
Progressive Grocer Pineapple
Langers Launches New Pineapple and Mango Chamoy Flavors
Langers Launches New Pineapple and Mango Chamoy Flavors
bevnet.com Aug. 7, 2023

Inspired by cold drinks bursting with sweet and slightly spicy flavor, Langers brings summer’s favorite fruity drink to an easy, pre-packaged recipe. On the heels of launching its pure pineapple juices in a 5-calorie version, the family-owned West Coast juice brand continues to push the envelope in exceptional juice at affordable prices – a delicious dose of Vitamin C, perfect for mixing drinks, making mocktails and more. The Pineapple Chamoy is best enjoyed ice cold or with a little rum and squeeze of lime for a Piña Chamoyada.
“Living in southern California, hot days can be tough – and having a bright, cold drink after work is a treat. We wanted to bring a new tasting experience for this summer and pay homage to the lively flavors of the chamoy-infused drinks with our own, easy to drink blend of juices and chamoy. Our recipe makes it simple to pour, sip or even chug and enjoy,” said Bruce Langer, President of Langers.
There are many recipes for tropical fruit drinks made with chamoy out there, from The New York Times to cooking blogs, but Langers reduces the step work and makes it easier than ever to sip these flavors leaving everyone feeling like being out in the sun.
A pre-blended recipe of pineapple, chamoy and natural flavor takes measuring out of the equation for the ultimate Piña Chamoyada. All that’s needed is a glass of ice or a mixer of choice.
Try these fun recipes
Piña Chamoyada Pops: Pour Langers Pineapple Chamoy into popsicle molds, freeze and enjoy!
Piña Chamoy Daquiri: Shake Langers Pineapple Chamoy with rum and serve with a squeeze of lime over ice in a rimmed glass.
Piña Chamoy Marg : Mix Langers Pineapple Chamoy with your favorite tequila, a splash of lime juice, and a touch of triple sec. Shake well and serve over ice in a salt-rimmed glass for a delightful tropical twist on a classic or spicy margarita.
Piña Chamoy with Whiskey: Enjoy a delightful fusion with a delightful twist by combining Langers Pineapple Chamoy to your go-to whiskey. Create an extraordinary cocktail that promises to tantalize your taste buds. Mango Chamoy uses nectar from Alphonso Mangos to create its exceptional Mangoneada, a juicy-sweet, slightly spicy combination. Try these recipes to savor the Langers flavor.
Mangoneada Slush: Pour Langers Mango Chamoy into ice cube trays, freeze and blend until smooth.
Mango Marganeada: Shake Langers Mango Chamoy with tequila and serve with a squeeze of lime over ice
Whip Float: Blend Langers Mango Chamoy or Langers Pineapple Chamoy with a large scoop of vanilla ice cream. Fill a milkshake glass half-way with the juice and top with ice cream blend.
Full of flavors, but also benefits, the Langers Chamoy juices, just like all of Langers Pineapple juices variety, offer 80% the daily value of Vitamin C in just ONE as well as a chock-full of vitamins and minerals for a refreshing drink that also helps boost the immune system, keep bones healthy, improve vision, ease digestion and reduce inflammation and swelling. In each glass, you’ll imbibe:
Vitamin C
Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) and B6
Copper
Manganese
Bromelain
https://www.bevnet.com/news/2023/langers-launches-new-pineapple-and-mango-chamoy-flavors
BevNet – This Week’s New Products
Fresh Off the Press
Lessons in Langer Management
Say it’s a Friday in October. You’re shopping in a Sprouts Farmers Market store, and a ray of sunshine slants down from the skylight, illuminating the brilliant garnet color in a bottle of Langers Pomegranate Juice. You pick up the bottle, put it in your cart… with not a thought given to how it came to be there, or how the bottle was made, or how the juice was squeezed, or when the pomegranates were picked.
But if you could somehow sequence the DNA of that juice, and trace it all back to its source, what you’d find is a series of activities — from picking to pressing to pasteurizing to palletizing, with dozens of other steps in between — that makes each and every bottle of Langers Juice a superb study in syncopation. And it all starts with the Langer family.

To understand how Bruce and David Langer got to this point — two smart, quiet Southern California boys overseeing a booming $180 million juice company (is there any such thing as a juice empire?) — you need to go back a ways. Back to the Old Country, to Poland, where their grandfather grew grapes and produced wine, or to San Diego, circa 1960, when their father, Nathan, bought a business called “VegeJuice” and sold celery juice to stores and through a home delivery van. Juice, it would seem, runs through their veins.
David, four years the elder, worked in the family business throughout high school, learning the ins and outs. Bruce, on the other hand, after growing up around the business, was thinking about a “juicier” income, and eventually went off to law school. But while he was interviewing with law firms, Nathan and David made him a very good offer, and he decided to join them.
“In hindsight,” laughs the counselor-at-juice Bruce, “I don’t think it was a very good negotiation for them. But it was for me.”
The verdict is in. Today, a quarter of a century later, Langers Juice Company ranks as one of the most highly respected juice producers in the country, and one of the ten largest. They have built a super-efficient, vertically integrated business that enables them to go from farm to shelf in a very short period of time. Langers operates four plants in California, where they press and bottle juice and carbonated juice, and even “blow” some of their own bottles. They employ 300 people and work with contract facilities elsewhere in the country, producing more than 200 beverages that are distributed coast to coast and around the world.

The juice-making process is not that complex, not really. Anyone who has ever thrown a few Valencia oranges into the juicer knows that. You get some fruit. You remove the parts you don’t want. You squeeze it. Maybe you strain it or filter it. You pour it into a glass.
That is exactly what they do at the Langers Juice Company. Only, they do it on a scale most of us cannot even comprehend. Think, truckload after truckload of fresh fruit. An enormous hydraulic press that crushes 24 tons of fruit at once. 13,000-gallon holding tanks. A computerized high-speed bottling operation, with conveyor belts moving every which way, that can fill 450 64 oz. bottles per minute. That sort of thing.
It all starts at Langer Farms, a rather nondescript 17-acre facility near Bakersfield, CA, in the dusty southern end of the San Joaquin Valley.
Wave after wave of flatbed trucks roll in, each carrying wooden crates filled with fruit. Pomegranates, apples, maybe oranges. Today it is peaches. Lots of ripe, fragrant peaches. Despite the dust and the diesel exhaust and all the industrial machinery around, this place smells like an orchard.
The peaches are off-loaded and stored temporarily, before being lifted into the “dump bin” at the grading machine. There, everything gets washed and inspected, with a worker hovering over the belt to remove any twigs or bad fruit, or the occasional plum that sneaks its way into the load. The conveyor then takes the surviving peaches up at about a 30-degree angle into the adjacent building, where they begin the sinuous journey that will end up in a bottle on your shelf in an amazingly short time

First, however, there is the little matter of that pit. A loud machine reaches into the core of each fruit, extracts the peach pit, and grinds it up into little pieces, which are then used as biofuel in
wood-burning power generation. Meanwhile, the flesh of the peaches gets sent over to the presses. Langers has three presses in Bakersfield, the largest of which is an augur-driven hydraulic monster capable of flattening 24 tons of fruit at once; the other two smaller ones are “pressed” into service when needed. Picture a tunnel, about 8 feet in diameter, with an interior wall that slowly moves from one end to the other — kind of like the ones the arch-villains use when they are trying to do away with the superhero. Only, these peaches don’t escape. The juice gets pumped over into giant stainless steel silos, while the remaining solids are removed, loaded into waiting trucks, and shipped out as cattle feed. On a typical day of peach pressing in Bakersfield, Langers generates about 20 to 40 tons of peach waste. Meaning, there are a lot of fat and happy cattle nearby.

in the processing room.
The peach juice eventually gets sent over to the “process room,” where it goes through a phalanx of other machines. There is a centrifuge that spins at thousands of revolutions per minute, accompanied by an intermittent ear-splitting noise. There is a gadget that removes some of the color — which might seem odd, but think about how picky you are about the color of the apple juice you buy. There is a machine that strips out the volatile alcohols that make a peach smell like a peach (elsewhere in the plant, there are buckets labeled “yellow peach essence,” which may be added back to the juice based on what the final product is). There is a vacuum boiler that can be employed to make the juice into concentrate, which is sold to some other companies and is sometimes used to make juice blends — one ton of juice yields 20 gallons of concentrate. And there is something called an ultrafiltration unit that looks kind of like an industrial large intestine, with long tubes doubling back on themselves repeatedly. The juice works its ways through these tubes for further purification, and is ultimately loaded into 55-gallon drums for shipment to the bottling plant. The whole crazy, convoluted process has taken only a few hours.
But the fun has only just begun.

ready to be shipped off to a Sprouts near you.
At the sprawling 140,000-square-foot Langers bottling plant in the aptly named City of Industry, about 30 miles east of Los Angeles, the juice (or, “the fruit,” as David Langer still refers to it at this stage) arrives — either in drums, or in the case of white grape juice, in tanker trucks. All of it is initially stored in “the refrigerator” — a dimly lit 10,000-square-foot room that will make you forget what the temperature is outside. Walking up and down the aisles is like moving through a virtual chilled fruit salad: Pink Guava, Alphonso Mango, Granny Smith Apple, Cranberry, and so on. Langers makes a number of different juice blends, and also likes to mix different varietals of apples to achieve just the right flavor profile, so it’s important to maintain a broad inventory.
The juice gets mixed together in huge steel vats that are sunken down below floor level in an adjoining room, with a vast network of steel pipes flying overhead, and is then pumped into the pasteurizing machine. Here it gets heated to remove any microbes. This is a carefully controlled process, because if you heat it too high or too long, the juice cooks and loses its flavor. This is just one of many precautions that Langers takes to ensure that its products are 100% safe. A few steps away there is a laboratory, where samples are taken from every single batch of juice and are run through an assembly line of impressive-sounding machines: a spectrophotometer (to check the color), a turbidimeter (to test the clarity), an acidity titration unit (to measure pH), and others. Technicians watch the juice samples swirl around beakers, and monitor the digital readouts to ensure that Langers is fully compliant with all government standards.

Inside the bottling room, empty plastic bottles are taken off pallets, turned upside-down, and cleaned with either de-ionized air or de-ionized water. Then they are set down in a machine that queues them up, first 20 or so across, then 10-wide, eventually single-file. It looks like a crowd of concert-goers just as the gates open. The bottles whiz down a conveyor toward a huge German-built filling machine, where a computerized valve-and-probe system controls the juice levels with precision, not a fraction of an ounce over or under. There is also a Wonka-like machine that sucks bottle caps up into a pneumatic tube and affixes them to the bottles. Every single one gets photographed by a computer, and if any caps are found to be askew, the machine pulls those bottles off the line. Once filled and capped, the juices go through cooling tunnels for about 45 minutes, get labeled, packed into specially made 8-sided boxes, placed on pallets, wrapped in plastic by a robot, and then put onto waiting trucks for shipment to distributors and stores.
This whole setup, all these belts and machines and computers, this giant juicy gee-whiz-gizmo, is run by a group of about 12 Langers employees on any given shift. It’s truly marvelous to behold — whether you are a visitor to the plant, or Nathan Langer, now in his 80s, who still comes into work every day, and looks on with pride and astonishment.
Bruce and David sit in a conference room in the office portion of their plant in City of Industry, discussing their state-of-the-art machinery and reflecting on how far the company has come.
“Innovation really drove the growth of our business,” says Bruce, who heads up sales and marketing. “I think quality drives the sustainability of it, but innovation drove the growth.”
In the late 1980s, they were still just a local Los Angeles company (and Henry Boney, the late patriarch of the family that would later found Sprouts, was one of their largest customers). But then they became the first major juice company in Southern California to use light plastic “PET” bottles, and, because that enabled them to start shipping the product nationally, they became a major player almost overnight. “The world changed,” says Bruce, “and it wasn’t possible to stay a little Southern California company anymore.”
Today, of course, between their juices, juice blends, no-sugar-added juices and Fragile Planet organic line, Langers is the anchor of the juice aisle in Sprouts stores.
David adds that eco-consciousness has also been a major initative catapulting Langer to its current success. Take the 8-sided boxes. “Unlike traditional square cases,” he notes, “these have extra stacking strength while using 10% less corrugated cardboard. Additionally, all of our corrugated suppliers are part of SFI, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, which means that for every tree that they cut down, they plant two others.” Langers also makes many of their own bottles in the Langers Plastics plant, using lightweight materials and BPA-free resin; prints on their boxes using soy inks; and co-generates some of their own electricity.
Still, in the end, it is taste that matters. Bruce proudly pulls a couple of the new Langers flavored green tea products from a nearby beverage cooler.
“We’re very obsessed with tasting. We spend a lot of time in the lab, tasting all the batches, mixing juices, and coming up with new ideas. Our Dad is a very good taster: he can really discern different flavors very quickly. We like products that are good for you, and are high in antioxidants. We’re always looking for something fresh and refreshing, and something with bright flavors.”
Bruce sips on a Langers Daily Start Green Smoothie, one of the company’s newer products, and declares it his favorite. David demurs, and nominates the All Pomegranate Juice. But it is a rare moment of dissent between the brothers, who look to each other for non-verbal cues and frequently speak with an almost symphonic concord.
But there is no time for any more reflection. Just outside, an 18-wheeler announces its arrival at the loading dock with a loud air brake exhale. It’s time to resume making some juice.
Originally published by Sprouts Farmers Market
JUICED UP
Inside the secret success of the Langers Juice Company.
by Rick Weinberg, Editor in Chief, California Business Journal
If you could sequence the DNA of Langers Pomegranate Juice and trace it back to its source, you’d find a series of activities – from picking to pressing to pasteurizing to palletizing, with dozens of other steps in between – that makes each bottle of the juice a superb study in syncopation.
To understand how Bruce and David Langer got to this point – two smart, quiet Southern California boys overseeing a $180 million juice company — you need to go back a ways. Back to the Old Country, to Poland, where their grandfather grew grapes and produced wine; or to San Diego, circa 1960, when their father, Nathan, bought a business called “VegeJuice” and sold celery juice to stores and through a home delivery van.
David, four years the elder, worked in the family business throughout high school, learning the ins and outs. Bruce, on the other hand, after growing up around the business, was thinking about a “juicier” income. So he went off to law school.
But while he was interviewing with law firms, Nathan and David made him a very good offer, and he decided to join them.
“In hindsight, I don’t think it was a very good negotiation for them. But it was for me,” Bruce says with a laugh.
A quarter of a century later, Langers Juice Company ranks as one of the most highly-respected juice producers in the country — and one of the 10 largest. They have built a super-efficient, vertically integrated business that enables them to go from farm to shelf in a very short period of time.
Langers operates four plants in California, where the company presses and bottles juice and carbonated juice. The company employs 300 people and works with contract facilities throughout in U.S., producing more than 200 beverages that are distributed coast to coast and around the world.
The juice-making process is not that complex. Anyone who has ever thrown a few oranges into the juicer knows that. You get some fruit. You remove the parts you don’t want. You squeeze it. You strain it or filter it. Then you pour it into a glass.
That is exactly what they do at the Langers Juice Company.
Only, the company does it on a scale most of us cannot comprehend. Think truckload after truckload of fresh fruit. An enormous hydraulic press that crushes 24 tons of fruit at once. Multiple 13,000-gallon holding tanks. A computerized high-speed bottling operation, with conveyor belts moving every which way, that can fill 450 64-ounce bottles per minute.
Step One
It all starts at Langer Farms, a 17-acre facility near Bakersfield, California, in the dusty southern end of the San Joaquin Valley.
Wave after wave of flatbed trucks roll in each day, each carrying wooden crates filled with fruit. Pomegranates, apples and oranges. Today, it is peaches. Lots of ripe, fragrant peaches. Despite the dust and the diesel exhaust and all the industrial machinery around, the facility smells like an orchard.
The peaches are off-loaded and stored temporarily, before being lifted into the “dump bin” at the grading machine. There, everything gets washed and inspected, with an employee hovering over the belt to remove any twigs or bad fruit, or the occasional plum that sneaks its way into the load.
The conveyor then takes the surviving peaches up at about a 30-degree angle into the adjacent building, where they begin the sinuous journey that will end up in a bottle on your shelf in a very short period of time.
First, however, there is the little matter of the peach pit. A machine reaches into the core of each fruit, extracts the peach pit, and grinds it up into little pieces, which are then used as biofuel in wood-burning power generation. Meanwhile, the flesh of the peaches gets sent over to the presses.
Langers has three presses in Bakersfield, the largest of which is an augur-driven hydraulic monster capable of flattening 24 tons of fruit at once. The other two smaller ones are “pressed” into service when needed.
The juice gets pumped over into giant stainless steel silos, while the remaining solids are removed, loaded into waiting trucks, and shipped out as cattle feed. On a typical day of peach pressing in Bakersfield, Langers generates about 20 to 40 tons of peach waste. Meaning, there are a lot of fat and happy cattle nearby.
The peach juice eventually gets sent over to the “process room,” where it goes through a phalanx of other machines. There is a centrifuge that spins at thousands of revolutions per minute, accompanied by an intermittent ear-splitting noise. There is a gadget that removes some of the color – which might seem odd, but think about how picky you are about the color of the apple juice you buy.
There is a machine that strips out the volatile alcohols that make a peach smell like a peach (elsewhere in the plant, there are buckets labeled “yellow peach essence,” which may be added back to the juice based on what the final product is).
There is a vacuum boiler that can be employed to make the juice into concentrate, which is sold to some other companies and is sometimes used to make juice blends – one ton of juice yields 20 gallons of concentrate.
There is also an ultrafiltration unit that looks like an industrial large intestine with long tubes doubling back on themselves repeatedly. The juice works its ways through these tubes for further purification, and is ultimately loaded into 55-gallon drums for shipment to the bottling plant. The whole crazy, convoluted process has taken only a few hours.
But the fun has only just begun.
At the sprawling 140,000-square-foot Langers bottling plant in the City of Industry, about 30 miles east of Los Angeles, the juice (or, “the fruit,” as David Langer still refers to it) arrives – either in drums, or in the case of white grape juice, in tanker trucks.
All of it is initially stored in “the refrigerator” – a dimly lit 10,000-square-foot room. Walking up and down the aisles is like moving through a virtual chilled fruit salad: Pink Guava, Alphonso Mango, Granny Smith Apple, Cranberry, and so on.
Langers makes a number of different juice blends, and also likes to mix different varietals of apples to achieve just the right flavor profile, so it’s important to maintain a broad inventory.
The juice is mixed together in huge steel vats that are sunken down below floor level in an adjoining room, with a vast network of steel pipes flying overhead, and is then pumped into the pasteurizing machine. Here it gets heated to remove any microbes. This is a carefully-controlled process, because if you heat it too high or too long, the juice cooks and loses its flavor. This is just one of many precautions that Langers takes to ensure that its products are 100 percent safe.
A few steps away, there is a laboratory, where samples are taken from every batch of juice and are run through an assembly line of impressive-sounding machines: a spectrophotometer (to check the color), a turbidimeter (to test the clarity), an acidity titration unit (to measure pH), and others. Technicians watch the juice samples swirl around beakers, and monitor the digital readouts to ensure that Langers is fully compliant with all government standards.
Inside the bottling room, empty plastic bottles are taken off pallets, turned upside-down, and cleaned with either de-ionized air or de-ionized water. Then they are set down in a machine that queues them up, first 20 or so across, then 10-wide, eventually single-file. It looks like a crowd of concert-goers just as the gates open.
The bottles whiz down a conveyor toward a huge German-built filling machine, where a computerized valve-and-probe system controls the juice levels with precision, not a fraction of an ounce over or under.
There is also a Wonka-like machine that sucks bottle caps up into a pneumatic tube and affixes them to the bottles. Every bottle gets photographed by a computer, and if any caps are found to be askew, the machine pulls those bottles off the line.
Once filled and capped, the juices go through cooling tunnels for about 45 minutes, get labeled, packed into specially made eight-sided boxes, placed on pallets, wrapped in plastic by a robot, and then put onto waiting trucks for shipment to distributors and stores.
The entire setup, all the belts and machines and computers, the giant gizmo, is run by a group of about 12 Langers employees on any given shift. It’s truly remarkable to behold – whether you are a visitor to the plant, or Nathan Langer, now in his 80s, who still comes into work every day, and looks on with pride and joy.
Brothers in Arms
Bruce and David sit in a conference room in the office portion of their plant in the City of Industry, discussing their state-of-the-art machinery and reflecting on how far the company has come.
“Innovation really drove the growth of our business,” says Bruce, who heads up sales and marketing. “I think quality drives the sustainability of it, but innovation drove the growth.”
In the late 1980s, they were still just a local Los Angeles company (and Henry Boney, the late patriarch of the family that would later found Sprouts, was one of their largest customers). Then they became the first major juice company in Southern California to use light plastic “PET” bottles, and because that enabled them to start shipping the product nationally, they became a major player almost overnight.
“The world changed,” Bruce says, “and it wasn’t possible to stay a little Southern California company anymore.”
Today, between their juices, juice blends, no-sugar-added juices and Fragile Planet organic line, Langers is the anchor of the juice aisle in Sprouts stores.
David says that eco-consciousness has also been a major initiative catapulting Langer to its current success.
Take the eight-sided boxes.
“Unlike traditional square cases,” he says, “these have extra stacking strength while using 10 percent less corrugated cardboard. All of our corrugated suppliers are part of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), which means that for every tree that they cut down, they plant two others.”
Langers also makes many of its own bottles in the Langers Plastics plant, using lightweight materials and BPA-free resin; prints on their boxes using soy inks; and co-generates some of their own electricity.
In the end, however, it is the taste of the juices that matters.
Bruce proudly pulls a couple of the new Langers flavored green tea products from a nearby beverage cooler.
“We’re obsessed with tasting,” he says. “We spend a lot of time in the lab, tasting all the batches, mixing juices, and coming up with new ideas. Our dad is a very good taster. He can really discern different flavors very quickly. We like products that are good for you, and are high in antioxidants. We’re always looking for something fresh and refreshing, and something with bright flavors.”
Bruce sips on a Langers Daily Start Green Smoothie, one of the company’s newer products, and declares it his favorite.
David demurs, and nominates the All Pomegranate Juice.
It is a rare moment of dissent between the brothers, who look to each other for non-verbal cues and frequently speak with an almost symphonic concord.
But there is no time for any more reflection.
Just outside, an 18-wheeler announces its arrival at the loading dock with a loud air brake exhale.
It’s time to resume making some juice.
Fansided

Tasty and creative ways to celebrate National Pineapple Day

https://foodsided.com/2023/06/27/celebrate-national-pineapple-day-2/
Langers Ranked Best Cranberry Juice

Langers Cranberry Cocktail was recently ranked “Best Cranberry Juice Brand” by the Daily Meal.
Daily Meal contributor Jenn Carnevale ranked 10 cranberry juice brands and Langers came out on top. Langers is described as a “flavor experience that will leave you wanting more.”
Langers has been perfecting its craft since 1960, and it shows in every sip of its Cranberry Juice Cocktail
– The Daily Meal
Described as “a symphony of flavors,” Langers is noted to achieve the elusive balance of not too sweet and not too bitter that other brands struggled to achieve.
Also noted is Langers commitment to quality, with our dedication to all natural ingredients and no high fructose corn syrup in any of our products.
Read the full story at: https://www.thedailymeal.com/1292106/cranberry-juice-brands-ranked/
Langers Cranberry Cocktail is available at grocery stores nationwide, and shoplangers.com
Langers Supports Olive Crest

For more information on Olive Crest, please visit https://www.olivecrest.org/
Langers Acquires Gen Z Water
THIS IS NOT A DRILL! LANGERS ACQUIRES FUTURE-PROOF BOTTLED WATER CO: GEN Z FLAVORLESS TRANSPARENT LIQUID
The aluminum bottled water company that creates more laughs, and less plastic announces early 2023 acquisition by family-owned juice business Langers Juice.
While many thought the brand GEN Z was a joke, the joke’s on them as the company expands with an acquisition by Langers. Splashing the market in 2021, GEN Z was imagined, created and produced by industry veterans and brand wizards breathing new energy into generation brands. The critter-crazed aluminum water bottles popped via e-commerce with a unique branding and marketing meticulously strategized by the team of Millennials and Gen Xers. The innovative approach to branding and marketing made the brand stand out in a crowded market and land in the radar of top industry player and six-decades innovating pioneer, Langers.
GEN Z showed up to the single-use-plastic party with an idea: shake up the category and sell flavorless, transparent liquid in a reusable, recyclable bottle that cuts through Zoomer’s high BS-meter, to help create a sustainable and improved future. Its unique design and eco-friendly message, with the company’s mission to reduce plastic waste and promote sustainability, resonated with customers who wanted a reusable bottle that could also be recycled yet wouldn’t break the bank when lost. Upgrading the category, GEN Z delivers.
“We’ve never taken ourselves too seriously at GEN Z, but we’re serious about Langers being the right company to keep GEN Z going strong. With the focus always being on the Gen Zers who drink water and on creating new critter designs to give flavorless transparent liquid, aka water, the bottle it deserves, we’re excited about this new chapter. Langers is a family-run business looking to future-proof their legacy business. With Langers GEN Z is in good hands…” says Erin Campbell, GEN Z’s Co-founder and Chief Marketing Officer.
By early 2023, Langers will take GEN Z, critters and its humor, under its wing to bring it closer to the consumers (even the non-Gen Zers) and expand its impact with their decades of proof, expertise and know-how. Through this acquisition, GEN Z will enter its new age early on, and with Langers six decades of established prowess, the slim bottle can exponentially flourish and thrive. With industry expertise and a powerful network of resources, Langers will help GEN Z continue to transform the world through convenient, sustainable, reusable, recyclable, packaging and much-needed humor to uplift and support the spirits.
Beyond fresh water, it’s the symbol of positivity and change that made an impact on the Langers family. The humorous and whimsical design of the GEN Z bottled water stood out with its power to bring a smile to someone’s face and act as a conversation-starter (about sustainability or the design), two elements that the younger generations need more than ever. It represents a shift towards a more lighthearted and joyful approach to life, encouraging individuals to take a break from the stress and negativity of daily life and embrace the simple pleasures. And, as a symbol of change, it inspires people to think about the impact their choices have on the environment and therefore other concerns. Drinking GEN Z bottled water is not just about quenching thirst, it provides a moment of levity and positivity and lifts the mood.
Over the next months, expect GEN Z to bring more smiles and be closer to every Zoomer and Zoomer-wannabe in more States and stores. With more consumers discovering their favorite transparent flavorless liquid and more critter-covered bottles in hands, there is no doubt about the impact GEN Z will have as a fresh alternative supporting all the eco-conscious enthusiasts in their efforts to act on the planet’s future. A mission that Langers is inspired and determined to push forward, continuing the legacy of their early days’ founding principles of commitment to quality and the use of traditional and environmentally friendly methods of bottling their juice in glass bottles.
“Acquiring GEN Z is a wonderful continuation of Langers portfolio. Seeing a company emerge on the market with an aim to provide sustainable solutions to single-use plastic that works and also carries a conversational message with its target audience is impressive. What we value the most is listening to our clients and GEN Z is the right answer in the right time. We love the playfulness of this company; we confidently look forward to propelling what they started,” says Bruce Langer, president of Langers.
With a proven record of enduring innovation and success in the beverage category, a remarkable brand and products, and helmed by true family leadership, Langers fosters its mission of preserving the craft of fresh beverages in all shapes, flavors, and forms. Langers will add the refillable and infinitely recyclable GEN Z water to its line of juices and enhanced juices as the company continues to satisfy the market’s thirst for more intentional beverages.
About GEN Z
Launched in 2021, GEN Z, the bottled-water brand, emerged to make a difference and lead a positive change. With an internal council made up of brilliant Gen Zers, the flavorless transparent liquid in a reusable, resealable and infinitely recyclable bottle created a solution to help people hydrate without all that single-use plastic – a small step in sustainability’s big picture. Since 75% of all aluminum ever produced is still in use today through its infinite recycling ability – not littering our lands and oceans or harming the critters – the body-to-cap fully aluminum bottle seamlessly resonated as the best material to use. And since the company is all about good news and fresh ideas, to celebrate the planet’s wonderful critters, GEN Z (the company) makes hydration for Gen Zers (the humans) more on brand by COVERING the aluminum bottles with marvelous critters. Yes, every sleek, chilled, resealable, and transportable bottle has critters staring back at you as you hydrate. It’s pretty creepy.
About Langers
Family-owned Langer Juice Company, Inc., has emerged as a major force and a top ranked brand in the very competitive juice industry. Since the formation of the company in 1960, the Langer family has remained actively involved in every aspect of making juice, from production and marketing to quality assurance. Producing beverages in many of the high-volume categories that include apple, cranberry, orange, grape, grapefruit, and pomegranate, as well as innovative tropical blends such as mango, guava and passionfruit, the Langers brand can be found in major retailers and Club stores across the country. Additional brands include Langer Farms 100% juices and No Worries brand cocktail mixers. Recent additions include Langers apple cider vinegar stick packs, Langers organic flavored sparkling waters, Langer Farms Beyond Butter apple butter, Beyond Honey plant-based vegan honey and LyteAde Sports hydration beverage with caffeine. Langer Juice Company is located in City of Industry, CA.
For more information about GEN Z’s #FlavorlessTransparentLiquid, visit them on TikTok, Instagram or its extremely passe website.