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Lender's Bagels

Lender's Bagels is a brand of bagels that pioneered the pre-packaged bagel industry in the United States. Established in 1927 in New Haven, Connecticut, by the Lender family, it became a North American leader in the marketing, distribution and sales of bagels. Lender's introduced frozen bagels and sold the first packaged bagels in supermarkets, eventually becoming the world's biggest bagel producer. The company was sold to Kraft Foods in 1984. In 2003, it became part of Pinnacle Foods. In 1994 it began production of room-temperature fresh bagels. In 2012, Lender's revenue was about $70 million.

Lender's Bagels
Product typeBagels
OwnerBimbo Bakeries USA
(Grupo Bimbo)
Introduced1927 in New Haven, Connecticut
Previous ownersKraft (1984–1996)
Kellogg's (1996–1999)
Aurora Food (1999–2003)
Pinnacle Foods (2003–2018)
Conagra Brands (2018–2020)
Websitehttp://www.lendersbagels.com/

In 2018 Pinnacle foods was sold to Conagra, which then sold Lenders Bagels out of Pinnacle to Bimbo Bakery

History Edit

 
Lender's Cinnamon Raisin Swirl bagels

Beginnings Edit

Lender's Bagel Bakery was established by Harry Lender, a Jewish baker originally from Chelm, Poland. He had immigrated to the United States from Lublin in August 1927. His surname is a transliteration of the Yiddish word meaning "countryman" or "person living in a rural area" (cf. modern German Länder).[1] After first working in a bagel bakery in Passaic, New Jersey, Lender purchased his own bakery on Oak Street in New Haven, Connecticut, for $600. He arranged for his family to join him in the United States and they arrived on December 30, 1929.[citation needed]

New Haven then had a population of over 162,000, many of them new immigrants. The Jewish population of 25,000 made up almost one-sixth of the population. Lender's bagel bakery, called the "New York Bagel Bakery", was one of the first bagel bakeries in the United States to be established outside New York City.[2] In 2007, the site of the first Lender's bagel bakery was dedicated as a playground; it was named after one of Harry Lender's sons: “Murray Lender Playground”.[3]

In 1934, Lender moved to a large former Italian bakery, in a multi-ethnic neighborhood of New Haven.[2] Aside from sales to individuals, Lender sold his bagels to other bakeries, as well as to delicatessens and restaurants. As the largest sales of bagels came on Sunday morning, Saturday night was the busiest time at the bakery. People of all ethnicities, even from out of town, began to stop by the bakery on Saturday nights to purchase fresh bagels.[2]

New processes lead to growth Edit

By the mid-1950s, the logistics of producing as many as 6,000 bagels for sale on Sunday morning, in contrast to relatively low activity the rest of the week, began to demand a solution. As a result, in 1954 Lender perfected a method of freezing the bagels, so that the labor could be spread more evenly throughout the week.[4] He kept this process a secret, but after two years, the bakery accidentally delivered frozen bagels, and the secret was revealed. Customers were initially angry, but were won over, when they realized that these were the same bagels they had been satisfied with for the previous two years. The New York Bagel Bakery started to market the frozen bagels, including delivery outside New Haven, for instance to resorts in the Catskills that were popular among Jews.[2]

Lender developed further refinements, such as pre-slicing the bagels and packing them in polyethylene bags to keep them fresh after thawing. The bakery began selling the packaged frozen bagels in supermarkets. To introduce bagels to an unfamiliar public, the Lender family would prepare and distribute them in supermarket aisles. The plastic bagged, frozen six pack of pre-sliced Lender's Frozen Bagels began to gain market share, and by 1959 supermarket sales accounted for half of the sales.[5] His business created new varieties of bagels, and production was switched to rotary ovens, rather than the labor-intensive open, flat ovens.[2]

In 1960, Harry Lender died. His sons Sam and Murray, who had been running the bakery with him, continued. (The oldest son Hyman had previously left the family business.) When youngest son Marvin graduated from college, he became a partner as well, and shortly thereafter Sam retired. The two brothers teamed up to expand operations, with Marvin managing the bakery and Murray in charge of sales.[2]

In 1963 the Lenders leased the very first Thompson Bagel Machine, invented by Daniel T. Thompson. Until then, according to Thompson,

“Sam Lender mixed the bagel dough and one man cut it into small slabs and fed it into an Italian breadstick machine. The Italian breadstick machine made bagel dough strips that were then distributed to workstations where six to eight men rolled them by hand into bagels. With this system they averaged 50 dozen bagels per hour per man. The first Thompson machine, with three unskilled workers, was able to do the work of eight skilled workers.”[6]

Large-scale expansion Edit

In 1965 the bakery, now renamed "Lender's Bagel Bakery", moved to a 12,000-square-foot (1,100 m2) plant on the Boston Post Road in West Haven, in order to have ample reserve capacity for expansion. Business increased so quickly that the bakery was working at full capacity within a year.[2] The Lenders began flash-freezing the bagels and produced softer and sweeter bagels than was traditional.[7]

In 1974, Lender’s had bought their major competitor, Abel's Bagels in Buffalo, New York.[8] In 1978 the family opened a bagel restaurant in Orange, Connecticut, under the name “H. Lender and Sons”; two years later they opened a second one in Hamden. After Lender's Bagels was sold to Kraft Foods, the name of the restaurant was changed to S. Kinder Restaurants. The name is derived from Yiddish esst, kinder, meaning eat, children.[9]

Under Marvin and Murray Lender, Lender's Bagels eventually grew to a highly automated 25,000-square-foot (2,300 m2) bakery, pioneering the modern automated bagel bakery. The company grew from six employees when it moved to West Haven to 600 in 1984, selling about $60 million worth of bagels from four bagel factories producing more than 750,000,000 bagels a year,[2] becoming the world's biggest bagel producer.[7]

Marketing Edit

Murray Lender's marketing promotions put bagels into the public consciousness. He was traveling throughout the United States marketing Lender's Frozen Bagels to a country which was disdainful of frozen foods and unfamiliar with bagels. In response to observations that March was the slowest month for sales of frozen foods, Murray Lender led an effort to declare March as Frozen Foods Month, raising sales dramatically.[10] In recognition of his contributions to the industry as a whole, he was elected chairman of the National Frozen Food Association, nominated to the Halls of Fame of the International Deli-Bakery Association, and the Frozen Food Association. In response to the public's growing consciousness of health foods and the drop in popularity of white bread, he began to stress bagels as more natural baked goods, and Lender's Bagels became one of the first products to voluntarily include nutritional information on the package.[2]

In a 1997 New York Times article, Eric Asimov described what he called the "informal border separating the land of fresh bagels from the frontier of the frozen assembly-line product made by Lender's Bagels" as "the Lender's Line."[11] Murray Lender appeared as a guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.[12] He created green bagels for Saint Patrick's Day, oval bagels for President Lyndon B. Johnson to be photographed eating in the Oval Office, and "bagel heads", miniature decorated bagels, in the likeness of the world leaders attending the 9th G7 summit in 1983.[2] In the late 1980s and early 1990s, a cartoon mascot, "BagelBird", was featured on t-shirts and other mail-order merchandise to promote the brand. When he died at age 81 on March 21, 2012, the Washington Post called him "the most important man in the modern history of bagels," adding "Lender’s bagels may taste like white bread with a hole, but what they lack in authenticity they make up for in meaning."[13]

New ownership Edit

In the spring of 1984, the Lender family sold Lender's Frozen Bagels to Kraft Foods, with the stipulation that Marvin would remain president and Murray spokesman for the next two years. Murray Lender publicized the sale in characteristic form, by holding "the marriage of the century", with Murray and Marvin escorting a 6-foot-tall (1.8 m) Lender’s Bagel, "Len", down the aisle to meet his new bride, "Phyl", a Kraft Philadelphia brand cream cheese.[2] In 1987, Lender's had three plants in West Haven, a plant in New Haven, one in Buffalo, New York, and one in Mattoon, Illinois;[14] the last is the site of the annual "Bagelfest", and also the only surviving Lender's Bagel plant in operation today.[15] Kraft, which reportedly spent $12 to $15 million annually to advertise Lender's bagels,[16] sold the company to Kellogg Company in 1996 for $455 million. Analysts criticized Kellogg's investment in a frozen product at a time when the popularity of fresh bagels was rising.[17] Kellogg's introduced a $20 million television campaign for Lender's in Fall 1997.[18] In October 1999, Kellogg's sold the business to San Francisco based Aurora Foods for $275 million,[19] and ceased production at the New Haven factory in March 2000.[17] In 2003, Aurora was bought by Pinnacle Foods, a subsidiary of the Blackstone Group since 2007.[20]

As of 2013, the Lender's Bagels brand is in production with a wide variety of bagels, including a Healthy Grain bagel brand containing more dietary fiber and protein than the company’s other bagels.[21] In 2011, Lender’s revenue was $40.9 million from the sale of 23.4 million six-bagel packages,[22] $12.7 million from the sale of 7.6 million units of frozen bagels, and $28.2 million from the sale of 15.8 million units of refrigerated bagels. According to SymphonyIRI Group, a Chicago-based market research firm, Lender’s is the top selling brand in each segment.[23] In 2012, Lender's Bagels sales increased to more than $70 million.[21]

In May 2012, Consumer Reports magazine rated Lender's Original as one of the best bagels sold by American fast-food chains and grocery stores,[24] an assessment criticized by many commentators – especially in New York – who argued that only fresh bagels are real bagels.[25]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Balinska, Maria (2008), pp.149-150
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k . New Haven Independent. May 29, 2009. Archived from the original on November 27, 2009. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
  3. ^ Aitken, Kate (September 13, 2007). "Playground named for famed bagelmaker". Yale Daily News. Archived from the original on February 9, 2013. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  4. ^ Balinska, Maria (2008), pp.151-154
  5. ^ Balinska, Maria (2008), p.153
  6. ^ Thompson, Daniel T. "Thompson Bagel Machine, History and Development". Thompson Bagel Machine. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  7. ^ a b Marks, Gil (2010). Bagel. In: Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley and Sons. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-470-39130-3.
  8. ^ Balinska, Maria (2008), p.164
  9. ^ Bass, Sharon L. (January 4, 1987). "'Bagel Boom' Spurs Lively Competition". The New York Times. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  10. ^ "Murray Lender. Murray Lender, bagel-promoter, died on March 21st, aged 81". The Economist. April 21, 2012. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  11. ^ Asimov, Eric (March 16, 1997). "Is a Bagel Still a Bagel in Maui?". The New York Times. p. 3. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  12. ^ Balinska, Maria (2008), p.172
  13. ^ Rothman, Lily (March 23, 2012). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on December 6, 2012. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  14. ^ Hamilton, Robert A. (September 27, 1987). "The View from Putnem; Bagels Give Town an Economic Boost". The New York Times. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  15. ^ Gregory, Ted (July 25, 2003). "Bagel town feels bite of downturn. Downstate Mattoon is home to the world's largest bagel festival, but the factory that started it all may be in trouble". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  16. ^ Canedy, Dana (December 24, 1996). "Assignments Added For Two Agencies". The New York Times. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  17. ^ a b "Metro Business; Kellogg Will Close Lender's Bagel Plant". The New York Times. March 2, 2000. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  18. ^ Kane, Courtney (September 3, 1997). "Kellogg promotes its family of cereals, even the sugary ones, as components of a healthy diet". The New York Times. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  19. ^ "Business: Diary; An Analyst Speaks Out". The New York Times. October 3, 1999. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  20. ^ AP (February 13, 2007). "Blackstone Leads Group Buying Food Company". The New York Times. Retrieved November 9, 2011.
  21. ^ a b Schroeder, Eric (February 4, 2013). "The bagel chill". Food Business News. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  22. ^ Hevesi, Dennis (March 22, 2012). "Murray Lender, Who Gave All America a Taste of Bagels, Dies at 81". The New York Times. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  23. ^ . BakingBusiness.com. March 22, 2012. Archived from the original on May 29, 2014. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  24. ^ "Who makes the best bagels?". Consumer Reports magazine. May 2012. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  25. ^ Fasick, Kevin; Sanderson, Bill (March 21, 2012). "Consumer Reports rate frozen, chain bagels 'very good'". The New York Post.
    "New Yorkers Question Consumer Reports Top Bagel Picks". CBS New York. March 21, 2012.
    Locker, Melissa (March 22, 2012). "Food Fight: America's Best Bagel May Not Be from New York". Time magazine.
    Burstein, Nathan (March 24, 2012). "Critics see holes in Consumer Reports' bagel rankings". The Times of Israel. Retrieved May 2, 2013.

Further reading Edit

  • Balinska, Maria (2008). The Bagel: The Surprising History of a Modest Bread, Yale University Press, November 2008, ISBN 0-300-11229-7, ISBN 978-0-300-11229-0.
  • Bernstein, Eldon & Carstensen, Fred (1996). . Business and Economic History 25 (1), pp. 165–175.
  • Horowitz, Andy, & Fischer, David S., editor (2009). "Jews In New Haven Volume IX: The Lender Family of New Haven, Connecticut", Greater New Haven Jewish Historical Society (JHS).

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • Lender's Bagel Commercials on Youtube

lender, bagels, brand, bagels, that, pioneered, packaged, bagel, industry, united, states, established, 1927, haven, connecticut, lender, family, became, north, american, leader, marketing, distribution, sales, bagels, lender, introduced, frozen, bagels, sold,. Lender s Bagels is a brand of bagels that pioneered the pre packaged bagel industry in the United States Established in 1927 in New Haven Connecticut by the Lender family it became a North American leader in the marketing distribution and sales of bagels Lender s introduced frozen bagels and sold the first packaged bagels in supermarkets eventually becoming the world s biggest bagel producer The company was sold to Kraft Foods in 1984 In 2003 it became part of Pinnacle Foods In 1994 it began production of room temperature fresh bagels In 2012 Lender s revenue was about 70 million Lender s BagelsProduct typeBagelsOwnerBimbo Bakeries USA Grupo Bimbo Introduced1927 in New Haven ConnecticutPrevious ownersKraft 1984 1996 Kellogg s 1996 1999 Aurora Food 1999 2003 Pinnacle Foods 2003 2018 Conagra Brands 2018 2020 Websitehttp www lendersbagels com In 2018 Pinnacle foods was sold to Conagra which then sold Lenders Bagels out of Pinnacle to Bimbo Bakery Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 New processes lead to growth 1 3 Large scale expansion 2 Marketing 3 New ownership 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Lender s Cinnamon Raisin Swirl bagelsBeginnings Edit Lender s Bagel Bakery was established by Harry Lender a Jewish baker originally from Chelm Poland He had immigrated to the United States from Lublin in August 1927 His surname is a transliteration of the Yiddish word meaning countryman or person living in a rural area cf modern German Lander 1 After first working in a bagel bakery in Passaic New Jersey Lender purchased his own bakery on Oak Street in New Haven Connecticut for 600 He arranged for his family to join him in the United States and they arrived on December 30 1929 citation needed New Haven then had a population of over 162 000 many of them new immigrants The Jewish population of 25 000 made up almost one sixth of the population Lender s bagel bakery called the New York Bagel Bakery was one of the first bagel bakeries in the United States to be established outside New York City 2 In 2007 the site of the first Lender s bagel bakery was dedicated as a playground it was named after one of Harry Lender s sons Murray Lender Playground 3 In 1934 Lender moved to a large former Italian bakery in a multi ethnic neighborhood of New Haven 2 Aside from sales to individuals Lender sold his bagels to other bakeries as well as to delicatessens and restaurants As the largest sales of bagels came on Sunday morning Saturday night was the busiest time at the bakery People of all ethnicities even from out of town began to stop by the bakery on Saturday nights to purchase fresh bagels 2 New processes lead to growth Edit By the mid 1950s the logistics of producing as many as 6 000 bagels for sale on Sunday morning in contrast to relatively low activity the rest of the week began to demand a solution As a result in 1954 Lender perfected a method of freezing the bagels so that the labor could be spread more evenly throughout the week 4 He kept this process a secret but after two years the bakery accidentally delivered frozen bagels and the secret was revealed Customers were initially angry but were won over when they realized that these were the same bagels they had been satisfied with for the previous two years The New York Bagel Bakery started to market the frozen bagels including delivery outside New Haven for instance to resorts in the Catskills that were popular among Jews 2 Lender developed further refinements such as pre slicing the bagels and packing them in polyethylene bags to keep them fresh after thawing The bakery began selling the packaged frozen bagels in supermarkets To introduce bagels to an unfamiliar public the Lender family would prepare and distribute them in supermarket aisles The plastic bagged frozen six pack of pre sliced Lender s Frozen Bagels began to gain market share and by 1959 supermarket sales accounted for half of the sales 5 His business created new varieties of bagels and production was switched to rotary ovens rather than the labor intensive open flat ovens 2 In 1960 Harry Lender died His sons Sam and Murray who had been running the bakery with him continued The oldest son Hyman had previously left the family business When youngest son Marvin graduated from college he became a partner as well and shortly thereafter Sam retired The two brothers teamed up to expand operations with Marvin managing the bakery and Murray in charge of sales 2 In 1963 the Lenders leased the very first Thompson Bagel Machine invented by Daniel T Thompson Until then according to Thompson Sam Lender mixed the bagel dough and one man cut it into small slabs and fed it into an Italian breadstick machine The Italian breadstick machine made bagel dough strips that were then distributed to workstations where six to eight men rolled them by hand into bagels With this system they averaged 50 dozen bagels per hour per man The first Thompson machine with three unskilled workers was able to do the work of eight skilled workers 6 Large scale expansion Edit In 1965 the bakery now renamed Lender s Bagel Bakery moved to a 12 000 square foot 1 100 m2 plant on the Boston Post Road in West Haven in order to have ample reserve capacity for expansion Business increased so quickly that the bakery was working at full capacity within a year 2 The Lenders began flash freezing the bagels and produced softer and sweeter bagels than was traditional 7 In 1974 Lender s had bought their major competitor Abel s Bagels in Buffalo New York 8 In 1978 the family opened a bagel restaurant in Orange Connecticut under the name H Lender and Sons two years later they opened a second one in Hamden After Lender s Bagels was sold to Kraft Foods the name of the restaurant was changed to S Kinder Restaurants The name is derived from Yiddish esst kinder meaning eat children 9 Under Marvin and Murray Lender Lender s Bagels eventually grew to a highly automated 25 000 square foot 2 300 m2 bakery pioneering the modern automated bagel bakery The company grew from six employees when it moved to West Haven to 600 in 1984 selling about 60 million worth of bagels from four bagel factories producing more than 750 000 000 bagels a year 2 becoming the world s biggest bagel producer 7 Marketing EditMurray Lender s marketing promotions put bagels into the public consciousness He was traveling throughout the United States marketing Lender s Frozen Bagels to a country which was disdainful of frozen foods and unfamiliar with bagels In response to observations that March was the slowest month for sales of frozen foods Murray Lender led an effort to declare March as Frozen Foods Month raising sales dramatically 10 In recognition of his contributions to the industry as a whole he was elected chairman of the National Frozen Food Association nominated to the Halls of Fame of the International Deli Bakery Association and the Frozen Food Association In response to the public s growing consciousness of health foods and the drop in popularity of white bread he began to stress bagels as more natural baked goods and Lender s Bagels became one of the first products to voluntarily include nutritional information on the package 2 In a 1997 New York Times article Eric Asimov described what he called the informal border separating the land of fresh bagels from the frontier of the frozen assembly line product made by Lender s Bagels as the Lender s Line 11 Murray Lender appeared as a guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson 12 He created green bagels for Saint Patrick s Day oval bagels for President Lyndon B Johnson to be photographed eating in the Oval Office and bagel heads miniature decorated bagels in the likeness of the world leaders attending the 9th G7 summit in 1983 2 In the late 1980s and early 1990s a cartoon mascot BagelBird was featured on t shirts and other mail order merchandise to promote the brand When he died at age 81 on March 21 2012 the Washington Post called him the most important man in the modern history of bagels adding Lender s bagels may taste like white bread with a hole but what they lack in authenticity they make up for in meaning 13 New ownership EditIn the spring of 1984 the Lender family sold Lender s Frozen Bagels to Kraft Foods with the stipulation that Marvin would remain president and Murray spokesman for the next two years Murray Lender publicized the sale in characteristic form by holding the marriage of the century with Murray and Marvin escorting a 6 foot tall 1 8 m Lender s Bagel Len down the aisle to meet his new bride Phyl a Kraft Philadelphia brand cream cheese 2 In 1987 Lender s had three plants in West Haven a plant in New Haven one in Buffalo New York and one in Mattoon Illinois 14 the last is the site of the annual Bagelfest and also the only surviving Lender s Bagel plant in operation today 15 Kraft which reportedly spent 12 to 15 million annually to advertise Lender s bagels 16 sold the company to Kellogg Company in 1996 for 455 million Analysts criticized Kellogg s investment in a frozen product at a time when the popularity of fresh bagels was rising 17 Kellogg s introduced a 20 million television campaign for Lender s in Fall 1997 18 In October 1999 Kellogg s sold the business to San Francisco based Aurora Foods for 275 million 19 and ceased production at the New Haven factory in March 2000 17 In 2003 Aurora was bought by Pinnacle Foods a subsidiary of the Blackstone Group since 2007 20 As of 2013 the Lender s Bagels brand is in production with a wide variety of bagels including a Healthy Grain bagel brand containing more dietary fiber and protein than the company s other bagels 21 In 2011 Lender s revenue was 40 9 million from the sale of 23 4 million six bagel packages 22 12 7 million from the sale of 7 6 million units of frozen bagels and 28 2 million from the sale of 15 8 million units of refrigerated bagels According to SymphonyIRI Group a Chicago based market research firm Lender s is the top selling brand in each segment 23 In 2012 Lender s Bagels sales increased to more than 70 million 21 In May 2012 Consumer Reports magazine rated Lender s Original as one of the best bagels sold by American fast food chains and grocery stores 24 an assessment criticized by many commentators especially in New York who argued that only fresh bagels are real bagels 25 See also EditList of brand name breadsReferences Edit Balinska Maria 2008 pp 149 150 a b c d e f g h i j k Secret of The Frozen Bagel Revealed New Haven Independent May 29 2009 Archived from the original on November 27 2009 Retrieved May 31 2009 Aitken Kate September 13 2007 Playground named for famed bagelmaker Yale Daily News Archived from the original on February 9 2013 Retrieved November 9 2011 Balinska Maria 2008 pp 151 154 Balinska Maria 2008 p 153 Thompson Daniel T Thompson Bagel Machine History and Development Thompson Bagel Machine Retrieved November 9 2011 a b Marks Gil 2010 Bagel In Encyclopedia of Jewish Food Hoboken N J John Wiley and Sons p 36 ISBN 978 0 470 39130 3 Balinska Maria 2008 p 164 Bass Sharon L January 4 1987 Bagel Boom Spurs Lively Competition The New York Times Retrieved November 9 2011 Murray Lender Murray Lender bagel promoter died on March 21st aged 81 The Economist April 21 2012 Retrieved May 2 2013 Asimov Eric March 16 1997 Is a Bagel Still a Bagel in Maui The New York Times p 3 Retrieved November 9 2011 Balinska Maria 2008 p 172 Rothman Lily March 23 2012 Murray Lender the man who brought bagels to the masses The Washington Post Archived from the original on December 6 2012 Retrieved May 2 2013 Hamilton Robert A September 27 1987 The View from Putnem Bagels Give Town an Economic Boost The New York Times Retrieved November 9 2011 Gregory Ted July 25 2003 Bagel town feels bite of downturn Downstate Mattoon is home to the world s largest bagel festival but the factory that started it all may be in trouble Chicago Tribune Retrieved November 9 2011 Canedy Dana December 24 1996 Assignments Added For Two Agencies The New York Times Retrieved November 9 2011 a b Metro Business Kellogg Will Close Lender s Bagel Plant The New York Times March 2 2000 Retrieved November 9 2011 Kane Courtney September 3 1997 Kellogg promotes its family of cereals even the sugary ones as components of a healthy diet The New York Times Retrieved November 9 2011 Business Diary An Analyst Speaks Out The New York Times October 3 1999 Retrieved November 9 2011 AP February 13 2007 Blackstone Leads Group Buying Food Company The New York Times Retrieved November 9 2011 a b Schroeder Eric February 4 2013 The bagel chill Food Business News Retrieved May 2 2013 Hevesi Dennis March 22 2012 Murray Lender Who Gave All America a Taste of Bagels Dies at 81 The New York Times Retrieved May 2 2013 Murray Lender bagel guru dies at 81 BakingBusiness com March 22 2012 Archived from the original on May 29 2014 Retrieved May 2 2013 Who makes the best bagels Consumer Reports magazine May 2012 Retrieved May 2 2013 Fasick Kevin Sanderson Bill March 21 2012 Consumer Reports rate frozen chain bagels very good The New York Post New Yorkers Question Consumer Reports Top Bagel Picks CBS New York March 21 2012 Locker Melissa March 22 2012 Food Fight America s Best Bagel May Not Be from New York Time magazine Burstein Nathan March 24 2012 Critics see holes in Consumer Reports bagel rankings The Times of Israel Retrieved May 2 2013 Further reading EditBalinska Maria 2008 The Bagel The Surprising History of a Modest Bread Yale University Press November 2008 ISBN 0 300 11229 7 ISBN 978 0 300 11229 0 Bernstein Eldon amp Carstensen Fred 1996 Rising to the Occasion Lender s Bagels and the Frozen Food Revolution 1927 1985 Business and Economic History 25 1 pp 165 175 Horowitz Andy amp Fischer David S editor 2009 Jews In New Haven Volume IX The Lender Family of New Haven Connecticut Greater New Haven Jewish Historical Society JHS External links EditOfficial website Lender s Bagel Commercials on Youtube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lender 27s Bagels amp oldid 1159512591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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