Annie Chun, who grew up in South Korea, already has one profitable enterprise underneath her belt. Now, she’s constructing her second one with only one ingredient: seaweed.
When Chun got here to San Francisco within the late Nineteen Seventies, she ended up within the meals enterprise, beginning like so many different meals entrepreneurs—on the farmer’s market. Within the early 90s, she hit the native markets together with her Asian-inspired sauces. In 2009, she and husband Steve Broad, who can also be her trusty enterprise companion, offered that first enterprise, Annie’s Chun’s meals to CJ’s, a South Korean firm, after reportedly reaching $15 million in annual gross sales.
In 2012, Chun needed to do a unique enterprise that reminded her of the seaweed snacks she grew up having in South Korea. GimMe was born. “There was nothing prefer it in the marketplace. And positively not natural.”
Chun and Broad had a tall activity forward. Not solely had been they remodeling the way in which seaweed was harvested from off the coast of South Korea, however they needed to introduce a comparatively new idea to American shoppers: a snack with a chip-like texture, however an earthy, salty style of the ocean.
The duo had benefited from the success of their earlier firm; so that they put among the positive factors from that enterprise to begin this new firm. “With the sauces, there have been too many particular person elements to make it natural. It was laborious to get copackers to additionally undergo that further effort. However with seaweed, it’s only one major ingredient,” Chun notes.
The Bay Space resident who had been a proponent of natural meals, now had an opportunity to usher in a wholly natural product line, whereas working carefully together with her provide chain.
Seaweed, a staple in Japanese and Korean diets, had been restricted to the ethnic meals aisles within the US. Plus, Chun needed to make it extra palatable for American tastes. So, she developed a crispier, chip-like model that is available in a wide range of flavors: teriyaki, wasabi, sesame, avocado oil, chili lime, and extra.
Plus, seaweed is a nutrient dense meals, Chun explains. “When you don’t have the rest so as to add to rice, simply crush some seaweed and put it on prime.” Seaweed comprises iodine, omega 3, iron, calcium, fiber, protein — amongst different vitamins. “For its weight, it’s a really nutrient dense meals,” explains Broad. “And if we have to search for extra vegetarian choices, it’s an excellent alternative, provided that we’ve overfished our seas.”
It’s additionally change into a well-liked ingredient for its environmental attributes. Seaweed will be grown in regenerative natural farms, in keeping with the Ellen MacArthur Basis. Not like land-based farms that want giant quantities of exterior inputs for his or her crops, seaweed could be a extra low-maintenance crop. Seaweed may also help regenerate the marine ecosystem by decreasing ocean acidification and making a habitat for numerous marine species. It’s estimated {that a} 20-acre farm can sequester 9,000 kilograms of CO2 and 300 kilograms of nitrogen yearly.
GimMe states that one ton of seaweed can sequester about one to 4 tons of CO2 per yr, and usually can sequester two to 5 instances the quantity of CO2 of tropical forests just like the Amazon.
Rising it organically provides one other layer to this environmental story. Broad explains that their course of differs from standard growers. GimMe’s seaweed is grown in deeper waters in Jangheung Bay, he says. “They use buoys. When the seaweed is immersed within the water, it grows. Then they rotate it and expose it to the solar above water. That kills any species that may hurt the seaweed and make it flip brown.”
This pure method to farming seaweed avoids using any chemical substances or components that would doubtlessly hurt marine life.
When Chun first pitched the natural seaweed to some nationwide retail grocers, she didn’t actually obtain an enthusiastic response. It was when she went to Entire Meals, she says, “The customer bought it instantly and understood the worth of natural. After which launched us nationally.”
For Chun, rising GimMe has been a mix of sharing her Korean heritage and creating snacks which are wholesome and inexpensive. “For me, this can be a firm about sharing, sharing my roots but additionally sharing one thing that’s good for our well being.”
Packing it, although, hasn’t been straightforward. The seaweed crisps have to stored contemporary; the packaging subsequently has to have a excessive oxygen barrier. Thus for years, they had been housed in plastic trays, wrapped in a movie. Broad explains that they’ve now gotten rid of the plastic trays and are consistently searching for higher options. GimMe works with OSC, One Step Nearer Packaging Collaborative, within the Bay space, which consists of comparable sustainability-minded corporations who’re searching for extra eco-friendly options to packaging.
As an organization of about 20 workers, Broad says, “We’re nonetheless small, and it’s laborious to vary a packaging trade on our personal. However we’re consistently looking for higher choices.”
Through the pandemic as sushi eating places closed, GimMe’s nori grew to become a staple for DIY sushi makers at dwelling, he provides. That’s helped the enterprise get a brand new demographic on board. “However what’s superb is we’ve got children sharing the snacks at faculties with one another, and that’s exposing children to seaweed. Plus, we’ve seen a number of large hits with TikTok.”
So might the youth be useful in making seaweed extra common in America? Broad hopes so. “Our knowledge tells us that seaweed is at about 4% penetration in American homes. So it’s nonetheless early days.”