The Palm Beach Post

Nestle freshens its image with veggie-meals takeover

Purchase of startup will help food giant offer healthier frozen fare.

- By Jamey Keaten

GENEVA — The maker of Hot Pockets wants to go vegetarian, California-style.

Nestle, the world’s biggest food and drinks company, is buying husband-and-wife startup Sweet Earth, which sells frozen burritos stuffed with quinoa, beans and other vegetarian ingredient­s.

The move echoes efforts by packaged food conglomera­tes across the world that have been trying to appeal more to consumers who favor fresher foods, smaller, local brands and are worried about the ingredient­s they eat.

Nest l e , whose f roz e n f ood brands include Lean Cuisine and Stouffer’s, recently invested in online meals company Freshly, which delivers cooked meals to customer’s doorsteps that it says are gluten-free and don’t contain refined sugars. In 2012, Campbell Soup bought natural foods maker Bolthouse Farms.

And Thursday, rival Unilever said it was buying Pukka Herbs, a small but fast-growing organic herbal tea business.

“This segment has been identified for us globally as a key area a few years ago,” said Wayne England, head of strategic food operations at Nestle. “Giving the world better access to vegetarian-based or plant-based food is something we want to do.”

Nestle, which is based in Vevey, Switzerlan­d, said Sweet Earth, which reportedly had $25 million in revenue last year, will remain a stand-alone business, and stay at its headquarte­rs in Moss Landing, Calif. It declined to specify the cost of the deal.

Sweet Earth co-founder Kelly Swette, who will continue to run the company with co-founder and husband Brian, said in an interview: “We believe in redefining frozen food.”

She said several companies approached Sweet Earth about a buyout, but declined to name them. The deal with Nestle, she said, will help get Sweet Earth into more frozen food aisles. It’s currently in more than 10,000 stores, including Walmart and Whole Foods. England said Nestle wants to protect and grow the Swette’s relationsh­ip now with 273 Whole Foods stores.

Sweet Earth’s best-selling products are its burritos, but it also sells other frozen meals, including mushroom ravioli and veggie burgers.

“At the moment, if you look at the range at Sweet Earth, it’s very much hand-held: burritos, this kind of (product),” Nestle’s England said. “We think we can work with them to extend it into frozen meals. We can help them accelerate.”

Nestle says the deal will give it “immediate entry ” into the plant-based foods segment that is expected to be a $5 billion market within three years. It says up to half of all U.S. consumers are seeking more such foods in their diet.

It said the Sweet Earth acquisitio­n is aimed to complement its growing vegetarian, plant-based offer in Europe, such as “charcuteri­e vegetarian” — essentiall­y plant-based cold cuts — under the Herta brand in France, and the launch of the Garden Gourmet line. It says the market has been growing in high double-digit percentage rates.

 ?? LAURENT GILLIERON/KEYSTONE 2016 ?? The world’s biggest food and beverage company, Nestle, says it is buying husband-and-wife startup Sweet Earth, which sells frozen burritos stuffed with quinoa, beans and other vegetarian ingredient­s.
LAURENT GILLIERON/KEYSTONE 2016 The world’s biggest food and beverage company, Nestle, says it is buying husband-and-wife startup Sweet Earth, which sells frozen burritos stuffed with quinoa, beans and other vegetarian ingredient­s.

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