11.19.07
My Brother
Adam is the coolest.
Life… With Ice Cream
Wow. We’ve been riding the whirlwind. Today Lynsie gave two interviews. Rowena Morrel of In The Kitchen came to visit us at home to talk about Perfect Flavor, and Lynsie made chocolate ice cream. The beat just goes on and on.
I finally put up our first cut at a press kit, and designed our first-ever print ad. I have no idea how one is really supposed to do that, but as they say, fake it ’till you make it.
Think about that for a minute. Yes, I’m serious, a full minute. Sit back at your desk or cubicle, and take a deep breath, and think about what that phrase means. What is away? Where is away?
You might find that away represents a convenient (and fallacious) mental shorthand for “not my problem anymore”. I have been forcing myself to conduct this exercise several times over the last year or so, especially in the stark light of launching our own green business, Perfect Flavor. By degrees, it changes your perceptions.
For me, this awareness adds a painful dissonance to the mundane act of putting anything in the trash. Because, you guessed it: away doesn’t exist.
In that spirit, I offer your a link to Grist’s recent feature on what to do with some of those hard-to-recycle items: computers, running shoes, cellphones, and so on.
Repeat after me: “Nothing goes away.”
Out in Mt. Sidney, VA, you’ll find Bonny Venture Farm, which Lynsie and I visited on Monday. It’s run by Kevin Hoschar, who is an organizational coach and teambuilding expert by day. In his spare time he manages to raise Cashmere goats, like this one:
He also raises a wide variety of fruits, herbs, and so on. We’re hoping that soon he’ll become one of Perfect Flavor’s suppliers. We’re looking for quite an assortment of fruits, berries, nuts, and so on that can be grown in Virginia, but aren’t widely available on a commercial basis. For example, choke cherries, pawpaws, and quince. If you are a grower, or know where we can find one, for anything on this list, let us know.
When we tell people about our business (Perfect Flavor), we tell them that our goal is sustainability. In its simplest definition, sustainability refers to the long-term longevity of a human enterprise. Sustainability encompasses several overlapping concerns: the environment, social systems, and economic systems. One widely employed definition states that sustainable development:
“meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”
With respect to the environment, one definition of sustainability means that all of the things a business takes from the Earth - the inputs like energy, fuel, and raw materials - must eventually be returned to the Earth in such a way that they can be used again.
We, like others involved with sustainable businesses, struggle with these definitions and labels. Although the terminology provides context, it can be confusing and limiting. In part, the problem lies with its Platonic “either/or” duality. We find it more useful and practical to consider things along a continuum from “less sustainable” to “more sustainable”.
The problem gets even more complex, because even the idealized notion of sustainability changes over time. Sustainability isn’t a place - it isn’t a singular and fixed destination. Like us, it evolves, as our understanding of the planet Earth and our species’ place thereon evolves. Sustainability is a process - a point of view that demands thinking, exploring, and questioning the status quo.
In that spirit, and encouraged by the notion that transparency matters, we offer a list of things we know that Perfect Flavor can improve upon. We hope that this disclosure will help our customers understand what we do, and the challenges we face. On some issues, we have had little or no choice on how to proceed because regulatory requirements are very stringent. On other issues, we have chosen to compromise because we are a small Mom & Pop business, and have insufficient capital to pursue other options.
Startup
Ongoing
When we look at this list, we feel challenged to improve the myriad ways our business impacts the environment. The stark nature of this list illustrates just how far we are from our goal, but it heartens us to pursue the dream with passion.
If you are unhappy, you get more ice cream. Brilliant ice cream dispenser design!
I learned this lesson early on in my involvement with startups: Ideas Are Cheap. Dirt cheap, really. The hard part is execution. The easiest way to spot a very green entrepreneur is to ask them to tell you their idea. Smart and/or experienced entrepreneurs will grin and expound at length. They’re not afraid of you stealing that brilliant idea. They want you to understand, and to buy into the idea, and to do that, they have to tell you what it is.
The folks that clam up and ask you to sign an NDA, or say, “I can’t tell you, it’s too easy to steal,” are the ones that need a few hard knocks.
The Bush administration’s lastest ill conceived food policies hasten the race to the bottom in the industrial food business. What can you do? Know what you’re eating, where it comes from, what’s in it, and how it got to your table. Sounds hard? It’s not. Go to your local farmer’s market, and when you buy, ask “Did you grow this? How?”
Try it. You’ll like it.
It costs about three times as much.
We are finding the adage about starting a business frighteningly true. We started Perfect Flavor in earnest about a year ago, planning for a four month ramp up and a launch in January of 2007. My initial estimate on startup costs were very modest. What could go wrong? It’s just ice cream, right?
Well, heh. We’re older and wiser. And it’s a year later, and we still can’t sell our organic and local, customized, handmade, gourmet ice cream.
The end finally seems to be in sight, though. We’re leasing space. We’ve purchased the majority of the equipment we need. Our contractor has done the initial work of setting up the plumbing required by the Virginia Department of Agriculture. Now all we need is… MORE time and MORE money.
Keep your fingers crossed for us, everyone. I’m hoping we’re in the home stretch.