Latitude Magazine

Regional Food /

- WORDS Annie Studholme

New Zealand’s first vegan heat-and-eat ready meal made right here in Canterbury

From humble beginnings in a tiny kitchen, a 20-something Christchur­ch couple

with big dreams and truckloads of ingenuity have created New Zealand’s first vegan

heat-and-eat ready meal manufactur­ing company.

looking for more sustainabl­e and ethical alternativ­es to pre-made food need not look any further than Christchur­ch-based Berkano Foods. Founded by young entreprene­urs Britteny Bryan and Nicholas Harlow, in three short years the pair have single-handedly taken New Zealand’s vegan food market by storm with their delicious fully plant-based ready-made meals. Berkano products are now available for online door-to-door deliveries as well as in selected supermarke­ts nationwide. But it hasn’t all been plain sailing for the couple.

Britteny was halfway through a five-year mechanical engineerin­g degree at the University of Canterbury when she first met Nick, dropped out of university, became vegan and together decided to launch a business. ‘I loved going to university, but it just didn’t vibe with me. I didn’t see the point of finishing a degree that I wasn’t ever going to use,’ she says. ‘Right from early on, we both knew we wanted to start a business, we just didn’t know what business that was.’

After choosing to follow a plant-based diet, Britteny and Nick, then just 21 and 23 years old respective­ly, soon realised they didn’t know what to eat or even how to cook vegan food. ‘We both love food. We’re both foodies,’ says Britteny. ‘We had a look in the supermarke­ts and there was nothing available at all to replace what we were eating. There was a real lack of food that we could readily eat and become vegans. At that stage there wasn’t really any vegan dairy or fake meat, the only things available were coconut yoghurt and tofu.’

Seeing a huge gap in the market, it got them thinking. Initially, they thought about opening a café, but with startup costs prohibitiv­ely expensive, they did some research into what was popular in the UK’s vegan food market (a market that’s about three to four years ahead of New Zealand with vegan options) and decided on ready-made meals. ‘Ready meals were really popular over there, so why not give them a go here and see what happens,’ says Nick.

With just their savings, no investors, and little family support, the pair risked everything to get the business off the ground. ‘We completely underestim­ated how long it would take to get everything in place, from dealing with the council, MPI, private auditors and getting a Custom Food Control Plan to designing the website and advertisin­g. Everything costs and it takes a lot of your time with no money coming in,’ says Britteny.

‘At the start when we first formed this company, our family, our friends, everyone, didn’t understand the idea and couldn’t comprehend what we were doing,’ says Nick. ‘They thought we would go bankrupt in a couple of months.’

And they came close on numerous occasions, but despite five failed bank loan applicatio­ns and nine months slumming it living in a storage container because they couldn’t afford rent on a house, the pair stuck to their guns using a PledgeMe page to crowd-fund the last 5000 needed to pay for lab testing.

‘I’m not going to sit here and say it hasn’t been hard. We could have given up at any point because of family pressure and start-up costs,’ says Britteny. ‘We had to learn how to cook (using vegan ingredient­s) and we were starting a business. It was a steep learning curve, neither of us had any skills in running a business or marketing. We had to learn everything along the way.’

After seven months in the pipeline, Berkano Foods (which takes its name from an ancient Germanic rune of continual growth and rebirth) finally launched their

inaugural vegan ready-made meals to the public in early

2018. Their idea was simple. ‘It’s not about giving people a whole new way of eating, but giving them old favourites that they know and love, and making them even more delicious, and then they are vegan as well,’ says Nick. ‘We don’t tend to specialise in a type of cuisine. What we tend to do is find family favourites and vegan-ise them. They’re dishes that everyone loves and eats constantly, like vegan versions of butter chicken or Thai green curry.’

But Nick emphasises that vegan-ising our favourite comfort foods doesn’t come at the expense of flavour or quality. Berkano is passionate about lovingly creating food everyone will love, vegan or not, using quality (where possible) locally sourced ingredient­s.

‘We are vegan, we eat a vegan diet, but we are not extremists. Our main goal as a company is to break up the Western diet so people aren’t consuming as much meat and dairy. We want to help people out and make people’s lives easier. We’re not trying to convert people,’ says Britteny.

The pair’s timing couldn’t have been better, coinciding with the growth in veganism and plant-based diets soaring globally. That, together with the rise of other alternativ­e vegan foods like Sunfed’s Chicken-Free Chicken and Angel Food’s dairy-free cheeses saw Berkano flourish. As word-of-mouth spread, online orders started streaming in.

To begin with, the pair used to cook on the weekend and deliver fresh ready-made meals on Mondays, but they soon realised to up-scale their operation, freezing was the only option moving forward. Specialise­d equipment was also required. Every cent they earned was ploughed back into the business.

Towards the end of 2018, Nick and Britteny got the call they had been dreaming of when a merchandis­er approached them about taking Berkano’s products into supermarke­ts. It was a major coup for the couple. But in reality, there was a lot of work required to scale up their business to cope with the increased demand. ‘It was like, here was this huge opportunit­y, but there was a lot to sort out,’ says Britteny. ‘Supermarke­ts are a numbers game. We needed to be making hundreds of meals at a time. We had to invest in bulk ingredient­s and packaging. It was eight to nine months before we were ready to go into supermarke­ts.’

In July 2019, Berkano’s products were launched in-store at St Martins New World. They started with their three most popular online offerings – Sunfed Chicken-Free Chicken Thai Green Curry, Rigatoni Bolognese, and Golden Peanut Satay. They proved an instant hit with customers, with the entire stock selling out in just two days. And it continued to grow from there.

Today, Berkano’s products are sold in supermarke­ts nationwide. Their online delivery service now includes 30 delicious vegan meal options (split into fitness, gourmet, mains and dessert ranges as well as a range of pantry staples)

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 ??  ?? TOP / Berkano’s ready-made products are now sold in supermarke­ts nationwide as well as online. Photo supplied. ABOVE / Despite Berkano’s growth Britteny and Nick remain hands-on in all facets of the business. Photo Annie Studholme.
TOP / Berkano’s ready-made products are now sold in supermarke­ts nationwide as well as online. Photo supplied. ABOVE / Despite Berkano’s growth Britteny and Nick remain hands-on in all facets of the business. Photo Annie Studholme.

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