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Hellmann's vs. Best Foods, Etc.: Why Some Brands Have Different Names On Different Coasts


First Posted: 02/ 2/2012 3:55 pm Updated: 02/ 3/2012 3:47 pm

Do you ever wonder why some food products have different brand identities across the country? For example, East Coasters know mayonnaise to be Hellmann's. But on the West Coast, the same brand is called Best Foods. Some people think these brands are different, but actually the variant names use the same logo and similar advertisements. Some even make similar commercials, just with the products switched ("Bring out the Best Foods and bring out the best" just doesn't seem to have that same ring to it, does it?).

At Kitchen Daily we recently conducted a sandwich bread taste test and discovered that Arnold bread has three different identities -- it's known as Oroweat on the West Coast, Brownberry in the Midwest, and Arnold on the East Coast. All three names use the same logo.

And then there's Edy's and Dreyer's ice cream. On the East Coast it's known as Edy's, and on the West Coast it's Dreyer's.

So why does this divergent branding exist? We dug into each company's history to find out.


Best Foods vs. Hellman's

The West Coast mayonnaise company Best Foods bought its East Coast rival Hellmann's in 1932 and kept both names -- it didn't want to rename itself with its competitor's identity and both companies had very large market shares in their respective regions. (Hellmann's had been around since 1905, when German immigrant Richard Hellmann started selling mayonnaise out of his New York deli.) The newly combined company continued to use both names but united the two brands in 1968 by using the characteristic Hellmann's blue ribbon on the Best Foods packaging. In 2000 the British company Unilever purchased the company. Since 2007, both products have featured the same exact logo to make the brands look like sister products. Both have exactly the same commercials and advertisement but with the names switched. Some people say that Best Foods and Hellmann's use different recipes, which are based on the original recipes, but both products have the same ingredients. So it's up to each person's perception as to which tastes different.


Dreyer's vs. Edy's

This ice cream company was founded in 1928 by business partners William Dreyer and Joseph Edy in northern California. The company was known as Edy's Grand Ice Cream until 1947, when Mr. Edy left the business. In 1953, Mr. Dreyer took over and renamed the company. In 1981 the company expanded to the East Coast, but decided to use the Edy's name because they thought the name Dreyer's might get confused with Breyer's, an East Coast ice cream brand. But if you think about it, this naming convention honors the two founders of the company rather fairly.


Arnold, Brownberry And Oroweat

Each of these bread brands has a different history. Oroweat was founded in 1932 in Hollywood, CA, and it eventually spread throughout the West Coast and the Southwest. Arnold bakery was founded in 1940 by Dean and Betty Arnold in Connecticut. Their bread became so popular that the company expanded to other states on the East Coast. In 1946 Catherine Clark convinced her husband to take out a mortgage on their home so she could open a bakery. The company was named Brownberry and was located in Wisconsin. In 1972, Mrs. Clark sold Brownberry to the Peavey Company in Minneapolis and the brand spread throughout the Midwest.

What ties these three brands together is the fact that they were all purchased by Bimbo Bakeries USA, a subsidiary of Grupo Bimbo, a company based in Mexico City. Oroweat was purchased in 2002 and Brownberry and Oroweat in 2009. All three companies were previously owned by the baking company George Weston Ltd. Bimbo also now owns Sara Lee, Entenmann's, Thomas', Freihofer's, and Boboli among many other American bakery brands.


What do you think about food product branding? Leave a comment below.

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Do you ever wonder why some food products have different brand identities across the country? For example, East Coasters know mayonnaise to be Hellmann's. But on the West Coast, the same brand is call...
Do you ever wonder why some food products have different brand identities across the country? For example, East Coasters know mayonnaise to be Hellmann's. But on the West Coast, the same brand is call...
Do you ever wonder why some food products have different brand identities across the country? For example, East Coasters know mayonnaise to be Hellmann's. But on the West Coast, the same brand is call...
Do you ever wonder why some food products have different brand identities across the country? For example, East Coasters know mayonnaise to be Hellmann's. But on the West Coast, the same brand is call...
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02:03 PM on 02/20/2012
"Dukes" mayonnaise is ( pardon my use of popular slang but it fits here) the shiznit. Seriously, it has no added sugar and it tastes great.Unfortunately it is not available everywhere and it is somewhat pricier.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SBinF
Educator, musician, foodie.
03:51 PM on 02/12/2012
Best Foods, Hellmann's, bah.

If you're not making your own mayo (it's really easy, but not terribly practical unless you are using it all at once), Duke's is definitely the way to go. Think it may be a Southern thing though.
04:59 PM on 02/10/2012
I always thought that Breyer's was a cheap knock off of Dreyer's. TIL that its an East Coast thing and Dreyer's is local, but known elsewhere as Edy's.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
08:08 PM on 02/07/2012
Speaking of Dryers ice cream. Circa 1972-73, we Berkeley hippies used to get really stoned and go to the Dryers ice cream parlor at the plant nearby. You couldn't beat a really good buzz and ice cream fresh at the factory :))
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Hiphopcrates
Kicking the money lenders out of the Temple
08:40 AM on 02/08/2012
Still can't.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
01:07 PM on 02/08/2012
I am glad to know that the dream still lives :))
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Artos
Down with Tyrants
02:36 PM on 02/07/2012
I think it has perhaps less to do with the histories mentioned, but more to do with trying to downplay the notion of having monopolies which may not sit well with some folks. Personally the idea does bother me. Many people wouldn't take the time or make the effort to look up who owns what across the nation, but when you do it's very educational to realize that in many cases it is one Giant Monopoly that owns a wide diversity of companies, many that produce as in these cases very similar products.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
12:50 AM on 02/07/2012
i have a simple hypothesis for all of this, west coasters can process more letters in a word better than east coasters. let us delve into this theory further shall we:
Oroweat(west coast) --arnold(east coast)
dreyers(west coast)--edys(east coast)
and when there is tie in letters west coast steps it up with making it two words instead of one-->> best foods(west coast)--hellmans(east coast) --> U MAD EAST COAST :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jmichaelmunger
Tired of Fear...
11:35 PM on 02/06/2012
Hardee's and Carl's Jr.... still don't get that one.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LisaLisa1234
04:46 PM on 02/07/2012
What's interesting about those two is that they have very different food. I loved Carl's Jr, but I don't like Hardee's at all.
04:30 PM on 02/06/2012
What about Rally's and Checkers? Do they have the same menu?
11:11 AM on 02/04/2012
And, in Colorado they sell Best Foods mayo and Hellman's mayo in the same store side-by-side on the shelf. Go figure.....?
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Artos
Down with Tyrants
02:38 PM on 02/07/2012
Pretense of being separate products, while allowing them to monopolize more shelf space. Guarantees them more sales. Makes them richer.
10:04 PM on 02/03/2012
What about
sugus vs starburst ???
Ovaltine orange packaging (worldwide) vs Ovaltine blue packaging (US) ???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rockysparks
there's no law against being annoying.
06:06 PM on 02/03/2012
Oooh .... Edy's ... I should never read these food articles ...
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lynjs
Take each day as it comes. Tomorrow isn't promise
09:11 PM on 02/15/2012
I'm going to have to get some out of the freezer (Vanilla Bean or Butter Pecan) afterwhile...LOL.

Here in my area, western NC, we weren't exposed to Edy's until the mid-90s. Ice cream was always Breyers, DeLuxe or store brand.

It is just weird how we eat the same things but under different names. I'll have to remember Dreyers if I go to visit family on the West Coast.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rockysparks
there's no law against being annoying.
01:11 AM on 02/16/2012
Ooh ... butter pecan ... and I have it in the freezer ...
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ecotopian
I am nerd, hear me geek
04:15 PM on 02/03/2012
I remember a jingle from the 80's. "Bring out the Hellmann's and bring out the Best!" It took me moving from the east coast to the west to find there was a Best Foods.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HarmNone
Censorship: Reaction of the ignorant to freedom
03:56 PM on 02/03/2012
Because the logos are almost identical, I can't tell you how many years I bought Best Foods before I realized it wasn't Hellmanns!
03:44 PM on 02/03/2012
As a recent coast switcher, thanks for the info!

Now can you tell me why West Coast Cheddars are almost always the orange ones, not the white ones? This really puzzles me.
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chinacatsunflower
a smile is the shortest distance between people
03:49 PM on 02/03/2012
LOL i went for months without mayo, because i just couldn't find the hellmann"s!!
03:58 PM on 02/03/2012
Nice name logo!
02:51 AM on 02/06/2012
It just depends on market preference! Cheddar is naturally about a light yellow (depending on the amount of butterfat in the milk processed), and annatto is a plant extract used to color the cheese darker (to give the illusion of more butterfat/flavor, apparently). It is going to be the same taste, so the color of the cheese is really just what you prefer eating. Apparently the lighter ones sell better back East, but we in the West are pretty used to Cheddar being orange.
(see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheddar_cheese#Character)
04:51 PM on 02/07/2012
Thanks for the info everyone.

Vive la difference!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
faithnj
10:05 AM on 02/12/2012
thank you. because I always used to get a little nervous when I saw white cheddar. I always thought it wouldn't taste the same as the yellow/orange stuff. i'm a vegan now, so in reality it really shouldn't matter to me. but now that I know the only difference was annatto, emotionally, i can move on, LOL.
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biglog
I see your Schwartz is as big as mine.
03:41 PM on 02/03/2012
Funny thing is that I have actually wondered this. Of course, my basic assumptions were correct, for the most part. No real surprises here. I have often thought it's funny how Breyer's and Dreyer's can co-exist on my grocer's freezer shelves. It's not called Edy's here.