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GOURMET NEWS
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T H E
VOLUME 85, NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2020 n $7.00
NEWS & NOTES n
Meijer Store Director Celebrates 50-Year Anniversary PAGE 10
RETAILER NEWS n
Candy Club Provides Turn-Key Opportunity PAGE 12
SUPPLIER NEWS n
Julia’s Pantry Offers Nostalgia Along with Southern Cooking PAGE 16
B U S I N E S S
N E W S P A P E R
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If Most Ice Cream Screams Back – Re:THINK PAGE 18
News..............................................6 Ad Index .......................................23
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A Snack Bar with a Mission to Save Lives BY LORRIE BAUMANN
This Saves Lives is a snack brand that’s on a mission to help end severe acute malnutrition in children around the world. With every purchase, the company sends food to a child in need through a partnership with Action Against Hunger, a global humanitarian organization that takes action against the causes and effects of hunger in more than 45 countries. Co-founded by Hollywood celebrities Kristen Bell, Ryan Devlin, Todd Grinnell and Ravi Patel, This Saves Lives offers three product lines: Classic snack bars for adults, snack bars for
children and the newest, Krispy Treats. The line of bars designed for children offers five flavors, each of which contains a full serving of fruits and vegetables in
each bar. They’re non-GMO, gluten free, kosher and safe for school – they’re all free of the most common allergens. “I’m a mom myself, and when we cre-
ated these, we wanted to be sure we were creating a product that kids love, and that parents could feel good about giving them, especially with the full serving of fruits and vegetables,” said Jillian Dilorio, the company’s Chief Sales and Giving Officer. “It’s a healthy and delicious snack bar on a mission to help end severe acute malnutrition. For every single purchase, we send life-saving food to a child in need around the world.” The Krispy Treats share the same attributes as the classic bars
One thing that Chris Molieri has learned after almost a decade of being the co-Owner and coFounder of Greenstreet Coffee Roasters in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is that most of those purchasing premium coffees prefer single-origin coffees to blends. “I think the single-origin is an opportunity to taste nuances from a specific terroir that is the literal soil and the plants and the history of that farm taken care of by the owners, generally the family that lives there and
runs it,” he said. “At the $16 price point or upwards of that number, someone wants a reserve or a family-owned estate. When they’re paying that much for it, that’s what they want.” Another thing he’s learned is that those customers generally prefer a light roast that allows them to taste flavor notes they wouldn’t get otherwise. “You won’t get that in a coffee that’s sat there for a few weeks or a month,” he said. “A week from now we’ll have gone through all the coffee we have roasted.”
Pickled Pink Foods Rises Above Pandemic BY LORRIE BAUMANN
Molieri now roasts coffee three days a week. He learned those skills from Joel Domreis at Courier Coffee Roasters in Portland, Oregon, while he was living there doing a job he hated. “I met this guy, Joel from Courier Coffee, and he talked a lot about training. He had all facets of a coffee business down pat,” he said. “He kind of made it basic enough that I was interested. I was hoping that I wouldn’t mess up his work. He gave me a primer, and I
Garlic Dill Pickles and Honey Cinnamon Beets are the newest products from Pickled Pink Foods, a line of Southern-style pickles made according to old family recipes of friends and business partners Jim Lawlor and Charlie Stephenson, who both spent many years in the restaurant business. Until the pandemic hit, this was going to be a year when the company, launched in 2013, was going to get some sales traction on the new products that Lawlor had planned to introduce to potential buyers at the Summer Fancy Food Show and the Natural Products Expos. With those shows canceled this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, business slowed down during the spring, but along with many other specialty brands, Pickled Pink Foods has since been discovered by consumers willing to try brands they might never have heard about before. According to the Specialty Food Association’s consumer research, although the specialty food market’s growth rate has been declining over the past few years as the industry matures, specialty food sales saw a 15 to 17 percent
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Fresh is Best: Advice on Coffee from Philadelphia BY LORRIE BAUMANN
NATURALLY HEALTHY
F O R
New Collection from Feve Artisan Chocolatier Evokes Luxurious Comfort BY LORRIE BAUMANN
Lifting the top off a box of Feve Artisan Chocolatier’s chocolates is like opening a jewelry box. An assortment will offer bonbons blazing with the red of a pigeon’s blood ruby or gleaming with gold. Others are iced with pointillist forests or adorned with tessellations traced in gleaming gold. “Our signature style is bold flavors and stunning appearances that create an indulgent confection,” said Bryon Sheets, Owner and President of the company founded in San Francisco, Cali-
fornia 12 years ago by chocolatier Shawn Williams. Sheets acquired the company in 2017 after retiring from a twodecade career in private equity. Although Williams had given the company a good start with ideas borrowed from European chocolatiers married to his own creative vision, he’d lacked the capital needed to scale the company beyond its positioning as a local boutique chocolatier and propel it into a future that included greater retail penetration across the country and the exercise of co-packing
and private label capabilities. “They had this great chocolate. I saw the potential to expand the number of channels and customers,” Sheets said. “We’ve invested in some new capital equipment, increased production space by almost three times and positioned to serve a wider group of customers across more lines than the company had ever had before.” Since its inception, Feve Chocolates has won four Good Food Awards along with finalist nods in 2020 for its Cinnamon
Toast Crunch and in 2018 for its Peanut Butter Coconut Chile. The awards include a 2019 win for Cherry Vanilla Single Origin, 2015 for Caramelized Chai Spice Continued on PAGE 17