EVANS CITY, Pa. — Marburger Farm Dairy is not just an outlet for the milk production from the Marburger family’s dairy cattle, but a market for farmers’ milk from several counties in western Pennsylvania.
Jim Marburger, current president of Marburger Farm Dairy, has spent his life keeping the family business going strong in western
Pennsylvania
Now, the fourth generation — son Craig and daughter Carrie Marburger-Roff — work with him to keep the milk processor running.
“It’s been a good life,” said Marburger.
History
Marburger’s grandfather, A.C. Marburger, had been a dairy farmer all of his life. However, in 1938, an opportunity came along that changed the Marburger family farm history.
A.C. Marburger purchased Evans City Dairy after it went bankrupt, and changed the name to Marburger Farm Dairy. The dairy was able to process 20 gallons of milk a day.
Almost immediately after he opened the dairy plant, local farmers started hauling their milk into the Marburger Farm Dairy. The dairy began delivering milk directly to area homes, then started to supply grocery stores.
In 1940, Marburger’s father, Martin, and two uncles started working with his grandfather. They kept the dairy small in the 1950s, but started growing in the 1960s.
Still milking cows
Marburger said they had 10 tie stalls in 1950, but by the middle of the 1950s, the Marburgers were milking 60 head of cattle on their own farm.
By 1968, the farm doubled the size of the barn, and was up to milking 100 head. Then, in 1979, a fire broke out in the barn due to an electrical issue. The farm lost only a few cattle, but the barn burned to the ground.
The Marburgers decided then to build a freestall barn and began milking 100-110 Holstein cattle.
Progress
Today, the plant and dairy farm remain on land that has been in the Marburger family since the 1840s.
In 2000, the decision was made to build a new dairy plant, the first dairy built in western Pennsylvania in 50 years, the family says. The state-of-the-art facility was one of the first plants to be built using air valves and computers to process and operate the plant.
In 2014, the processing plant is producing between 20,000-25,000 gallons a day.
The dairy now produces milk for several large grocers, including some Wal-Mart stores, and their product reaches as far south as Florida. They service retail stores in Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania, and also offer home delivery in a 20-mile radius.
There are 40 trucks on the road each day, delivering Marburger milk.
Today, Marburger Farm Dairy employs 100 people.
Milk purchases
Marburger said the dairy purchases milk from farmers extending from Meadville, Pennsylvania, in the northwest, to Washington, Pennsylvania, in the south. He said there are four milk trucks per day that deliver milk to the plant. No milk is processed from outside of Pennsylvania, due to state regulations.
Marburger said not all of the milk purchased is used at the dairy. Some is resold to Titusville Dairy for ice cream and Fairview Cheese for the production of mozzarella and Swiss cheese.
Profit margins
Jim and Craig Marburger agree that higher milk prices is not necessarily a good thing.
While it may be good on the milk production end, the father and son team explained that it means smaller profit margins for the dairy processing enterprise, which, in turn, means no new equipment.
They also explained that it means making repairs to the existing equipment to process the milk and the trucks that deliver it.
Both agreed keeping the doors open in the dairy industry sometimes means making the difficult decisions no one wants to make.
“You have to tighten your belt to keep going,” said Jim Marburger.
Marburger said the most important thing for the dairy is to produce quality products the public wants.
Ice tea production
The dairy produces chocolate, white (skim, 2 percent and whole) and buttermilk, and packages milk in quarts, half gallon and gallon sizes, for sale to grocery stores.
Marburger said school districts are one of the dairy’s customer segments. The dairy produces school-size milk drinks for the daily lunch programs in many districts. The milk produced for schools is the only milk placed in paper cartons.
But the plant is also known for its ice tea. It produces 18 flavors of ice tea, in more than 40,000 gallons during the summer. In addition, lemonade and orange juice are also bottled.
Every day
Marburger said the dairy starts each day with 15,000 gallons of skim milk, then, as the processing moves along, more fat is added in order to produce the whole, 2 or 1 percent milk.
He said the dairy is strict about processing milk according to Pennsylvania laws and following established food safety regulations.
The dairy keeps two years’ worth of records of all milk brought into the processing plant, including where it came from and what truck it was hauled in. In addition, like every processor, every truckload of milk gets tested for antibiotic residues before it gets unloaded.
After the milk is unloaded, it goes through the pasteurization process, which includes heating the milk up to 173 degrees, then in 18 seconds, the milk temperature is dropped to 36 degrees.
Marburger, Craig and Carrie all agree the process is not simple and there are no shortcuts, but a safe product ensures that dairy farmers have a place to sell their milk and the consumer gets the dairy products they need.
I really enjoyed this story as it reminds me of a local dairy operation in my hometown which used to thrive many years ago. Next time I’m in western PA I will make sure I try your milk. Thanks for keeping the home delivery service alive.
I was an over the road driver and tried milk all over the country. I tried Marburger milk and loved it. Your two percent milk tastes better than most whole milk I have tried I go out of my way to find it. I drive local now and I go through Evans city every Saturday and stop at Violas market to buy some. The cottage cheese is great too. I also buy it at Cabot Pa. I don’t live in an area where I can buy it everyday, so when I get the chance to buy it I buy two quarts and enjoy them all at once. Thank you for having a great diary the gives good products to the public.
I sometimes buy Marburger, but prefer “gently pasteurized” organic or at least RGB free milk. I understand you must make business decisions to stay profitable, however,’ oleo and nondairy coffee creamers do not represent the dairy industry well.
Why is there no cottage cheese available at wal-mart or giant eagle. Have you quit producing this product? If not where can I purchase it? Thank you