The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Sweet success as Owen prepares to open shop

Teenage jam-maker on the move as his business goes from strength to strength

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM AND PAUL RODGER pmeiklem@thecourier.co.uk

Celebrated jam-making teenager Owen Foster is opening a farm shop outside Forfar.

The 18-year-old started Owen’s Angus Jams from his mum’s kitchen when he was just 14 and now makes thousands of jars a year for shops, cafés and restaurant­s, including Glamis Castle.

A successful crowdfundi­ng campaign in 2018 allowed him to move out of his mum’s kitchen at Lunanhead to an industrial unit at Orchardban­k.

The entreprene­urial teen is now on the move again to new premises on the Old Brechin Road, just outside the Angus market town.

Owen said: “It started in my mum’s kitchen on a small stove till about last year, then we got a premises in an industrial unit.

“I’m moving again to a place with a kitchen in the back with a farm shop and space for a café.

“We weren’t looking for a new place but it came up and thought it was too good to pass on and the scope for growth is much higher.

“The public can come and see what we’re selling, so demand will grow.

“It must be about 3,000 to 4,000 jars this year.

“We’re looking to upscale but by doing the farm shop we’re looking to branch out and get other local products in.”

Owen started on his entreprene­urial journey when he was 12, selling freerange eggs round the village.

When the supply dried up he asked his grandmothe­r Joyce Morrison, 69, to teach him how to make jam and he has never looked back.

The first batch all sold out within a week, at £3 per jar.

His company has grown quickly from there, producing preserves and fruitinfus­ed gins, and going on to secure a lucrative contract with Glamis Castle.

His accountant mum Jude helps him run the business.

She said Owen had been engaging with customers on social media to see what new products he could stock in the farm shop.

She said it was likely to take a couple of months before the premises were properly up and running but they were feeling good about the change.

She said: “He’s received a lot of positive feedback already. People seem to be very excited about it.”

It must be about 3,000 to 4,000 jars this year. OWEN FOSTER

 ?? Picture: Katielee Arrowsmith. ?? Stirring stuff: Owen Foster, 18, with gran Joyce Morrison.
Picture: Katielee Arrowsmith. Stirring stuff: Owen Foster, 18, with gran Joyce Morrison.

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