Archive for ‘Pricing & Costing’

How 2 Food Entrepreneurs Kick Started With Kickstarter

By , 3 May, 2012,

The team behind Squarebar marshalled the support of Grandma and put social media to the test when raising money through a Kickstarter campaign to fund their new organic, Non-GMO Verified nutrition bar company. Hear how they did it in this spontaneous interview, shot I ran into them at an event. P.S. I lurv their bars which really are good enough to be candy bar substitutes.

2011 Chocolate Salon: Conversations With Chocolatiers

By , 20 April, 2011,

For me, walking through Taste TV’s International Chocolate Salon in San Francisco was culinary carnage and social bliss. First the carnage: As I diligently sampled chocolate after chocolate, I flashed back to a family-owned chocolate shop I called “my after school job” in high school.  The day I started, I asked if I could taste. The owner said, tongue in cheek, it was mandatory. “You’ll get sick of it,” he added.

While others filled cups and napkins with samples, my chocolate chunks and passion fruit-filled bon bons disappeared like a snowman in global warming.

However despite my theobroma high, the bliss came from great conversations with old candy-making friends and interesting new food entrepreneurs I met at the show.

10 Things I Gleaned While Not Eating

  1. The world wants more chocolate! Every year new companies pop up, and the crowd loves them. The thing is, companies go too. It’s exciting to feel the passion, and exhaustion, of a new candy company as I sample a peanut butter cup from Snake and Butterfly (who incidentally makes maple bacon caramels).
  2. When accounting for costs, every minute counts. “It’s easy to calculate the time involved with making my chocolate but where I might lose sense of time – and money – is the packaging. Every ribbon tie, every piece of tape takes a few seconds and thus costs me. When making a large number of packages like for an event, my costs can skyrocket.” So when you rip open your box of chocolates, enjoy the full experience like you will the gooey centers.
  3. Kitchen collaboration rules. I’d heard of at least 3 chocolatiers on the hunt for a large kitchen. It turns out one is working on starting a kitchen and has the line on others who may share. Collaboration is so much better than competition.
  4. If at first a group dies out, start again. The desire to commune among local chocolatiers is strong and wonderful. Peer groups rock – for sharing resources, general support in victory and commiseration, and trading advice. For a couple of years a group of women – “The Sweet Mafia” – would meet periodically. A new chocolatier is reinvigorating the tradition, which led to various business collaborations in cooperatively buying bulk chocolate and production.
  5. Fame can’t hurt. No one knew why William Dean‘s line was so long, about a 15 minute wait. Tasting the chocolates answered three questions: They’re good. He’s famous. Their tasting was a veritable flight with a highly personal touch. OK four: They were selling a lot. Was it his feature on the Home Shopping Network? Do tell.
  6. Inspiration comes from the darndest places. The delightful I-li of Vice Chocolates debuted a chocolate inspired by “The Ring,” decorated with a ring and named after her favorite character.
  7. Twists are fun especially where danger is involved. It’s fun when you can tell a story like Amano Chocolates with their bon bon made with “the most expensive honey in the world” from Yemen. I pictured kids in the middle of nowhere sticking their arms in buzzing hives to enable me to taste that chocolate in San Francisco coupled with the thought that the honey is probably unavailable at this time.
  8. Wine and chocolate go together almost as well as vodka and chocolate. Two different vendors had twists on the ol’ Godiva chocolate liqueur. I had to go with the “local” one – made in Petaluma, despite the Motley umlaut in VÄD.
  9. It’s hard to tell big companies from small. There is much contention in the world as to “artisan” being bandied about. I had no clue (except for a post-chocolate-coma-flashback) that Pure Dark was a Mars company. Yes that Mars. It is now tempting to say “not that there’s anything wrong with it” ala Seinfeld, because I’m an admitted fan of another Mars company, Ethel M. A few months ago the editor of Specialty Food Magazine posed the question of large companies using “artisan.” It’s a toughie.
  10. Toffee and caramel are all the rage. Which is good, with sugar and butter being my two basic food groups. Cristina of Kika’s Treats is making caramels using palm sugar. Toffee Talk, a San Francisco company, uses red walnuts which lend an extra soft crunch to their English style toffee. Nicole Lee, ex-high techie of San Jose, sampled mini chocolate hearts filled with drippy passion fruit caramel as did Anni from Gateau et Ganache in Palo Alto.

Sunflower Seed Butter : Make or Buy ?

By , 27 March, 2011,

For the last few months I’ve been playing around with recipes and ideas for possible foods to sell. It’s amazing how recipes that seemingly cost a miniscule amount can quickly add up to where it might be difficult to make a profit.

When I set out to re-make the famous Flourless Peanut Butter Cookies recipe, adapted from Jennifer Cinquepalmi,   using sunflower seed butter, I headed to Trader Joe’s. At $3.99 for 16oz and containing sugar, their new sunflower seed butter product gave me pause. Roasting and grinding sunflower seeds myself would more accurately echo the recipe, which called for plain peanut butter. And $3.99 seemed a bit pricey to this peanut butter buyer….and one pound of sunflower seed kernels costs $1.49. Then again, I’d never made “nut” butter before. What’s a dabbler to do?

The country of origin is not marked on either product, but I’m 83.7% sure, based on the price, that the kernels are from China and 91.7% sure that the butter is from U.S.-grown kernels…perhaps Sun Butter. (Do you know?)

The Results

I coated the kernels with a salt water solution then dry roasting them over a flame. Crunchy, toasty deliciousness.

Using a food processor, I whirled the kernels until they became a smooth and gooey butter.

Interestingly, it took 2x as many kernels to make the equivalent amount in butter. 1/2 cup of kernels makes 1/4 cup of butter, not that shocking though when you think of how much more compressed butter or paste is than the raw ingredient.

The Verdict

Buy!

Given that the kernel price comes to $3 for 16 oz of sunflower seed butter, getting the pre-made butter is a much better investment, if the sugar is not an issue. I’ll definitely try the recipe and reduce the sugar a bit but it should be fine.
gluten free sunflower butter cookies

Flourless Sunflower Seed Butter Cookies (Nutless Wonder Cookies)

  • 1 cup sunflower seed butter
  • 1 cup brown sugar (if using store bought butter that includes sugar, slightly reduce sugar)
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • sea salt
  • flax seeds (optional)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Mix ingredients together. Place 1/2 tsp size balls on parchment or a stick-free mat on a baking sheet. Bake 8-9 minutes. For chewier cookies remove when they are still soft and seem undone. A true nut free, gluten free crowd pleaser!