James Gerald Leprino (November 22, 1937 – June 19, 2025) was an American billionaire businessman who was the chairman of Leprino Foods, the world's largest manufacturer of mozzarella cheese, it controls up to 85% of the U.S. pizza cheese market. He was listed as the 264th richest person in the U.S., with a net worth of $3.1 billion according to the 2017 Forbes 400 list. Forbes Chloe Sorvino nicknamed him the "Willy Wonka of cheese".
The company rapidly grew alongside the American taste for pizza. When Pizza Hut began rapidly expanding in 1968, they turned to Leprino, who came up with a way of avoiding the traditional cheese shredding process in the store and layer on frozen product instead, simplifying the process and reducing cost and labor. Leprino Foods became the largest manufacturer of mozzarella cheese in the world, over which James Leprino reigned as CEO and Chairman. It supplies major pizza chains including Pizza Hut, Domino's, Papa John's and Little Caesars, and controls up to 85% of the U.S. pizza cheese market.
The company made many innovations to accommodate the needs for industrial-scale pizza making, including the introduction of spray-on additives that change the behavior of cheese in the oven, allowing the pizza chains to differentiate their product from each other. They reduced the natural aging process for mozzarella from 14 days to a mere four hours. They created a "preservative mist". They made cheese that could be baked on pizzas even while the cheese was frozen. Laprino credited Lester Kielsmeier, a cheesemaker from Wisconsin, who ultimately became the lead author of more than a dozen Leprino Foods patents. "I would tell people, ‘Lester is the man that made me rich,’", Leprino said.
In October 2017, his net worth was estimated by Forbes at US$3.1 billion. In 2022, his two nieces, who hold a 25% stake in Leprino Foods, filed a lawsuit claiming they, as minority shareholders, were disfavored in terms of profitability and global management. The nieces requested Leprino Foods be dissolved and its assets be distributed among all shareholders. A Colorado judge ruled out dismantlement of the company, but their claims of inequitable treatment could go forward.
Leprino was secretive, rarely speaking with journalists.
Leprino died on June 19, 2025, at the age of 87. It is unknown where he died or what cause.
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