I love great food — fresh, local food that doesn't travel for days before it gets to you! I've turned this interest into a healthy baking business that's expanded and grown in popularity. I use local farm fresh eggs, organic spelt flour, real butter. No preservatives. No trans fats. If I can't pronounce it, I don't eat it!
Getting Started
I discovered a love for baking and cooking when I was 8 (I'm now 15). Around that time, my mom found out she has a wheat allergy, which means she can't eat the type of flour most people eat. But she is only allergic to wheat, not gluten, so she can have a certain type of flour called spelt flour.
Because she was missing many of her favorite foods, I started experimenting with spelt flour to see if I could make some of the things she was missing. Spelt flour has a different type of protein that is easier to digest, so it's a great alternative for some people who are allergic to wheat. (It's not gluten free, though, so people with celiac disease can't eat it.)
I found out that I loved working in the kitchen. Soon I was making many of the meals and all the baked goods for our house.
Opportunity Knocks — Then Knocks Again
I started working with Martin Ruiz, who had a bakery. He sold mostly at a local farmers' market. At first I worked at the market, but I soon started baking.
Martin decided to pursue other business interests and asked if I wanted to run the bakery for him. I was thrilled! A few months went by, then one day at the market I saw a notice that a national healthy grocery chain was looking for local vendors. Up until this point I had been baking wheat products only for farmers' markets. But this opportunity fit with my plans to provide fresh-baked, snack-size spelt products for people who can't eat wheat.
I submitted an application and samples to see if my spelt products would meet their needs. I waited for about a month and then the notice came that I had been accepted! Over the next few months, things started moving fast. I met with the grocery chain's regional people. I had to make decisions on labels, packaging, and which products to ship first. I had to find wholesale vendors willing to sell me bulk ingredients, like spelt flour.