San Francisco Chronicle

Home kitchen law still on back burner

Bay Area lags on 6monthold state legislatio­n

- By Tilde Herrera

When Solano County approved a new California law that would legalize homebased kitchen operations in April, it seemed like Cheska Kistner’s plans to open a restaurant in her Benicia home would finally come to fruition. The measure, California’s AB626, allows for what are known as microenter­prise food businesses, which Alameda County also made inroads toward legalizing Monday. But no Bay Area county has yet fully implemente­d the 2018 law, leaving entreprene­urs like Kistner in limbo.

Under AB626, cooks can legally sell up to 30 meals a day or 60 per week from their homes when their counties opt in and they have received a permit; their annual gross sales are capped at $ 50,000. The law has been implemente­d in only one county so far, Riverside. In Alameda County, many home kitchen operations have proliferat­ed during the pandemic without the option to get proper permitting, leading to the health department cracking down on some.

Solano County is one of the furthest along in the Bay Area, even though the coronaviru­s pandemic caused officials to delay inhome inspection­s and permitting until shelterath­ome orders are lifted. What many people thought would be a short delay has lasted six months — and counting.

For Kistner, a personal chef and caterer on and off for nearly 30 years, that means waiting to expand her business beyond the current small number of carryout

she makes for family, friends and clients. She would like to recreate the model of her Filipino restaurant, Bale Ku Café, which means “my house” in her local dialect and is operated out of a home. Her Asian fusion dishes — including japchae, with sweet potato noodles and rib eye steak, and ningnang manuk, a grilled chicken and rice dish — generally cost $ 25 and feed two to three people.

With so many suffering financiall­y during the pandemic, proponents say there couldn’t be a better time to launch the program.

“There are people who need to work, who want to work,” says Matthew Butler, a Vallejo cook who wants to start a home restaurant business. “This would definitely be a viable option for a lot of people.”

Butler has spent the past 10 or so years catering parties and corporate events after working at restaurant­s throughout Solano and Contra Costa counties. That all came to a halt once the pandemic hit. While he has found catering work with a chef friend still servicing clients, he envisions creating his own homebased restaurant called Vondi’s, in honor of his late mother, where he would sell his Mediterran­ean braised beef with garlic mashed potatoes and Koreanstyl­e pork chops with bok choy. The only other food options in his neighborho­od are fast food and burrito trucks, and he thinks it could represent a new revenue stream, especially with his kids at home distancele­arning.

To Supervisor Monica Brown, it is this type of caregiver scenario that initially seemed like a perfect fit for AB626.

“When a constituen­t came and brought this forward, my first thought was that this is a way for a parent who can stay home, earn money and take care of their family — whatever their family needs might be,” Brown says. “It seemed like a winwin to me.”

She brought the concept to the Board of Supervisor­s around October 2019, making sure that she had the support of another board member to move it forward. Brown worked with a loose coalition of residents and nonprofits to build support for AB626 in the community. That included Janniece Murray, a retired nursing home kitchen manager known for the “heavenly” desserts she sells during the holidays, and LaDonna Wildinated liams, who sold pineapple coconut crunch cakes and West African jollof rice to support herself when she fell on tough times after a divorce.

“To work my way out of homelessne­ss, I actually sold cakes and was able to save up some and put some on the side,” Williams says. “A friend of mine helped me with purchasing the ingredient­s, so I know that it does work. It can work.”

Murray and Williams coororders with the Cook Alliance, a nonprofit that helped get AB626 passed and provided technical assistance, including organizing tool kits and informatio­n about how the law is implemente­d. Meanwhile, the Solano Small Business Developmen­t Council pledged public support during the process and will offer business and food safety training to a limited number of participan­ts once the program is running.

They faced opposition over fears that these home kitchen operations — despite a $ 50,000 cap on gross annual sales — would create unfair competitio­n for restaurant­s forced to meet higher safety standards. Others worried they would create a nuisance in their largely residentia­l neighborho­ods.

But from tamales to lumpia, barbecue and cakes, people have always sold food out of their homes, Brown and Williams argued.

“Many of us in our neighborho­od, which was mostly low income or what they would consider disadvanta­ged, we always had a house that sold sandwiches and snacks for the kids,” Williams says. “They always had to do it under the radar, but it provided a real necessary service to the community.”

Since the main holdup is inspection­s, advocates argue the permits could be issued through virtual ones. Riverside County has conducted more than 10 virtual inspection­s during the lockdown, says Brent Casey, a program chief and public informatio­n officer with the Riverside County Department of Environmen­tal Health. Of those, eight permits were issued, with two pending.

Solano County moved into the lessrestri­ctive red tier on Sept. 22, allowing for some parts of the economy to reopen, including restaurant­s. But that won’t include inhome inspection­s, says Jagjinder Sahota, Solano County environmen­tal health manager. In between the pandemic and wildfires, his department hasn’t considered virtual inspection­s, he added.

“The bottom line is we’re not implementi­ng the program at this point, but we would be ready to go once the restrictio­ns are lifted,” Sahota says.

Akshay Prabhu, founder of Foodnome, a startup that helps home cooks launch, manage, monetize and market their home kitchen businesses, is among advocates for implementi­ng AB626 as soon as possible in the county, arguing that it will only make the activities that are already happening in neighborho­ods safer. With little marketing, Foodnome has received applicatio­ns from nearly 100 cooks in Solano County, 10 of which — including Kistner and Butler — are ready to start operating once they receive a permit.

“What permitting home cooks will do is increase the safety in the food industry and allow for increased representa­tion and reduce the barrier of entry, so that the restaurant choices in a community represent the diversity of the community, which I think is really important,” Prabhu says.

 ?? Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Home kitchen entreprene­ur Cheska Kistner cooks at home in Benicia as she awaits action in Solano County.
Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Home kitchen entreprene­ur Cheska Kistner cooks at home in Benicia as she awaits action in Solano County.
 ??  ?? Kistner is among 100 homekitche­n chefs waiting for Solano County to finish implementa­tion of the law.
Kistner is among 100 homekitche­n chefs waiting for Solano County to finish implementa­tion of the law.
 ?? Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Homekitche­n entreprene­ur Cheska Kistner grills in the backyard of her home in Benicia.
Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Homekitche­n entreprene­ur Cheska Kistner grills in the backyard of her home in Benicia.
 ??  ?? Asian fusion chef Kistner wants to model her carryout dishes on the cuisine of her Filipino restaurant Bale Ku Café.
Asian fusion chef Kistner wants to model her carryout dishes on the cuisine of her Filipino restaurant Bale Ku Café.

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