This is WONDERFUL, as a very small business owner, it motivates me to keep working, striving to make the PURPOSE for my business to make a difference in my community SHINE. You are very inspiring. Mr. Ulukaya, you gave me HOPE!! GRACIAS from Juárez México.
Traditionally, yogurt from Greece made with Sheep's milk. Whole Foods had stopped selling Chobani yogurt At the beginning of the year, I reported that Whole Foods had stopped selling Chobani yogurt over a spat the grocery store had with the Greek yogurt brand’s use of milk from animals eating genetically modified feed. The spat went a little like this: Whole Foods only wanted to sell organic or non-GMO Greek yogurt. Chobani produces all of its Greek yogurt with milk from conventionally raised cows. Those cows were eating genetically engineered feed. Whole Foods seems to be under the impression that animal byproducts from an animal that has eaten GMO feed is also GMO. (Yes, under that same logic you and me and anyone that has ever eaten GMO food is now a GMO.) Whole Foods asked Chobani to source its product elsewhere so it was GMO-free. Chobani refused. When it comes to Greek yogurt, we may think that the authentic version is made of cow's milk and is strained of its own liquid to reach the perfect creamy consistency. But this isn't actually true. Real Greek yogurt, the kind made not in factories but in villages, has never been strained and probably never will be. Here, yogurt is made with full-fat Sheep's milk. This rich milk, together with a combination of time and temperatures, is going to give us a yogurt that is already thick, tart and creamy, without the need to be strained at all. We visited Antonis Nikolopoulos at his dairy in Floka, Greece, to learn how he makes yogurt from his Sheep herd.(ruclips.net/video/BrA_-152whA/видео.html)
Thank you Stanford for bringing forward this beautiful interview!
Great human being! Proud of you! ❤
This is WONDERFUL, as a very small business owner, it motivates me to keep working, striving to make the PURPOSE for my business to make a difference in my community SHINE. You are very inspiring. Mr. Ulukaya, you gave me HOPE!! GRACIAS from Juárez México.
What an inspiring and humble businessman. He gives hope that making money and treating people well are not mutually exclusive.
As a Turk, I proud of him.
He’s a Kurdish businessman
@@Reas247 do we have to hate him since he is Kurdish ?
Yes we are proud of him
He's from Dersim, my home 😁
Hi!HAMDİ ULUKAYA
I HAVE TO SEE YOU!
Important about something!
This is amazing. My Goal is to be like him in the plant based yogurt world.
All KURDS Prouud of You 😍👏
❤👏🏻👏🏻
❤️ very inspiring
Traditionally, yogurt from Greece made with Sheep's milk.
Whole Foods had stopped selling Chobani yogurt
At the beginning of the year, I reported that Whole Foods had stopped selling Chobani yogurt over a spat the grocery store had with the Greek yogurt brand’s use of milk from animals eating genetically modified feed.
The spat went a little like this: Whole Foods only wanted to sell organic or non-GMO Greek yogurt. Chobani produces all of its Greek yogurt with milk from conventionally raised cows. Those cows were eating genetically engineered feed. Whole Foods seems to be under the impression that animal byproducts from an animal that has eaten GMO feed is also GMO. (Yes, under that same logic you and me and anyone that has ever eaten GMO food is now a GMO.) Whole Foods asked Chobani to source its product elsewhere so it was GMO-free. Chobani refused.
When it comes to Greek yogurt, we may think that the authentic version is made of cow's milk and is strained of its own liquid to reach the perfect creamy consistency. But this isn't actually true. Real Greek yogurt, the kind made not in factories but in villages, has never been strained and probably never will be. Here, yogurt is made with full-fat Sheep's milk. This rich milk, together with a combination of time and temperatures, is going to give us a yogurt that is already thick, tart and creamy, without the need to be strained at all. We visited Antonis Nikolopoulos at his dairy in Floka, Greece, to learn how he makes yogurt from his Sheep herd.(ruclips.net/video/BrA_-152whA/видео.html)
Kurdistan is proud of him :)
I think about this View From The Top event on campus when I have Chobani.