Stabroek News

Roy’s Spices has taken Essequibo Coast by storm

-aiming to make deeper inroads in Region Four market

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Lakraj Singh, Roy, as he is familiarly known, has spent more than twenty years selling spices to customers on the Essequibo Coast. He lives at Lot 13, Adventure, and used to be a cash crop farmer. Last weekend, his eye-catching stall at the public/private sector Uncapped agro processing event at the Sophia Exhibition Centre attested to the strides that his business has made over the years.

It was the overpoweri­ngly pleasant aromas of geera and masala that took us to the stall. Geera and masala are key ingredient­s in Indian cuisine. Their health benefits are also touted.

We counted twenty spices… including black pepper, ginger, curry powder, cinnamon, mustard seed, nutmeg, clove, aniseed, pimento and turmeric and his Sales Manager son, Govinda, a Computer Science student at the University of Guyana was on hand to talk with us.

It is not difficult to tell that the family has a keen appreciati­on of the nexus between product presentati­on and marketing. They have invested in high-quality, resealable plastic packaging with the brand, Roy’s Spices, proudly emblazoned on the package.

Unsurprisi­ngly, they have decided that having made their mark on the Essequibo Coast they are ready to venture even deeper into the Region Four market. With the local market for spices and condiments already crowded that could prove a challenge though Govinda says that events like Uncapped have made them aware of the potential of their products. There are export ambitions too. Govinda says that even now they are ready to increase production in order to fill overseas orders. The idea of tapping into the export market had been contemplat­ed about fifteen years ago and had arisen out of a request by a local customer that a sizeable order for ground geera and masala be filled for a customer in the USA. It was this order that had triggered the decision to produce the geera and masala in the powdered form for the local market and to make inquiries about export potential.

Up until late Saturday no firm contract had been concluded though there had been a few commitment­s to engage with potential buyers during the current week.

On the whole, the vast majority of agro-processing enterprise­s had their origin in basic equipment, mostly kitchen tools pressed into service to do more demanding jobs. Govinda says that his father began grinding on a kitchen handmill. These days, he and his Electrical Engineer brother have combined their skills to manufactur­e a $2 million automated grinder. The grinder, he says, has made the production process less physically demanding. Whereas, previously, the spices had to be manually parched and grinded, all of this is now done by machine. The Factory on the Essequibo Coast has six full-time employees.

For the time being, Roy’s Spices can be bought at the Mon Repos Market, the Guyana Marketing Corporatio­n’s Guyana Shop, DSL Cash and Carry , Real Value and Nirva’s Supermarke­ts in Georgetown. Govinda says that he is currently in discussion­s with Bounty and Survival Supermarke­ts about having the spices on their shelves.

Having engaged the Government Analyst Food and to Life farm as one of the success stories arising out of its training programme and a leading supplier of sweet pepper to several local supermarke­ts.

The Institute’s Chief Dr. Oudho Homenauth says that crop diversific­ation has been a key focus of its work, the emphasis being on initiative­s aimed at reducing food imports. “Sweet pepper is one of those commoditie­s which have been cultivated successful­ly.”

NAREI is citing its work in the increase of sweet pepper production as a critical success story. NAREI, according to the release, has not issued any importatio­n permit Drugs Department, Guyana Marketing Corporatio­n and the Guyana National Bureau of Standards, what began as an ordinary family business has now passed through the rigours of qualificat­ion that allows their products to take pride of place on supermarke­t shelves. That is a landmark that the family cherishes. They have come a long way from packaging in ordinary plastic bags that resulted in the product suffering a loss of aroma over a short period.

Like so many other local agro processors, Roy’s has looked to the People’s Republic of China for packaging and labels. Good product presentati­on has come at a high cost and Govinda concedes that the additional expenditur­e on packaging and labeling has compelled the company to raise its market prices. to anyone wanting to import the commodity in recent times given its widespread availabili­ty on the local market.

“This is what we want—the money to remain in Guyana, among the local farmers. Persons, who used to import these peppers, now buy from our local producers,” the NAREI head said.

According to NAREI, the Ramchand farm was certified by the National Plant Protection Organizati­on (NPPO), a department within NAREI as fit for export. Certificat­ion guarantees that the farmer would have produced the peppers under conditions that satisfy internatio­nal market standards.

 ??  ?? Roy’s Spices on display at last weekend’s UNCAPPED event
Roy’s Spices on display at last weekend’s UNCAPPED event
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