The refreshed corporate purpose and values statements unite a diverse portfolio of brands under one vision, celebrating its heritage while embracing the future. The name change acknowledges that ...
Sometimes it’s not a larger facility or bigger operating budget that draws someone to a new job. Moving up the ladder in a company doesn’t always lead to larger clientele and fancier facilities. For ...
Litehouse will invest $46 million in the City of Danville, VA at the packaged food company's first East Coast production facility. Litehouse, Inc. will invest $46 million to acquire and expand Sky ...
Of all the grocery store options for ranch dressing, Litehouse Homestyle Ranch Dressing & Dip is the far-and-away favorite ...
Litehouse Inc., a leader in refrigerated salad dressings, dips, cheese, freeze dried herbs, and other innovative consumer packaged goods, will invest $46 million to acquire and expand Sky Valley Foods ...
SANDPOINT, IDAHO — Litehouse, Inc., maker of refrigerated salad dressings, dips and cheeses, has initiated a search for its next president and chief executive officer. Jim Frank, who has been at the ...
The deal was a natural — and almost all-natural, to boot — the coming together of two food-processing companies that pride themselves on the goodness of their products. In May, Idaho-based Litehouse ...
Officials at Sandpoint-based Litehouse Inc. announced this week that the name of the company that makes popular salad dressings has been changed to Litehouse Foods. What began 62 years ago as a ...
Ashok Selvam is the former James Beard Award-winning regional editor for Eater’s Midwest region, in charge of coverage in Chicago, Detroit, and the Twin Cities. He’s a native Chicagoan and had been ...
Two people were hit by a truck while out on a lunchtime walk in Sandpoint Thursday, according to a Litehouse Foods, Inc. spokesperson. Police say two employees of Litehouse were walking down McGhee ...
Litehouse dressings and dips fanatic Ranch Guy wants to share some of the offbeat contents of his Ranch Cave in the lead up to the Super Bowl—and then give some of that merchandise away. How offbeat?