Yale Sustainable Food Program

From Bulletin Board to Grocery Store

This article was originally posted on the website of the Tsai Center for Innovating Thinking at Yale, our collaborator.

“Pay attention to where your attention is going. Get in touch with your reptilian brain.”

This peculiar set of instructions from Justin Freiberg, a mentor-in-residence at Tsai CITY and director of the Yale Landscape Lab, was not in reference to the neon green signs and LED lights that adorned Elm City Market on a gray October afternoon. Rather, it was in reference to the grocery store’s even brighter collection of products, packages, and produce neatly arranged in rows, behind refrigerator doors, and on shelves — all carefully designed to reel in the casual market-goer.  

From the dairy aisle to the snack section, under Freiberg’s instruction, a cohort of curious Yale students embarked on a scavenger hunt in the local market, kicking off the Food Product Development Intensive, one of the many programs offered by Tsai CITY this fall. Intensives are cohort-based, extracurricular learning opportunities that are exploratory and experimental in nature, and this Intensive exposed students with their own food product ideas to a diverse selection of industry experts and insights. Led by Freiberg and Erwin Li, Lazarus Fellow at the Yale Sustainable Food Program, the Intensive would take its participants through a semester-long journey complete with taste-testing, open discussions, and activities.

Students by day and home cooks or aspiring entrepreneurs by night, the Intensive’s participants came to the program’s kickoff with their own recipes and ideas, ranging from twists on cultural foods, like a low-sugar kefir beverage or a quick-service empanada restaurant, to health-conscious or sustainability-focused products, like a cacao-based energy drink with roots in indigenous communities in Mexico, or even acorns as a flour or nut-milk. Equipped with diverse ideas, palates, and goals, the cohort would dive into one specific element of the development process in each session, starting with recipe development and storytelling and ending with marketing and manufacturing. 

“This is graham crunch, my greatest achievement in life, and it’s all downhill from here.”

Before introducing herself, Hallie Meyer ’15, the founder of newly-opened Caffe Panna, held up a plastic container packed with an enticing, sugary graham-cracker crumble. The homemade dessert condiment, however, was not without a fitting counterpart: ice cream. Cartons labeled with flavors like “Brown Butter Peach,” “Sour Cream Caramel,” and even “Olive Oil Golden Raisin Stracciatella” lay in front of her, undisturbed. But not for long.

The second session of the Intensive marked the first day dedicated entirely to learning from (and eating with) experts and entrepreneurs in the food business. Gathered around wooden tables, the cohort split into two breakout groups: one joined Meyer, scooping into her home-made ice cream, while another joined Jason Yang ’09, co-founder of FireOx Foods, digging into his ready-to-serve plant-based meals. 

As Meyer dished out advice on product sourcing and outreach, Yang took students through a simple costing exercise to help them better understand retailer markup, distribution, and production cost. The groups would eventually rotate and reconvene, but as the sound of discussion gradually replaced the sound of spoons scraping against paper bowls, it quickly became clear that Yang and Meyer had two different philosophies.

Yang established the importance of optimizing cost and targeting market tastes when starting a business, focusing on the economic realities of product development. However, Meyer noted that her ice cream business was “not targeting anyone.” Instead, she advised students to simply think about what they crave, what they enjoy eating — even if it’s a competitor's product — and apply their personal tastes to their own product. 

“My goal in year one is to not make money — the goal in year one is to make it a beloved place to be and to create a culture,” she explained. “Once you build a community, there are so many ways to grow.”

In dialogue, Yang and Meyer provided the students with potentially conflicting pieces of advice: should they focus on their own personal tastes and values or the consumer’s? But perhaps the choice isn’t quite so stark. At the next session, Lucas Sin ’15, culinary director at Junzi Kitchen, pointed out, “It’s not black and white, one and zero. You can engineer your product for your market while retaining authenticity.” 

Like many of the students’ ideas, Sin’s business revolves around adapting a cultural item — in his case, traditional Chinese noodles — and transforming it into an experience that is both true to its roots and accessible. Flashes of Yang’s advice — adjusting to the market tastes and the western palate — appeared in Sin’s takes (“Beef stroganoff may taste good… but it doesn’t taste healthy,” he observed at one point), yet Sin also maintained his personal vision of Chinese-American cuisine. “Chinese food hasn’t been updated for a while,” he said. “It’s not just about refreshing what’s already there.”

Finding this balance of cost, cultural authenticity, and personal values was among the many challenges posed to the cohort over the course of the Intensive — not to mention other issues like sustainability, food ethics, and making connections within the sprawling food industry. With unanswered questions and loose ends swirling within the cohort as the Intensive moved into its final two sessions, students completed activities that could help move them towards the final stages of the development process.

To help solidify product messaging, Avi Szapiro of New Haven restaurant Roia helped students create a “mind map,” a colorful web diagram that included values like taste, convenience, and affordability. Herb Heller of Living Intentions asked students to give him a two-minute elevator pitch of their product, and reminded them to “always have your product on you.” Rachel Laryea PhD ’22, founder of Kelewele, took students through a storytelling exercise based on her personal exploration of plantains, a cultural food of her childhood. Meryl Breidbart MBA ’20, co-founder of Chirps (a company that incorporates crickets in their chips, protein powder, and cookies), tasked students with crafting their own brand positioning statements alongside a template. 

After students funneled their questions into tangible messages and began to outline bite-sized stories and values, Breidbart imparted the students with a final word of advice:

“When enough people are telling you that they think what you’re doing is crazy, you know you’re onto something.”

At the start of the Intensive, Tiffany Leong MBA ’21, brought in a homemade beverage using jujubes, a traditional Chinese superfood. By the end, she had created two additional recipes: a drink made with chrysanthemum tea, and another with hawthorne berries. Daniela Chona MBA ’20, who began by experimenting with plain homemade kefir, now had formulated chai and chocolate syrups that alter the flavor profile of the original sour, fermented beverage. Schuyler Borden MF ’20, who explored the culinary use of acorns throughout the Intensive, discovered that the oils of boiled, deshelled acorns actually give off a strong, toffee-like scent on their own.

“Getting feedback on the taste of my product from people with different perspectives on the product was so valuable,” Chona said. “I was constantly surprised by the different interpretations — and positive reactions — to the kefir flavors I have been working on.…There was so much great content that I want to take some time to digest it all — no pun intended.” 

Tony Cisneros MBA/MEM ’21, whose idea is a vegan, dehydrated meal company geared towards backpackers and hikers, added: “The Intensive has been so helpful as I flesh out my food product venture…I think we have reached a turning point where [we are] shifting focus to developing our brand.”

As the clocked ticked towards 4:30 on a November afternoon, signaling the conclusion of the Intensive, the participants gave each other’s newly refined and altered products one last taste and shared a final reflection with the group. While some praised each other’s support and feedback, thanked Freiberg and Li for organizing the Intensive, or commented on the insights from the speakers, Borden took the cohort back to the Intensive’s very beginning.

“The Intensive really changed my perspective,” he reflected. “When I go in a grocery store now and see every little brand, I think, ‘Someone had to go through that entire process to be on a shelf!’”

Indigenizing the Local Food Movement with Elizabeth Hoover

Indigenous communities around the U.S. have long sustained their unique relationships to culture, land, and one another through food. As part of our Chewing the Fat series, the YSFP invited Dr. Elizabeth Hoover, Associate Professor at Brown University, to speak more about her research on indigenous foodways.

After recording a podcast with YSFP student Amy Zhang ’21, we hosted Dr. Hoover for lunch on the Yale Farm with Yale students and staff (thank you to Sanctuary Kitchen for catering!). The group gathered also to workshop a chapter from her forthcoming book, From “Garden Warriors” to Good Seeds: Indigenizing the Local Food Movement (University of Minnesota Press). In particular, students explored the relationship between food and gender norms through terms like “rematriation”, and asked questions on how climate change affects indigenous food systems and ways of living.

That afternoon, Dr. Hoover began her widely attended public lecture with stories of road trips; for years, she’d driven around the U.S. to meet with various native tribes and communities. Through these travels, she’d documented their seedsaving, farming and other cultural practices, explaining how stewarding seeds has transformative implications for food sovereignty. Seeds, after all, were gifts: they offered both biological and spiritual nourishment to people. YSFP Deja Chappell ’21 moderated the conversation that followed.

The Native American Cultural Center (NACC) hosted Dr. Hoover for a dinner with NACC students and community members. Along with other NACC student staff, YSFP-NACC liaison Catherine Webb ‘22 prepared buffalo creek squash soup, a hominy-bean salad, and sunflower seed cookies. The recipes were inspired by chef Sean Sherman’s Sioux Chef cookbook.

Elizabeth’s visit was co-sponsored by the Native American Cultural Center and the Yale Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration.

Photography by Addee Kim ‘22.

Climate Change and the Future of Food

A lunchtime conversation with Max Elder from IFTF's Food Futures Lab on climate change and the future of food. Institute for the Future (IFTF) partnered with the World Bank Climate Investment Fund on a body of research related to the Future of Climate Action. The report identified opportunity zones for climate action over the next decade, including artificial intelligence, digital engagement, youth movements, and the new climate economy.

In partnership with the Yale Center for Business and the Environment (CBEY)'s Climate Change and Entrepreneurship Program, the Plant-Based Initiative at CBEY, Tsai Center for Innovative Thinking at Yale (CITY), and Food, Agribusiness and Beverage (F.A.B.) Group at SOM.

Farming While Black, Book Conversation with Leah Penniman

Soul Fire Farm, cofounded by author, activist, and farmer Leah Penniman, is committed to ending racism and injustice in our food system. Extending this work is Leah's widely acclaimed book, Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land. We hosted Leah for a book conversation, and to discuss how you can help build a food system based on justice, dignity, and abundance for all.

Part of the YSFP's Chewing the Fat speaker series, as well as a kick-off event for Afro-American Cultural Center's Black History Month 2019 programming. Event co-sponsors included the Yale Sustainable Food Program, Afro-American Cultural Center, and Yale Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration, Endeavors, Center for Business and the Environment at Yale, Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, and the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale.