Meet the Owner(s): Alison Cayne of Haven’s Kitchen

Meet the Owner(s) is a new column on PaigePapers featuring enterprise owners running bakeries, cafes, markets, specialty food shops, and fast casual restaurants in New York City and around the country.  In speaking with enterprise owners, we hope to offer readers unique perspectives on the challenges and triumphs of ownership, as well as valuable insights to apply to their own enterprises.

Recently, we spoke with Alison Cayne, founder of Haven’s Kitchen, a specialty food shop, recreational cooking school and event space in Manhattan.  Located just blocks from the Union Square Greenmarket, Haven’s Kitchen “is dedicated to the preparation and enjoyment of delicious, sustainable, seasonal food.”  TaraPaige Group helped Alison and her team with the opening of Haven’s Kitchen and were thrilled to catch up with her again.

Below is an abbreviated version of TaraPaige Group’s conversation with Alison.

TPG:       How did the idea for Haven’s Kitchen come about? 

AC:             “When I first was out of college I really wanted to open a little sandwich shop, and I always loved making food for people and thought it would be fun to do that as a job.  [T]hen when I went back to school, I started teaching again. I had always given my friends cooking lessons here and there, and as I started learning more about food systems, my cooking classes turned into more of food classes…about sustainability and nutrition.”

TPG:       And then you started looking for a space for the school?

AC:            “I didn’t really at all envision this, I just pictured the kitchen part, and I thought there’d be a little retail…and this place came up and it was way bigger than I [was looking for].”

But after seeing the building, Alison began to envision a ground level café and school, and the event spaces on higher floors. “So the idea for the whole thing as one big business didn’t really happen until the building happened.”

TPG:      What was the most challenging part of starting a new venture? 

AC:            “I had no idea what I was doing…It was also my greatest asset, because someone with more understanding of this business and everything that goes into it probably wouldn’t have taken this on.  And it’s been challenging in that I’m a very trusting person and unfortunately I’ve been challenged with having to face the fact that not everyone deserves that trust…There have been those…typical business challenges, getting this permit or that…certificate, but all of that doesn’t really get to me in a core way, it’s more the interpersonal stuff that has been challenging.”

TPG:      What has been the most exciting part?

AC:            “Honestly, every day is exciting.  That there are people changing the way that they eat and understand sustainable and local, that chefs come to us because they like our coffee and our granola…We work with JustFood [where Alison is on the board], we work with Rural & Migrant Ministry, we work with Edible Schoolyard, we work with FarmAid.  We’re actually doing very cool stuff, and that’s exciting.  [P]eople have responded so well and I’m so honored.”

TPG:       How have things changed now that you’re past your first year?

AC:            “I’m less challenged by the interpersonal stuff now. I think I’ve gotten a little tougher skin, and I think I’ve learned how to not personalize things that are not personal.  But the excitement grows.  It just gets bigger.  It’s still all really exciting.”

TPG:       What about your day-to-day?

AC:            “I taught more at the beginning…And I don’t have the time really to do that [now].  I was behind the counter a lot more at the beginning, too.  I’m still behind the counter, but it’s not probably the most efficient use of my time.  Although I do love our regulars and they all know me.”

“My days change from day to day.  We are still dealing with contractors, we’re still growing our website.  I do the Pinterest. I do the Instagram.  I’m writing for the Huffington Post.  I’m still in school.  I still end up talking to customers because I’m always sitting in the front.  I do the flowers for every private event. Every day is different, which is really fun because it keeps it very exciting.”

TPG:       Sustainability is a core value of your enterprise.  Can you talk a bit about building it into your enterprise?

AC:            “If you’re a values-driven business, you’re going to have questions every day…My primary goal is yes, to keep the lights on, but my very, very close secondary goal is to represent the values that I am espousing.  So every day is a decision, [for example when a private event] really wants to have Coke at their party, but we don’t support Coke, generally, as a business.  And they don’t understand why we would prefer to serve Boylan’s…Everything is a case-by-case, and that’s the good news about being a very small team is you get to make those decisions.  But they’re constant…You constantly have to keep checking yourself against that mission…We keep checking against [a set of questions]–‘are we who we say we are; are we who we want to be; have we lost something because we’re so busy.’”

TPG:       You have 3 revenue streams at Haven’s Kitchen (classes, retail, and events).  How do you manage all three under one roof?

AC:            “It’s been and asset and it’s been a liability… Our ricotta is a perfect example.  We make the ricotta from the unused milk from the coffee [bar], so that’s a really good way…to have the businesses feed off of each other.  We have really good ways of being more sustainable in terms of food waste.”

But she noted it does have some challenges. “The private events right now support the whole building. We would like each business unit to be more self-sustaining.  I thought the school would be more profitable.  As it turns out, right now I think we have about six classes a week.  I thought we’d have three classes a day, six days a week.” Furthermore, Alison noted, “Figuring out what the costs are for retail and the school are actually challenging because so much of it is tied in [to the other revenue streams].”

TPG:      What are some things you wish you had known before starting your enterprise?  Is there anything you would do differently?

AC:            “It would be great to [have known] what COGS [Cost of Goods Sold] are.  I kept looking at sales, and [saying] I don’t get it.  We have such great sales, why are we losing money?  And I didn’t really understand that …[y]ou can have a program where you figure out your margins.  And you should run everything through that program just to know where you are.  It’s the same thing with management.  It’s about if you’re bringing out the best in people that you’re managing… That’s something that I wish I had known earlier on because I think that I was very nice, but I don’t necessarily think that I was as helpful as I could be.  And I thought that I was giving people autonomy, but I probably wasn’t giving people enough leadership.”

TPG:      What’s your favorite product or class that Haven’s Kitchen offers?

AC:            “I really love everything.  I happen to love our granola cookie.  And I love our ricotta.  And I love our pancake mix.  No one would ever say that [our food is] health food, because we use butter.  It’s not a quinoa-chia-date raw bar.  But it does have good quality ingredients; it is made with everything you would want your food to be made with.  It’s just real food and it’s really good.”

Veggie Vans Roll Into New York City Food Deserts

Refrigerated trucks carrying locally-sourced produce will begin driving through New York City’s food deserts, neighborhoods underserved by farmers markets and traditional grocery stores.  Called Veggie Vans, these trucks will offer local produce to residents at a reasonable price.

Residents sign up to participate in the program through participating community organizations, then have access to $10 bags filled with produce each week.  Residents can use cash, credit, debit, and food stamps to purchase the bags.  Veggie Vans will stop at senior centers, NYCHA buildings, nursing homes, and other locations each week so that all residents can have easy access.

The trucks will begin today in Manhattan’s Two Bridges neighborhood and expand to other communities, including Harlem and Washington Heights.  The program is open to anyone wishing to participate.

For more information, click here.

Caribou Coffee: On Social Media and Sustainability

Fast Casual reports that Caribou Coffee Company Inc. is joining forces with its fans and Project 7, a manufacturer of eco-friendly products, to plant trees in April. As the first major U.S. coffeehouse to source all coffees and espresso from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms, Caribou Coffee, in partnership with Project 7, will plant a fruit tree in Central or South America with each “like” it receives on Facebook in April.

In 2012, this partnership helped to plant more than 100,000 trees, feed the hungry in U.S. communities with 35,000 meals, provide over 3,000 days of shelter for those in need.

To encourage its fans to drink sustainably year-round, Caribou offers all customers who use a reusable tumbler in their locations a 10-cent discount on their beverages. Coffee drinkers can look forward to Caribou’s Earth Day offer when the company gives free coffee to all customers who bring in a reusable mug or tumbler on April 22.

B-Corp Status for The Eco-Conscious Business Owner

For socially conscious entrepreneurs, becoming certified as a B Corporation sounds ideal: Make money and do some good at the same time. But how would it really change your business? B Lab, a Berwyn, Pa.-based non-profit, created the unique business structure and provides the certification. To achieve B Corp status entrepreneurs must meet very high standards in how they treat employees, the environment, and the community in which their business operates.

Young Entrepreneur talked to entrepreneurs that were among the first B Corps, when the certification became available in 2007. Here, they share how the new structure has affected their businesses and offer advice on the process.

Adding B-Corp Status to your business increases your credibility to your sustainable conscious consumers

88 ORCHARD: COFFEE & WINE CAFE ENTERPRISE

88 Orchard Street, New York, NY 10003 (Lower East Side) • 212.228.8880

88 Orchard

88 Orchard

Their Success… Can a cafe offer it all?  88 Orchard succeeds in combining sustainability across all elements.  They feature organic sustainable coffee, locally sourced pastries and bread, wine and beer selections and on site preparation of sandwiches, salads and cheeses.  They prominently feature their purveyors such as Amy’s Bread, Balthazar Bakery, Irving Farm Coffee Roasters and Saxelby’s Cheese.  This is more than your typical cafe– this is a neighborhhood joint that you too wish you had just outside your door.  In addition to the welcoming environment upstairs, there is an intimate dining area downstairs.  Their design is mainly reclaimed materials and on a monthly basis they featuring a rotating showcase of art from local artists.  This cafe has built a community like culture and makes this operation one to follow.

What We Learned… Sustainability is good for business and good for building a community around your business.  This cafe does it all in offering in serving their community all day with a menu from breakfast to night.

Take Aways… Understanding the the community you serve is value added to your business and to your guests.

Edible Manhattan Presents New York Eat Drink Local Week 6/23-6/30

Edible Manhattan’s Eat Drink Local Week celebrated by Edibles around the Tri-state area, raises awareness about the bounty of products grown in the region, drives customers to the restaurants and other businesses that feature these products, and raises funds for charitable partners dedicated to regional agriculture throughout the state. The fourth Eat Drink Local week kicks off June 23 and involves partners from the entire food chain, who urge you to dine out, cook in, and celebrate the ingredients, landscape and people behind our food and drink through a week’s worth of events, which we’re currently planning.

Eat Drink Local Week June 23rd – June 30th

Stone Barns Center offering a Mother’s Day Treat

Celebrate Mother’s Day at Stone Barns with loved ones of all ages! Pitch in on the farm with special hands-on activities, and take a tour of the mothers and new babies. We’ll have a plant-potting activity in the Dooryard Garden all day and our Farm Market and Spring Plant Sale will be held from 1:00PM – 4:00PM.

Join Stone Barns and your family for a fun filled day in the garden

Brooklyn Food Conference May 12th, 9am-6pm

On May 12, 2012 over 5,000 people are expected to attend this free, all day event filled with keynotes from notable food activists, workshops, panel discussions, food demos, family programming, art and much more. The 2012 Conference will help strengthen the cooperative effort of individuals, groups and organizations fighting everyday for a healthy, sustainable and fair food system. Food activists, local farmers, academics, restaurateurs and health advocates and all those interested in food justice will gather to discuss the global food economy and its impact on our lives.
Join 5,000 others and support the Brooklyn Food Conference

Celebrate Earth Day with NYC Greenmarket with Food Scrap and Textile Recyclying

What better way to celebrate Earth Day than by visiting your local Greenmarket to recycle food scraps and textiles? GrowNYC is happy to help, with new sites for dropping off unwanted clothing, linens, and fruit & veggie scraps opening this weekend and throughout the Spring.
Join NYC Greenmarket in celebrating Earth Day

May 19th, Stand up for Food Revolution Day: Get Involved and Make a Difference

Food Revolution Day on 19 May is a chance for people who love food to come together to share information, talents and resources; to pass on their knowledge and highlight the world’s food issues. All around the globe, people will work together to make a difference. Food Revolution Day is about connecting with your community through events at schools, restaurants, local businesses, dinner parties and farmers’ markets. We want to inspire change in people’s food habits and to promote the mission for better food and education for everyone.
Join in and Make a difference in our food ecosystem, May 19th 2012