Posted by admin | Posted in Food Ideas | Posted on 08-11-2011
Tags: conagra foods, conagra foods careers, conagra foods foundation, conagra foods investor relations, conagra foodservice

ConAgra Foods “Food You Love”
|
|
8 oz. Popcorn Kit Vogel All-in-One, Ready to Use 36/CS 8 oz. Popcorn Kit Vogel All-in-One, Ready to Use 36/CS… |
|
|
Gift Set With Uptown ECO Friendly Reusable Coffee Cup And Swiss Miss Classic Hot Cocoa Mix With Marshmallows When you’re craving a little one-on-one time with your loved ones, a mug of hot cocoa is the simple, delicious way to share a moment. The chocolaty taste makes it the perfect treat, and the warmth is a great way to slow down. Be ECO friendly too, with the Uptown Eco cup. You can help reduce waste that is sent to landfills each year…. |
|
|
Burt Wolf – What We Eat – The True Story of How Voyages of Columbus….9 Story of Coffee 10 African Foods in America 2002 USA VCR VIDEO CHAPT 9 COFFEE, 10 AFRICAN FOODS, FR CONAGRA… |
|
|
Culturelle 30 Caps $30.49 CulturelleThe Premier ProbioticA carefully researched probiotic, clinically proven as a useful adjunct in the managment of gastrointestinal disorders.*Helps control overgrowth of harmful bacteria*Assists intestinal functioning*Enhances the body’s natural defenses*Adheres and colonizes in the intestinal tract*Survives in stomach acid and bile*Clinically proven health benefitsIngredients: Inul… |
|
|
Orville Redenbacher Kettle Korn Popcorn, 10-Count (Pack of 3) $21.96 Orville Redenbacher microwave popcorn…. |
|
|
David Seeds Original Sunflower Seeds, 1.75-ounce Bags (Pack of 24) $11.55 America’s favorite in-shell sunflower seeds are delicious and fun to eat any time, anywhere. Natural and nutritious, DAVID Sunflower Seeds are available in a variety of new flavors and convenient, portable packaging for easy, on-the-go enjoyment!… |
|
|
Orville Redenbacher Original Popcorn Kernel Jar, 30-ounces (Pack of 3) $18.55 Organic Gourmet Popping Kernels All natural popcorn Made in USA… |
|
|
From Columbus to ConAgra: The Globalization of Agriculture and Food $16.85 This examination of the role of agriculture and food in the new international division of labor argues that the globalized economy creates new winners and losers…. |
|
|
Mexican Cooking $8.66 Published in 1908 by the Gebhardt Chili Powder Company (now owned by ConAgra Foods, Inc.), this cookbook collected for the first time in the United States recipes that went on to define Mexican food for generations. Includes recipes for chicken, cheese, egg, fish, game, oysters as well as chilis, enchiladas, envueltos, tamales, tortillas, and more…. |
|
|
ConAgra who?: $15 billion and growing $9.00 … |
|
|
2007 LifeLock 400 $68.99 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The 2007 LifeLock 400 is the 29th race in the 2007 NASCAR season and the third race of the ten in the 2007 Chase for the NEXTEL Cup Championship Series. The event, held at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas, was run on September 30, 2007. The new title sponsor of the race was LifeLock, a company that sells products that are designed to protect consumers from identity theft. It replaces ConAgra Foods, which had sponsored the race since 2003 under the Banquet brand name. With a lap of 30.846 seconds at a speed of 175.063 mph, Chase driver Jimmie Johnson scored his second consecutive pole. “Rocketman” Ryan Newman was to have been alongside him, missing tbe pole position by .30 thousandths of a second, but his lap was disallowed after failing post-qualifying inspection. Out of his typical fashion of starting in the back, Matt Kenseth qualified a very uncharachteristic third. |
|
|
Dairy Farming in Canada: Canadian Cheeses, Dairy Products Companies of Canada, Beatrice Foods, Manufacture of Cheddar Cheese, Cheese Curds $19.99 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Canadian Cheeses, Dairy Products Companies of Canada, Beatrice Foods, Manufacture of Cheddar Cheese, Cheese Curds, Mac’s Convenience Stores, Silverwood Dairy, Saputo Incorporated, Sealtest Dairy, Amalgamated Dairies Limited, Neilson Dairy, Oka Cheese, Beatrice Foods Canada, Dairyland Canada, Organic Meadow Cooperative, Gay Lea, le Riopelle de L’isle, Becker’s, Dairy Farmers of Manitoba, Kawartha Dairy Company, Natrel, Dragon’s Breath Blue, Ault Foods, Agropur, Parmalat Canada, Canadian Dairy Commission, Bleu Bénédictin, le Douanier, Friulano, Hewitts Dairy, Ermite, Pied-De-Vent, Sir Laurier D’arthabaska, Centreside Dairy, Bouq Émissaire, le Gré Des Champs, Ultima Foods, Chèvre Noir. Excerpt: The Beatrice Foods Company was a major American food processing company and household name. Its smaller international food operations were sold to Reginald Lewis, a corporate attorney creating TLC Beatrice International in 1987. The majority of its domestic (U.S.) brands and assets were acquired by Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts (KKR), with the bulk of the holdings sold off. By the early 1990s, the remaining operations were ultimately acquired by ConAgra Foods. The Beatrice Creamery Company was founded in 1894 by George Everett Haskell and William W. Bosworth, by leasing the factory of a bankrupt firm of the same name located in Beatrice, Nebraska. At the time, they purchased butter, milk and eggs from local farmers and graded them for resale. They promptly began separating the butter themselves at their plant, making their own butter on site and packaging and distributing it under their own label. They devised special protective packages and distributed them to grocery stores and restaurants in their own wagons and through appointed jobbers. To |
|
|
Food Recalls: 2007 Food Protein Contamination, 2008 Food Protein Contamination, 2008 Chinese Milk Scandal, Chinese Protein Adulteration $39.25 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 2007 Food Protein Contamination, 2008 Food Protein Contamination, 2008 Chinese Milk Scandal, Chinese Protein Adulteration, 2007 Pet Food Recalls, Timeline of the 2007 Pet Food Recalls, International Reaction to the 2008 Chinese Milk Scandal, Peanut Corporation of America, Melamine, Irish Pork Crisis of 2008, Official Test Failures of the 2008 Chinese Milk Scandal, Odwalla, 2006 North American E. Coli Outbreak, Fonterra, Conagra Foods, Sanlu Group, Ica Meat Repackaging Controversy, White Rabbit Creamy Candy, Olive Oil Regulation and Adulteration, Timeline of the 2008 Chinese Milk Scandal, Mengniu Dairy, Castleberry’s Food Company, Pilgrim’s Pride, Topps Meat Company, Arla Foods, Hallmark/westland Meat Packing Company, Schwan Food Company, Jbs S.a., Yili Group, Hanwei Group, Bon Vivant Soup Company, Koala’s March, General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, Hudson Foods Company, Yashili, List of Foodborne Illness Outbreaks, 2007 Vietnam Food Scare. Excerpt: The 2007 pet food recalls comprise the contamination and wide recall of many brands of cat and dog foods beginning in March 2007 and the ensuing developments involving the human food supply. The recalls in North America, Europe, and South Africa came in response to reports of renal failure in pets. Initially the recalls were associated with the consumption of mostly wet pet foods made with wheat gluten from a single Chinese company. After more than three weeks of complaints from consumers, the recall began voluntarily with the Canadian company Menu Foods on 16 March 2007, when a company test showed sickness and death in some of the test animals. Soon after, there were numerous media reports of animal deaths as a result of kidney failure. In the following weeks, several other companies who |
|
|
Mexican Cookery $14.95 The Gebhardt Chili Powder Company was founded by William Gebhardt, a German, who migrated about 1885 to New Braunfels, Texas. Gebhardt opened a café, which served chilis imported from Mexico. To preserve them, he dried and crushed them into powder. He began bottling his powder, and in 1890, he opened a factory to San Antonio. Six years later he trademarked the name “Gebhardt’s Eagle Brand Chili Powder.” The powder became an important ingredient to such an extent that recipes in Texas cookbooks specifically recommended its use. When Gebhardt began marketing chili powder to a wider audience beyond Texas, he ran into a very serious problem-consumers not familiar with Tex-Mex cookery had little idea what to do with it. To help cooks understand Tex-Mex cookery, Gebhardt produced a small 32-page cookery pamphlet. This cookbooklet was originally published about 1908. As such, it was the first English-language booklet published in the United States that focused on Mexican-American cookery. It proved so successful that new editions of it were regularly published through the 1950s. In 1911, Gebhardt sold his company to his brothers-in-law, who expanded their product line to include beans and tamales. During the 1920s, they introduced to the tourist trade Gebhardt’s Original Mexican Dinner Package, consisting of cans of chili con carne, Mexican Style Beans, shuck-wrapped Tamales, Deviled Chili Meat, and a bottle of Chili Powder-all for one dollar. By the 1930s, Gebhardt products were sold throughout the United States and Mexico. The company survived until 1960 when it was purchased by Beatrice Foods, which in turn was acquired by ConAgra in 1990. |
|
|
Omaha $19.99 Kapitel: Olympiatrials Der Vereinigten Staaten 2008, Berkshire Hathaway, Omaha Ak-Sar-Ben Knights, Joslyn Art Museum, 311, the Good Life, Erzbistum Omaha, Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben, Conagra Foods, Azure Ray, Saddle Creek Records, Tilly and the Wall, University of Nebraska at Omaha, Tenaska Energy, Omaha Knights, Kearney. Aus Wikipedia. Nicht dargestellt. Auszug: Omaha (pronounced ) is the largest city in the state of Nebraska, United States, and is the county seat of Douglas County. It is located in the Midwestern United States on the Missouri River, about 20 miles (30 km) north of the mouth of the Platte River. Omaha is the anchor of the Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan area, which includes Council Bluffs, Iowa, across the Missouri River from Omaha. It is located 190 miles north of Kansas City, Missouri. According to the 2009 estimate by the United States Census Bureau, Omaha’s population was 454,731, making it the nation’s 40th-largest city. Including its suburbs, Omaha formed the 60th-largest metropolitan area in the United States in 2000, with an estimated population of 837,925 residing in eight counties. There are more than 1.2 million residents within a 50 mile (80 km) radius of the city’s center, forming the Greater Omaha area. Omaha’s pioneer period began in 1854 when the city was founded by speculators from neighboring Council Bluffs, Iowa. The city was founded along the Missouri River, and a crossing called Lone Tree Ferry earned the city its nickname, the “Gateway to the West.” During the 19th century, Omaha’s central location in the United States caused the city to become an important national transportation hub. Throughout the rest of the 19th century, the transportation and jobbing sectors were important in the city, along with its railroads and breweries. In the 20th century, the Omaha Stockyards, once the world’s largest, and its meatpacking plants, gained international prominence. Today, Omaha is the home to |
|
|
Simply Effective: How to Cut Through Complexity in Your Organization and Get Things Done $17.36 The level of complexity in most organizations today is staggering-and it’s only getting worse. There are so many choices to be made, people to involve, processes to manage, and facts to analyze, it’s impossible to get things done. And in today’s hypercompetitive world, that can be fatal. Yet complexity doesn’t happen on its own. Managers unwittingly create it, often through well-intended decisions. In Simply Effective, Ron Ashkenas provides a playbook for regaining control, focused on the four major causes of complexity: • Constant changes in organizational structures• Proliferation of products and services • Evolution of business processes• Time-wasting managerial behaviors The author provides a diagnostic for identifying how these causes of complexity are affecting your organization-and presents practical tactics for combating each one. Ashkenas also explains how to craft a strategy that will make simplification an ongoing driver of your company’s success-no matter where you work in your organization. Abundant examples from companies like ConAgra Foods, GE, Cisco, Zurich Financial Services, and Johnson & Johnson illuminate his points. A crucial resource in today’s overly complex age, Simply Effective should be required reading for everyone on your management team. |
