketed in said lemon shaped container with Coldcrops following shortly thereafter with their own design 13 It is of intrigue to some that both Pugh and Wagner were both former Royal Air Force pilots 8 11 Over the course of a ten month period from mid 1955 to early 1956 more than six million of the plastic juice lemons were sold by Coldcrops This initially began under the brand name Realemon and then after an objection by the then Board of Trade the name was changed to ReaLem and marketed with the slogan juice in a jiffy 8 The Board of Trade objected because it was perceived that Coldcrops was possibly passing off their product as the Realemon brand from the United States 13 During this same time period Hax was marketing tomato ketchup and brown sauce in custom shaped plastic containers for use on restaurant tables After a long argument about plastic containers the two companies agreed that they would not compete with one another and Coldcrops took the marketing rights for plastic lemons under the ReaLem brand 8 Coldcrops would market ReaLem lemon juice 18 and agreed to not enter other plastic container markets Jif brand edit Reckitt and Colman approached Stanley Wagner to buy Coldcrops and after a very long negotiation a deal was concluded 8 11 A letter from Barclays Bank dated 21 June 1956 reads Dear Mr Wagner I have pleasure in enclosing two copies of the Draft for credited to your account which the Bank will be pleased if you will accept as a souvenir of this most successful transaction The deal transferred ownership of the packaging and concept from Coldcrops to Reckitt amp Coleman and the new Jif brand lemon juice was launched in 1956 11 19 All parties were delighted Stanley Wagner with a substantial sum of money for those days and a large profit from the six million lemons that had been sold Reckitt s even more so because the negotiating team had permission to pay far more for the business than they were able to achieve Lemon farmers in Sicily were also pleased because the demand had increased for Sicilian lemon juice which was largely a by product of Sicilian lemon oil production For many years whilst producing lemon oil Sicilians had found little use for the juice Now there was a rapidly growing market for their near waste product In 1970 Jif continued to be prepared with lemon juice from Sicily 20 Later on Unilever acquired the Jif brand in 1995 for the price of 250m when it purchased Colman s of Norwich 21 At the time of Jif s product launch in 1956 it was marketed with the tagline Real lemon juice in a Jif 11 In 1956 Jif was the sole brand of lemon juice packaged in a squeeze pack container in the United Kingdom 7 The new Jif brand used the packaging developed by Shipton Plastics a manufacturer of telephone casings quite independently of Hack and Cascelloid developing the plastic lemon for ReaLemon whilst Cascelloid were concentrating on tomato ketchup containers Competitors edit The U S company Borden acquired the rights to the ReaLemon brand of lemon juice in the United States in 1962 when it purchased the ReaLemon Puritan Company for around 12 4 million 17 ReaLemon had begun production in the U S in the 1930s 11 22 Sales of ReaLemon realized successful profits in Europe in 1975 at which time Borden expanded into the United Kingdom market purveying a 250 ml bottle of lemon juice 11 By 1980 ReaLemon comprised around 25 of the U K lemon juice market 11 In response to this competition Reckitt amp Coleman began producing Jif in 150 ml and 250 ml sized bottles 11 Borden then began making plans to market ReaLemon in a lemon shaped package that was similar to Jif s packaging 8 11 This resulted in a lawsuit initiated by Reckitt amp Coleman against Borden based upon the notion that ReaLemon was attempting to copy Jif s packaging in attempts to mislead consumers by passing off their product as Jif 8 11 The case became known as The Jif Lemon case and was settled in 1990 in the Court of Appeal 11 It was ruled that a sufficient public recognition of Jif s packaging was existent which created an established reputation for the brand 11 The ruling stated that consumers would be likely to believe that the ReaLemon was a Jif Lemon when they saw it on a supermarket shelf 11 The ruling in Reckitt amp Colman s favour occurred even though Reckitt amp Colman did not register the plastic lemon packaging 8 Marketing editJif is sometimes used on pancakes 23 An advertising campaign introduced the catch phrase Don t forget the pancakes on Jif lemon day 24 in reference to Shrove Tuesday 25 which is also referred to as Pancake Day The campaign and slogan was devised by Reckitt and Colman s advertising agency Foote Cone and Belding 8 The Jif lemon shaped packaging aligned Jif with the consumption of pancakes on Shrove Tuesday in consumers minds creating a strong link between the product and Shrove Tuesday 11 Jif and pancakes is a popular combination on Shrove Tuesday 26 In 2000 over 80 000 Jif lemons were being produced per day to meet consumer demand for Pancake Day beginning five weeks prior to Pancake Day 8 13 14 This occurred despite fresh lemons having greater availability during this time compared to other time periods 8 The adverts were shown throughout the 1970s 1980s and 1990s decades on television screens in Ireland and United Kingdom See also editReaLemon CifReferences edit a b c d Product Detail Information JIF Lemon Juice 250ml Unilever Food Solutions United Kingdom 24 August 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help International Media Law A Monthly Bulletin on Rights Clearances and Legal Practice Oyez Longman 1987 p 56 They also bore the legends ReaLemon and natural strength But the court decided that a shopper would select the JIF product by its shape and would be unlikely to notice the JIF legend Accordingly the defendants had insufficiently distin a b c d Jif Squeezy Lemon Juice Tesco Retrieved 13 December 2015 Campbell D Cotter S Studies Center for International Legal 1997 Unfair Trading Practices Comparative Law Yearbook Ser Set Series Springer Netherlands p 169 ISBN 978 90 411 0721 3 Flint M F Thorne C D 1997 A User s Guide to Copyright Butterworths pp 40 42 ISBN 978 0 406 04608 6 The court found that Jif was and had for a long time been the only lemon sized squeezy pack of lemon juice on the market Jif as a brand name was well known among shoppers generally Shoppers generally were well aware Accountancy Volume 105 Society of Incorporated Accountants and Auditors 1990 p 51 Retrieved 12 December 2015 Each pack held 55ml of juice and looked like a real lemon in shape size and colour It had a yellow removable cap at one end over the nozzle and the word Jif printed on the lemon with a loose green triangular label with Jif printed on it held a b Wadlow C 2011 The Law of Passing off Unfair Competition by Misrepresentation Intellectual Property Library Sweet amp Maxwell Sweet amp Maxwell p 728 ISBN 978 0 414 04232 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p History of the world in 52 packs Jif lemon Sun Branding Solutions Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved December 13 2015 a b McDermott C Design Museum London England 1998 Design Museum Book of Twentieth Century Design Overlook Press Peter Mayer Publishers p 293 ISBN 978 0 87951 852 3 For many people the Jif lemon is the definitive pack design functional easy to use and highly distinctive It was one of the earliest food applications for blow moulded polythene replacing glass bottles for lemon juice By the 1950s Danovich Tove March 16 2015 Looks Matter A Century Of Iconic Food Packaging NPR Retrieved December 12 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Jif Lemon Marketing February 22 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2015 subscription required a b c Obituary Bill Pugh The Independent June 30 1994 Archived from the original on 2022 06 08 Retrieved December 13 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Davis Deborah Ludacer Randy July 23 2015 The HAX plastic lemon pack Box Vox Retrieved December 13 2015 a b c d e f Unilever Archives Unilever on Facebook Retrieved 13 December 2015 a b Bottling A Quarterly Supplement to the Brewing Trade Review 1954 p 196 The Princess Royal receives a Hax lemon The Chemist and Druggist June 25 1955 Retrieved 13 December 2015 a b The Federal Reporter West Publishing Company 1982 p 505 Sometime in the 1940s the ReaLemon trademark was developed and used for the reconstituted lemon juice product At that time Borden purchased the ReaLemon Puritan Company in 1962 for approximately 12 4 million Borden has Court of Customs and Patent Appeals The Court 1955 pp 111 112 Appellant is a customshouse broker for the Realem on Puritan Company which imports practically all of the concentrated lemon juice entering this country It is engaged in reconstituting the juice to its original strength then bottling and selling Food Processing Volume 58 Techpress FPI Limited 1989 p 50 Retrieved 12 December 2015 It appears that since about 1956 Colmans have sold lemon juice under the name JIF in a particular type of lemon squeeze Home Economics Forbes Publications 1970 p 29 Shepherd John May 10 1995 Slow recovery hampers Unilever The Independent Archived from the original on 2022 06 08 Retrieved December 12 2015 Party Line Lulu com 1945 p 167 ISBN 978 0 9794477 0 9 REALEMON Juice AND REALIME Juice Both are Borden products and are very handy and convenient whether you ReaLemon Juice was introduced in 1935 and distributed by the Realemon Puritan Company and ReaLime Juice in Naylor Tony February 17 2015 Recipes for success how to eat pancakes The Guardian Retrieved December 12 2015 Jif Lemon Day television advertisement YouTube Retrieved 13 December 2015 Glyn Jones A 1996 Holding Up a Mirror How Civilizations Decline Imprint Academic pp 405 406 ISBN 978 0 907845 60 7 Retrieved December 12 2015 Dimbleby Henry Baxter Jane February 28 2014 Back to basics The Guardian Retrieved December 12 2015 Further reading editAplin T F Aplin T Davis J 2013 Intellectual Property Law Text Cases and Materials Text Cases and Materials Series OUP Oxford pp 276 282 ISBN 978 0 19 964330 1 Smartt U 2014 Media amp Entertainment Law 2 e Taylor amp Francis p 431 ISBN 978 1 317 80816 9 In the Reckitt amp Colman Jif Lemon case the HL issued a permanent injunction preventing Borden from marketing a lemon shaped container to sell squeezy lemon juice which the US firm had done since 1985 Reckitt amp Colman had Torremans P 2013 Holyoak and Torremans Intellectual Property Law OUP Oxford p 566 ISBN 978 0 19 964331 8 FoodManufacture co uk March 30 2011 Unilever says Colman s investment may cut jobs FoodManufacture co uk Retrieved December 12 2015 Frozen Foods Journal of the Frozen Food Industry February 1963 External links editJif Lemon homepage HAX Packs Box vox How Much Juice In One Lemon Portals nbsp Companies nbsp Food nbsp Drink nbsp United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jif lemon juice amp oldid 1191442153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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