Manitoba staples marking milestone anniversaries
Two Manitoban snacking staples – Old Dutch Ltd. and Mordens’ are celebrating a combined 135 years in business in Winnipeg.
The potato chip company started in Minnesota and has been in the city for 70 years, while Mordens’ chocolates marks 65 years.
A can of Old Dutch potato chips. (Source: Cathy Laughlin/Etsy)
Blake and Shirley Morden first opened the chocolate shop in 1959. The original location was a small storefront on Portage Avenue, but it moved to its current location on Sargent Avenue soon after.
“A lot of things have stayed the same,” Mariel Morden-Miller, Mordens’ general manager, said, “Like the most popular product in the 1960s, is still the same today because those classic flavours endure.”
- The information you need to know, sent directly to you: Download the CTV News App
- Sign up now for daily CTV News Winnipeg newsletters
Morden-Miller is also the granddaughter of the store’s founders, and they’ve continued to learn as much as possible and create new recipes.
Though many things have changed over the last 65 years, some have stayed consistent, like their famous Russian Mints.
Over the years, the chocolate maker has continued to expand, adding a second storey and an extension to its building to increase production capacity.
Mordens' of Winnipeg's chocolate covered almonds. (Source: Mordens' of Winnipeg)
Food “part of connection to your hometown”: Professor
“[Food] becomes part of your connection to your hometown or your home province,” said Janis Thiessen, a professor of history at the University of Winnipeg, who researches and teaches food history.
“I think it can be a point of pride for folks that, you know, ‘I eat this, I don’t eat that.’ It’s one of the ways that you conceive of yourself as both an individual and as part of a collective.”
Thiessen explained it’s rare for local businesses to have lasted so long as there has been a lot of consolidation in food manufacturing since the 1980s.
“There’s some long-existing businesses with long histories like that, but there aren’t many,” Thiessen said.
Thiessen noted that Mordens’ of Winnipeg is a true rarity as it’s a third-generation business.
Mordens' sweet treats that were first made popular in the 1960s continue to be a staple today. (Source: Mordens' of Winnipeg)
“There are very few businesses of any kind in North America that are family-owned and make it to the third generation,” she said. “So that’s one way in which it stands out.”
She added that it’s also uncommon for a successful business to stay in the same location throughout its operation rather than move to a bigger headquarters.
“The West End, in the last couple of years, had some challenges certainly. The pandemic made those harder,” Thiessen said.
“There’s been a lot of business that have closed in this neighbourhood during the pandemic, but Mordens’ just keeps trucking along.”
An assorted box of chocolate from Mordens' of Winnipeg. (Source: Mordens' of Winnipeg)
Morden-Miller said running a business does come with challenges, but the fact that they have worked as a family has made it so they can take on any curveballs.
She noted that working for Mordens helps her feel connected to her family's past generations, adding that when you support a local business, you’re “supporting a family’s dream.”
“If you take the time to go visit a local business, a lot of the time, you’re speaking directly to the person who has made the product by hand. They care deeply about the product,” Morden-Miller said.
“They’ll remember your face. They’ll appreciate every single time you come in to visit their store.”
Thiessen said that Mordens’ chocolates have become a tradition for many Winnipeggers, especially their Russian mints.
Mordens' of Winnipeg's Russian mints. (Source: Mordens' of Winnipeg)
“It’s the thing you need to have a box of at Christmas, or it’s not really Christmas,” she said.
“Some of those foods take on these iconic status because people have managed to connect them to rituals within their families.
Morden-Miller said the key to her family’s long-lasting success is that they never give up.
“[My grandfather] has said this to me time and time again, and it has really, really helped, especially when things get tough and that to just keep going,” she said. “Don’t give up, just keep going.”
Mixed nuts from Mordens' of Winnipeg. (Source: Mordens' of Winnipeg)
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'She will not be missed': Trump on Freeland's departure from cabinet
As Canadians watched a day of considerable political turmoil for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his government given the sudden departure of Chrystia Freeland on Monday, it appears that U.S. president-elect Donald Trump was also watching it unfold.
Canadian government to make border security announcement today: sources
The federal government will make an announcement on new border security measures after question today, CTV News has learned.
Two employees charged in death of assisted care resident who ended up locked outside building overnight
Two employees at an Oshawa assisted living facility are facing charges in connection with the death of a resident who wandered outside the building during the winter and ended up locked outside all night.
The Canada Post strike is over, but it will take time to get back to normal, says spokesperson
Canada Post workers are back on the job after a gruelling four-week strike that halted deliveries across the country, but it could take time before operations are back to normal.
Lion Electric to file for creditor protection
Lion Electric, a Quebec-based manufacturer of electric buses and trucks, says that it plans to file for creditor protection.
Canada's inflation rate down a tick to 1.9% in November
Inflation edged down slightly to 1.9 per cent in November as price growth continued to stabilize in Canada.
Transit riders work together to rescue scared cat from underneath TTC streetcar
A group of TTC riders banded together to rescue a woman's cat from underneath a streetcar in downtown Toronto, saving one of its nine lives.
Trudeau considering his options as leader after Freeland quits cabinet, sources say
Chrystia Freeland, Canada's finance minister, said in an explosive letter published Monday morning that she will quit cabinet. Here's what happened on Monday, Dec. 16.
Teacher and a teenage student killed in a shooting at a Christian school in Wisconsin
A 15-year-old student killed a teacher and another teenager with a handgun Monday at a Christian school in Wisconsin, terrifying classmates including a second grader who made the 911 call that sent dozens of police officers rushing to the small school just a week before its Christmas break.