(TWiMB) This Week in Mandel Bread

February 11th, 2010
Comments Off

Beverly Hills ordered 2 more cases of Aunt Erma’s finest, but flooding in our home has prevented us from doing much more than my day job, and managing the task of fixing the house back up.  Fantasy Cookie received the recipe and ingredients on Monday (with full NDA’s signed).  It’s their move now, testing the mandel bread, see if they can make it the way we do it at home.  We’re hoping to make the switch to co-pack manufacturing. The cookie factory benefits are so great, their inside wrapping process should give Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread a 4-6 month shelf life, and they’re certified kosher dairy. These 2 elusive things (shelf life and kosher certification) have plagued us from the start. We are approaching the 10 month mark from when we received our mandel bread boxes. End of September is when we started at Whole Foods (Beverly Hills), so the goal now is to see if at the one year mark from when we received our packages if we can get Whole Foods to try us out regionally.  Btw – for those people starting any business in California, remember that the state has a minimum annual $800.00 fee for businesses, but if you are a new business, and elect to become an S-Corporation, then the fee is waived the first year.  That means, if you decide to form an LLC or a C-Corp from the start, you get whacked the $800 bucks right away.  Reason why I mention this is because we are approaching the one year mark of incorporating Aunt Erma’s, which also means that we are now on the hook for $800 (due March 15th) to the state.  Ugh…

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Fascinating documentary – related to food. Unbelievable.

February 5th, 2010
Comments Off

Another link, looks like a fascinating documentary.  Check it out.

THE COVE

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

In the world of Technology

February 3rd, 2010
Comments Off

Another favorite and inspiring source is the web show “This Week In Start-Ups” with Jason Calacanis.  In this episode, watch LA native Jason Nazar talk about how he maxed out his credit cards to start ‘DocStoc.  Jason’s company has become a big success and now he hosts local meet-ups in Santa Monica.  Waiting this week to get the baking test done from the cookie manufacturer…

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

We are Wrapped!

January 29th, 2010
Comments Off

Maybe the single most exciting news we’ve had since we landed our first Whole Foods Market back in September.  The wrap testing at our co-pack cookie factory was a success!  So what does this all mean?  The next step is to see if the cookie factory can bake the mandel bread just like Aunt Erma bakes it.  Not an easy task, they have to partially automate what up until this point has been a 100% ‘by hand’ process.  If the test run goes well then we have a green light to push for regional distribution.  This of course doesn’t mean anybody will buy Aunt Erma’s mandel bread, but based on the bit of success we’ve had at our four stores,  I think if they try they will buy.  Fingers crossed.

wrapped!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

An interview with Aunt Erma

January 21st, 2010
Comments Off

Here it is, a short interview with the real Aunt Erma!  Enjoy!

Recorded January 19th, 2010

ERMASTILLFORVIDEO

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Stats and more stats

January 15th, 2010
Comments Off

Important happenings this week in the mandel bread business.  But, not ready to share the details yet.  Hopefully we’ll be ready to announce some important changes and news shortly.  In the meantime, I wanted to share some of the web statistics for auntermas.com.  If you’re new to the web, all web sites have what is called a control panel, which is basically like looking under rhe hood of your web site.  Here is where domains are hosted, email is managed, files are stored and tons of other activity is done.  This is the access to your domain, your hard drive ‘in the cloud.’  One of the very cool tools in the control panel is a little software called ‘Awstats.‘  With Awstats I can track all sorts of information about auntermas.com.  For example, I know that last month over three hundred people read this blog, almost five hundred watched ‘The Story of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread’ and almost six hundred found the homepage of auntermas.com. There were fifteen thousand hits to the web site, and though they were overwhelmingly hits from the US, we did see a little traffic from far away places like Latvia, Syria and Finland.  Thirty seven percent of you hit auntermas.com using microsoft internet explorer, almost thirty percent used Apple’s Safari, and a surprising twenty three percent used Firefox.  This month numbers are strong too.  We’re hoping this steady climb in internet traffic will expand our brand awareness once we hit our stride and get regional distribution…..

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Article in the NY Times about going kosher

January 13th, 2010
Comments Off

Mama’s Kitchen Open House

January 10th, 2010
Comments Off

Yesterday, Mama’s kitchen had an open house for the community. Here’s a newspaper article about the event.  Mama’s was the second commercial kitchen we tried for Aunt Erma’s mandel bread.  Though we really like the place, unfortunately their mixer was too small, and we quickly out grew it.  Nonetheless, Mama’s was nice enough to invite us to participate in the festivities.  Here’s a video walk through of the place.  That guy holding the mandel bread is Bill Bogaard, the mayor of Pasadena, who showed up for the fun.IMG_0353

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Holidays!

December 30th, 2009
Comments Off

Just a quick update tonight.  We’ve been on hold over the holidays.  We continue to fill mail orders and handle friends and family business, but we’re holding off pushing for more sales at our three Whole Foods Stores, getting tray samples sent to fit inside our existing packaging.  With the proper tray we can move to private label manufacture and try to push for big scale distribution.

I also wanted to thank all the readers again and let you know that you can always contact me by e-mail if you have any questions or comments.  Unfortunately, I get too much spam when I open the comments on the blog so I have to leave then off.

phil@auntermas.com

twitter: philweinstein

telephone: 818 301-5775

PS – Stay tuned for an interview with the real Aunt Erma!  Coming Soon to auntermas.com

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Hello JamWest Foods!

December 19th, 2009
Comments Off

Last Friday we hit the road for JamWest foods, a Co-op kitchen in Santa Clarita, Ca. that specializes in Jamaican cuisine.  Why did we switch kitchens again?  Simple – The mixer at Mamma’s kitchen was too small.  We need big, and they got big, 60 and 120 quart mixers.  This means we can put an entire 4 case batch of mandel bread in one run in the mixer.  But first day in a kitchen is always chaotic.  The rack ovens at Mammas cooked the mandel bread much faster than at home, so we lowered the temp and reduced the time; opposite problem at JamWest.  We need a higher temp to bake in their walk in oven.  And it is a beast of an oven.  Plus we hired employee #1 and got help from an unofficial employee #2 who was already there doing his thing at JamWest when we showed up.  Grocery sales were flat this week, though a friend on recon to 3rd Street Whole Foods reported he couldn’t find any Mandel bread on the shelves, so we may be looking at a sell out over there.  Online we’ve shipped to Washington State and Santa Barabara, Ca. this week, Charlottseville, Va. next week and then prep 2 cases for a community event back in Pasadena which will be attended by the Mayor of Pasadena.  So that should be interesting.

And a big fat Heeb hello to Brian Abrams at HEEB Magazine, the coolest most unpc jew rag out there.

Once we get regional distribution look for our ad featuring the Pope sneaking some mandelbread in the Vatican pantry, with the tag  ”Not just for Jews!”

Happy eighth night of Hanukah!

jamwest60 Qt Mixer

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Best by?

December 11th, 2009
Comments Off

When we started delivering Aunt Erma’s to Whole Foods Markets, we had a slight dilemma to deal with.  What exactly is the expiration date of mandel bread?  Officially, only something called a moisture analysis could give us a real ‘don’t eat’ date.  We have had mandel bread laying around the house in cookie jars for weeks on end, perfectly fine.  But for our grocers, better a first time customer get a fresh box, then something that’s been sitting on the shelves for months on end.  Initially I put a 2.5 week date of expiration.  In the beginning, the strategy worked.  Aunt Erma’s was selling so fast that usually in one week we would be sold out.  But as the weeks wore on, Aunt Erma’s sat on the shelves longer.  And this is where we have encountered our first set of problems.  Though the mandel bread is still selling well at all three stores, two of the stores have product that is near or past the ‘best by’ date on the box.  Whole Foods Beverly Hills, who called to say that I was personally responsible for them having to ‘join a gym’ because they couldn’t stop eating Aunt Erma’s – knew that product dated with a best by of November will never sell now that we are in to December.  (Though the employee thought it still tasted great.)  The solution temporarily is simple, we swap out the stock, and date the fresh stock with a longer shelf life.  Fantasy Cookie company has machinery to ‘overwrap’ or ‘underwrap’ our product, and I think with that type of extra protection on the package we could achieve shelf life up to 6 months without a problem.

Tomorrow we try out a new Co-op kitchen.  If everything works out, I’ll add an entry with details.  The reason for the relocation is also simple, the place in Pasadena only had a 20qt. mixer.  Ask me 6 weeks ago if 20 qts. was big enough and I would have said it was too big.  But now, our recipe is scaled way up.  We no longer use cups to measure,  we measure in pounds.  It’s more efficient to weigh out 15 lbs. of flour then have to measure 60 cups of flour.  Same for the chips, the sugar, etc…  We’re also bringing on our first staffer, something we should have done long ago.  Hard to believe we lasted this long, just the two of us, three stores and something like 20 cases of mandel bread later.  So the new kitchen, with a giant 60qt. mixer, and something called a ‘sheeter’ for thinning out our dough, and a massive oven.  But because of the staff hire and the replacement stock, this run will be a loss leader.  Luckily we have internet orders to fill, to make up for the freebees we have to do at Whole Foods.

By the way, for anyone getting in to the food biz, Whole Foods is a pleasure to work with.  The grocery leaders, accountants, regional people, all really friendly.  None of them demanded free replacement stock, they actually left it up to me – But to build this brand, we gotta do the right thing, even if it means taking a loss to learn a lesson about inventory.

PS – Looking forward to story online at the LA Weekly coming this week.  Stay tuned!

I’d also like to thank the blog readers.  There are over four hundred readers a month to the blog, 100 subscribers to the feed and closing in on 30,000 hits to the web site.  Thanks for being a part of our journey!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

BREAKING!! Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread and Beverly Hills Whole Foods Market

December 8th, 2009
Comments Off

Don’t know if we can call this an official sell out, but this morning Whole Foods Beverly Hills ordered another two cases of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.

This brings our total tally at this one location to 11 cases.  If we make our delivery this week, our average at this location is one case per week(deliveries started on 09-17-09).  Meanwhile, coffee house Tazza Bianca in Pasadena is selling individual sticks of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread, and selling out.  They ordered another 4 boxes today.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

The Fantasy Cookie Company

December 6th, 2009
Comments Off

Last Friday Crystal and I visited the Fantasy Cookie Company in Sylmar, Ca.  I blogged about Joe Sembler’s amazing cookie factory a year ago. 11/24/08 post We’re in 3 stores at Whole Foods and available system wide at Whole Foods Southern California, finally in a place where we earned our stripes enough to go see the place in person.  A short 25 minute drive north of Burbank to Sylmar, Ca. and I feel like we walked right in to an episode of the Food Network’s Unwrapped.  In case you have’t caught this show, each episode goes behind the scenes of America’s favorite foods and show how they’re mass produced.  Joe’s Fantasy Cookie Company is one such place.  My guess is that Joe can’t publicly say all the companies he bakes for, but we saw product coming out of Joe’s ovens for some of the biggest food suppliers in the biz.  We toured the massive facility, including gigantic conveyor belt tunnel ovens, gargantuan mixers and custom bagging and hopper equipment for packaging you product.  The good news is that Joe has extruder dies about the same size as Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread, so with some slight modifying of the baking process, we could mass produce at Joe’s shop.  But calculating the product weight, our orders have to be substantial in size to make it happen.  This is a big shift in the way we have been operating at this point, but a moment we have been waiting for.  I’ve always felt that we are in the branding business, not the baking business.  If we can get the sales in place, this will give us the time to dedicate to selling the brand and developing more products in the Aunt Erma’s Brand.  Right now, we’re doing everything.  And doing everything, gets you nothing.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Getting out the calculator

November 30th, 2009
Comments Off

This morning I spoke to a private label baker.  This is a large scale production facility that needs a minimum 1000lb. order to produce our mandel bread.  So now, we’re looking at our next phase of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread production, scaling large.  The questions are:  what does our product weigh after baking?  How many boxes would we have to sell to meet the minimum 1000 lb. order, and, how much would that cost?  This week I’ll bring some samples over to the private label baker so he can cost out the production.  This should be an interesting week.  If we pull it off, we’ll jump from a little mom and pop op, to a large scale manufacturing facility.  But is this a reality for us?  It means we will need distributors, sales! and money!  - Can we pull it off?  Who knows, I think Aunt Erma’s has the potential to be big – But I guess we wouldn’t be swinging for the fences if I didn’t.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

On the shelves…

November 30th, 2009
Comments Off

Here’s Aunt Erma’s on the shelves at the Whole Foods Market 3rd Street (right across the street from the Farmer’s Market).

ErmaGrove

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Happy Thanksgiving!!

November 27th, 2009
Comments Off

A pre-thanksgiving baking run at the rental kitchen was chaotic.  Traffic out of Los Angeles was so bad that it took us over an hour to get to the place (in Pasadena).  We arrived at 3:06…and they were closing at 4:45 pm.  We managed to bake 4 cases of mandel bread in about 2 hours, but we were in such a rush that we lost 3/4 of a case on burnt ends and broken pieces.  Meanwhile, Whole Foods at the Grove has asked us to put in a request to regional to be part of the DVO system, which is Whole Foods system that allows Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread to be available in the entire region.  There are 28 stores in Souther California.  The tough part is managing the cost analysis, trying to figure out how to expand and remain profitable.  This week I’ll be looking at private label bakers who can handle large scale production of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.  Our friend Chris Clemmons at Food Tools in Santa Barbara gave us our first quote on a piece of equipment that will allow us to automate part of the baking process.  A $50,000 contraption that will slice and flip the mandel bread.  Casa Bianca Coffee Shop in Pasadena did a test run selling individual sticks of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread at 99¢ a piece and sold out !! – Stay tuned.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

BREAKING! Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread now at Whole Foods Market West Hollywood!

November 24th, 2009
Comments Off

Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread added its third store to the chain today.  Come see us Friday morning at Whole Foods Market on Santa Monica Blvd. in West Hollywood!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Stay tuned! For another announcement from Team Mandel Bread!

November 18th, 2009
Comments Off

Our 8 year old Eli took this picture of the ceiling of our rental kitchen.

wr

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Growing pains…

November 17th, 2009
Comments Off

We spent time baking Aunt Erma’s finest at our rental kitchen in Pasadena today.  As we begin to add more stores, we face newer challenges.  I always had this idea that I wanted a product that was cheap enough to not put people off.  I’ve seen some other boutique types of mandel bread, and I get offended when I see the prices they are asking for this stuff.  My sister sent some of the competition’s product back East for us to try and she paid 20 bucks for this overly sweet, dry, crap mandel bread.  So how do we scale up and remain profitable?  Big cookie manufactures have a small staff drop raw ingredients in to a mixer, and the rest of the process runs automatically through extruders, cutters and tunnel ovens and straight in to automatic packaging equipment.  We don’t have that stuff yet.   Our profit margin is only maintained if we can produce approximately 2 cases of mandel bread in 1 hour.  So, on a day like today, a couple of slip ups and next thing you know we spent 2.5 hours in the kitchen and produced only 2 cases of mandel bread.  Ok for now, as we are still growing, and giving out samples, but when things really roll this is a big issue.  So this next week I’m concentrating on costs analysis and efficiency.  The holidays could be interesting…And if you are at the Farmer’s Market in Los Angeles tomorrow, hop across the street to the Whole Foods Market and pick up a box of Aunt Erma’s!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Hello Whole Foods market Fairfax!

November 13th, 2009
Comments Off

11-13-09 BREAKING 

Aunt Erma’s Mandel bread just added its second Whole Foods Market.  Beginning Tuesday 11/17/09 Aunt Erma’s finest will be on the shelves at  Whole Foods Market Fairfax.  This is a premium Whole Foods location located directly across the street from the Los Angeles Farmer’s Market and The Grove shopping center.  Come see us in the cookie isle!

Thank you Solomon at Whole Foods!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

The Rental Kitchen

November 3rd, 2009
Comments Off

Today we did a test run at our new rental kitchen in Pasadena, Ca. This is a great place, an actual incubator kitchen – designed for the purpose of renting to food biz start-ups.  So here’s a few pix at Mamma’s kitchen! The kitchen has connections to Le Cordon Bleu, as we staff up our employees will likely be students of that prestigious school.  We’re looking at hiring patisserie students to bake the mandel bread…crazy.  We even had a group of recent grads and some students working along side us today and they sampled Aunt Erma’s finest and gave us their feedback.  Two batches cooked, one convection, and one conventional oven.  The group was split between the toastier convection, and the classic.  Tomorrow Crystal spends the day in a Food Manager Safety Program (a requirement that at least one person in the business have a food safety certificate.) – and I’m off to Whole Foods stores three and four on our mandel quest

IMG_0288IMG_0289IMG_0290

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

On the shelves

October 30th, 2009
Comments Off

Here we are in our new spot on the shelves in the cookie isle at Whole Foods Beverly Hills.  Sold about 5 boxes the last four days (Mon. – Thurs.) and we’ll see what the weekend brings.

photophoto

I can’t believe I haven’t mentioned this place on the blog yet.  But if you are a budding food entrepreneur in Los Angeles, then you should know about Star Restaurant Supply in Van Nuys.  They’ve got everything you need there, from pots and pans, sticks and stirs, trays and full blown professional cooking appliances.  And here’s a tip.  Tell them you’re starting a food business and they’ll give you a nice discount.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Restocked! and ready to roll out

October 28th, 2009
Comments Off

This week Whole Foods Market Beverly Hills was restocked with Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.  Sales are brisk at our one lone store.  We’ve delivered 9 cases of mandel bread in about 5 weeks, averaging just under 2 cases a week in sales.  The other news is that we finally found a rental kitchen that will work for us.  Once we lock in I’ll post a link.

I also wanted to share links to some of the entrepreneurs that inspire me.

Leo Laporte, an old school radio and tv guy, parlayed his Tech TV celebrity in to the most successful tech based news network on the web.  Check out his live broadcasts daily at live.twit.tv or tune in to one of his fourteen different technology based netcast shows he does weekly at Twit.tv.

leo-laporte

Jason Calacanis, a true web 1.0 and 2.0 celebrity sold his start-up Webblogs, Inc. to AOL for an estimated 25 million back in 2005.  He now hosts a totally interesting weekly web cast called TWIST (This week in start-ups).

Evan Kleinman is the owner of Angeli cafe in Hollywood, but most notably is the long time host of “Good Food” on KCRW.  I’m sure she must get paid practically nothing to do this, but constantly books interesting guests from the world of food.  Here it is: Good Food on KCRW

gf

I don’t know a whole lot about this guy.  But his tiny auto-biography about the birth of his cookie company is the branding model we are following at Aunt Erma’s.  You might never have heard of Wally Amos had the one time talent agent not started bringing homemade cookies as a calling card to client meetings.  But that’s what made him famous.

lab_0001_0001_0_img0074

more to come in following posts.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

SOLD OUT AGAIN!!

October 23rd, 2009
Comments Off

BREAKING

Friday, October 23 2009 

The Whole Foods Market Beverly Hills has once again sold of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.  Check back Monday October 26th for restock.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Plugs! and Adsense?

October 20th, 2009
Comments Off

Michel Algazi’s awesome group The LA Fine Food Group is a bunch of Los Angeles based food entrepreneurs, from the total new guys like me, to huge successful operations. They’re an invaluable resource for all sorts of information.  All free, and totally cool.  Next meet up is on the October 29th in Encino.  Check their site for details.

Cousin Scott Spiro helps little companies weather the financial crisis with a way to freelance your companies IT support.  Scott’s streamlined company, CSG is local here in LA and he’s a total tech geek.  For a flat monthly fee you get unlimited support, without snarky in-house guys, or over priced ‘bill-by-the-hour’ guys.  Outsourcing overseas is ok, but when it comes to computer support, it’s nice to know there’s somebody close by to have look.

But if you really don’t want to deal with all that IT stuff, get a Mac.

Finally – So what are those ads on the right side of my blog?  It’s Google Adsense.  Google is awesome at so many things,  not so hot at instructions.  You’re better off Googling ‘How do I put adsense in to my blog’ then relying on Googles very own explanation.  For you WordPress people just go to your admin, click on Appearence, then Widgets, then Text – and paste the Google Adsense code in to the box.  And if you want to help out Team Mandel Blog, click on one of those ads right now.

I’m on Twitter @philweinstein, but hardly ever post a tweet, and on SKYPE philtogo

Hey, check out our competition! -

ellyns

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Aunt Joy and Aunt Erma

October 17th, 2009
Comments Off

Last week while driving around Burbank we saw a couple of interesting leads on kitchens in the city to move Aunt Erma’s operations too.  One afternoon, while surfing Google for more information on one of those places I stumbled on a bakery called Aunt Joys.  The location was 5 minutes from my office, and even though I’ve driven that route dozens of times, I never noticed Aunt Joy’s place.  So, I grabbed an empty box of Aunt Erma’s mandel bread and headed down to meet Aunt Joy.  Aunt Joy has the perfect commercial kitchen.  Their business primarily caters to craft service in the entertainment industry, high end cakes and other delicious desserts.  Joy herself is somewhat of a celebrity, check out her scene from Cool Hand Luke.  They have a large revolving oven that can handle volumes of baked goods.  Just an eyeball estimation, we could bake at least 2 cases of mandel bread in that oven at a time, maybe more.  Crystal and I were excited about the possibility of working in their space after hours.  Sadly, I found out today that the landlord of the property is not keen on the idea, so we’re still on the hunt for a local operation.  But it gave us a good visual of what our ideal kitchen should look like.  The $50.00 per hour kitchen in North Hollywood isn’t going to cut it for us anymore.  

auntjoyscakes

Meanwhile, I was contacted by Rabbi Allen Silver at Kosher Technical Konsultants, he read my post titled Kosher Certification Rip-Off  and called to defend his company and their practices.  Rabbi Allen says lots of people complain about the same thing, and I have been left scratching my head over this whole kosher issue.  I’m still uncertain of the value of kosher certification, it seems like the large majority of cookie consumers could care less.  The kosher audience of course would insist on kosher, but my goal is to reduce costs as much as possible.  If I want to compete with large corporate brands I’ve got to supply a quality product at a competitive price.  The certification fees only force my wholesale price up, and the last thing I want to do in this economy is raise the price of my product.  Still trying to figure this issue out.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

The report from Whole Foods Beverly Hills

October 13th, 2009
Comments Off

This morning I received a final sales tally from Whole Foods Beverly Hills on Aunt Erma’s inital run.  Of the 6 cases we sent over, 10 boxes had met the expiration date, meaning we sold over 5 cases of Aunt Erma’s finest.  Now we have to replace the expired stock with good stock, or issue the store a credit.  13.8% of the stock didn’t sell in time for the expiration, pretty good for an initial run with zero promotion.  I’m going to offer to replace the stock to get some fresh stuff back on the shelves in lieu of credit, which brings me to the next update.

This afternoon I toured what I think will be the perfect commercial kitchen for Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.  Located right here in Burbank, we’re hoping the owners will like us enough to consider letting us rent their space during off hours.  And this is a great space!  The perfect oven, prep area, mixers, etc.  I’ll post a link when we hear a definite yes or no on the space.  The plan is to get the new place to agree to a test run, at which time we’ll fill the Whole Foods replacement stock and bake an extra case for samples as we begin to approach other Whole Foods markets.

I also went back to see Silviano at 3D Stainless to have another custom tool created for our budding mandel bread business.  This time he created a custom device for extracting the sliced mandel bread from the cutting tool.  Pretty cool stuff.

Finally, a mention that my brother-in-law Rick, a great attorney located in the DC Metro area has launched his first blog.  You can ask Rick just about any legal question, Rick specializes in criminal law, but the law firm he belongs to is full service.  So feel free to post any question.  It’s your chance to get free legal advice.  Click here to ask Rick.

Is Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread coming to the Big Apple?……

ladyliberty

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Burbank also business friendly ??

October 1st, 2009
Comments Off

Stopped by the City of Burbank today to check out their zoning maps.  Was warned to be careful where we rent because if the kitchen is not zoned, and the owner gets busted – we’ll take a fall too.  The Los Angeles business license is a pretty good deal for start-ups, with no city tax for the first two years of operation.  Next up is Burbank, which only charges a fee per employee but I have to check the license code to see if there are any other fees attached to operating a commercial kitchen – worst is our neighbors southeast of us.  The city of Glendale has no business license fee, however, you will pay a tax on equipment depreciation and gross receipts.  So we’re trying to stick with Burbank for the easy operation.  Meanwhile, Snookies Cookies is relocating down the block and looking to sell their old equipment.  This leaves Crystal and I wondering if we should consider renting our own space and buying Snookies ovens and tables.  Would be a bigger start-up cost but if sales get moving then our kitchen costs would average way down.  So many decisions to make on a limited budget.  Next week we’ll finally get access to Temple Emmanuel in Burbank, another possible lead for a commercial kitchen rental.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

And our update

September 24th, 2009
Comments Off

Today I took a drive over to Whole Foods Beverly Hills to check on Aunt Erma’s stock.  The shelves are pretty well loaded.  I counted at least 2.5 cases of mandel bread on the shelves.  As expected, sales slowed during the week, and I expect things to pick up again as we roll in to Yom Kippur on Sunday.  Meanwhile Crystal and I have been scrambling to find another rental kitchen to meet demand.  We’ve talked to Yummy Cupcakes, Martino’s Bakery, Cupcake and Company, Temple Sinai, and Essential Desserts.  There’s also an incubator kitchen in Pasadena that looks interesting though we’d have to do a bigger volume to make it cost effective.  Our food distributor Robin at GS Foods says he may have some leads for us too.  Halfway through our mandel bread fulfillment I had the ‘duh’ moment, realizing we should be using a hot glue gun to seal the bottoms of the boxes, instead of blowing through the loads of avery labels we’ve been using, which cost a fortune.  We’d been popping in on Beverly Hills to make sure the stickers are keeping the lids closed (my newbie error in ordering the boxes, I didn’t create a re-closeable flap), and I was surprised to find that two of the hot glue gun bottoms had popped open.  Unfortunately I didn’t have any stickers with me (Crystal went on a recon mission last week with stickers, to make sure all the flaps are closed) but I wasn’t as prepared.  Tomorrow is Thursday, this time a week ago we sold out 2 cases.  So I’m not sure what to expect.  I’ve also been thinking about some type of mandel bread slicer flipper do hickey.  Maybe some sketches tonight.

casebox

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Where to find Aunt Erma’s mandel bread

September 21st, 2009

SOLD OUT!

September 19th, 2009

I remember one year watching the Super Bowl ads and I saw this commercial for UPS.  A bunch of people sitting around a computer, they had just launched their web site.

They waited anxiously, staring at a computer monitor,  on the screen the words “ORDERS”, with a flashing cursor next to it.  Suddenly the cursor changes to a 1, then 5, then 10 – The people all cheer!  Success!  Then the counter starts to go faster, 100, 1000, 10,000!  The look on the faces of the entrepreneurs turns to panic.  This is how I felt this morning when we woke up.  Crystal wandered down stairs about 6:45 am and glanced over at our computer.  An email sent at 5:11 am from Eddie at Whole Foods Beverly Hills. “Only 5 boxes left, send 5 more cases.”  Crystal ran up stairs to share the exciting news.  Our very first grocery store shipment of Aunt Erma’s mandel bread almost completely sold out in one day! Celebration!  Then the panic set in.  It had taken us long in to Wednesday evening just to get 2 cases of mandel bread baked .  We’re almost out of flour, sugar, butter, case boxes, labels.  Completely unprepared for the sudden success of our product.  The day was a blur.  It’s 2:00 am now, and we’ve managed to fill 3 of the 5 cases in the order.  We realize we need to dip in to our capital and scale very very quickly.  Off to bed….

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

IRMA – and Whole Foods Market!

September 17th, 2009

At the end of July I took a sample of Aunt Erma’s to Eddie, the Grocery Team Leader at the Whole Foods Store in Beverly Hills, Ca.  After 3 attempts, the first time meeting the assistant buyer, the second time meeting Eddie, and the third time hustling over there to give Eddie product info. (insurance policy, nutritional and legal stuff) to input to the regional office.  On August 13th Whole Foods regional contacted me about getting bank account information so that I could be “in their system.”  Figuring I was “in” if they were asking for bank account info. I went ahead and posted “an official announcement coming soon!” (Aug 13th post)   A week later Eddie went on an extended vacation, with instructions to check with his assistant buyer to see if I was “in the system.”  Each time I called, the response was “nothing in the system.”  After 5 long weeks, I dug up an old email for Eddie’s email address, and in the threads I saw the Whole Foods Regional correspondence with the subject line ” VENDOR – IRMA ” – They spelled Erma wrong!  Unbelievably, I was in the system all that time, but with only the assistant buyer around to check my status, he could only check what I asked him to check – Erma.  E – R – M – A.  Eddie returned this week and placed an order for 2 cases of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.  With the jewish holiday coming Saturday, Crystal and I stayed up late (until 1:30 am) baking the first order.  A few little late night hitches, like the case boxes I purchased could only hold 11 boxes (not 12 like the sticker says), and we ran out of box sealers – but we managed to get everything baked.  At 6:30 am I ran out the door and made it to Beverly Hills a little after 7:00 am.  Took a guess at how to pull up to shipping and receiving (which was a little funny, our little Prius sitting there next to a big bunch of food delivery trucks).  Checking in the product was Joe, who said he couldn’t accept the mandel bread because there was no invoice number.  I said “What is that?”  He said each store I deliver too should have a code.  I said, ” Well, you’re my first so how about ‘one.’  Anyway, Joe was nice enough to show me how the guys in the big leagues do it, I left the two cases.  Crystal went on a recon mission with one of her girlfriends at lunch and snapped these photos from the store.

img_09033 img_0904img_09051

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

All about the food biz…

September 12th, 2009

I started this blog as a personal diary, our journey in to the food business.

I work in animation, that’s my day job.  I have lots of screen credit, even an emmy award.  But like lots of people who have worked for ‘someone’ for a long time, I have dreamed about having my own thing.  My Aunt Erma’s mandel bread recipe was the inspiration for this business, and I’ve learned lots of stuff along the way.  So for you folks who have thought “Hey, I’ve got a great family salsa recipe,” or “My mom’s apple pie is so great she should sell it!” Here are a few shortcuts to earlier posts that tell you how to get it done!  Enjoy!  Phil

So, where in the world do I get a nutritional panel?

What kind of things do grocery stores look for when you talk to them?

I need to bake lots of cookies and I need custom equipment.

You know that bar code on the box, where the heck do I get one of those?

Do you know any reliable printers for creating packaging overseas?

How about the biggest and best food trade show for my new product.

Ok, so I have boxes made overseas, explain how clearing customs works.

Should I go kosher?

I live in California, explain all the business taxes and licenses I’ll need.

Oh man, I know nothing about the web, and my site got hacked.

Lots of other posts, please feel free to scroll through.  Or send me an e-mail, phil@auntermas.com

fancyfood

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

idiosynchronicity

September 10th, 2009
Comments Off

I’m on the edge of my seat awaiting our first big announcement and wanting to share how the simplest little thing can cause delays.  But that’s for another post.  Last weekend we went to the totally cool Diddy Riese cookies in Westwood.  These guys have been baking cookies and serving ice cream over by UCLA for about 26 years.  What is interesting about the place is not so much the cookies (they are hot and fresh) or the ice cream (it’s Dreyers), but the price.  Cookies are 35¢ each.  Scoop of ice cream is a buck.  The lines are out the door at the place all day long.  For those outside of the area, Diddy Riese is in the Westwood Village, a high rent shopping area adjacent to UCLA.  Amazing they can do so well selling cookies for 35¢.  Really got me thinking about a mandel bread store front.  Something very upscale lookng, like Peet’s Coffee , but priced like Diddy Riese.  Limited menu, maybe just a few types of mandel bread and a really great cup of coffee.  2 sticks of mandel bread and a cup of joe for 2 bucks.  And maybe in an upscale part of town like Westwood.

diddy-riese

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

The Shark Tank

September 7th, 2009
Comments Off

Last night I watched episode 4 of “The Shark Tank.”  An acquaintance from the LA Fine Food Group is Jeff Cohen, founder of Granola Gourmet.  Jeff was lucky enough to get a shot on The Shark Tank last night, but he was pretty skewered on national TV.  The worst was when that Fubu guy said he didn’t like the way Jeff’s bars tasted.  Jeff disclosed a bankruptcy from a former business and one by one all the Sharks were out.  I disagree with the Sharks, they are totally missing what is happening in what one of the Sharks called the ‘me too’ market.  The low sugar trend might seem over, but I think that fitness people, and people looking to lose weight are understanding now that controlling blood sugar is one of the important keys to dropping the pounds.  The low sugar bars on the market are crap.  I’ve tried many of  them.  Atkins, Think Thin, Promax, they all suck, and have nutrasweet or sucralose – causing lots of gas and bloating.  Jeff’s bars are low glycemic, and all natural, and Ive tried his chocolate espresso bar which tastes pretty damn good.  My only issue is packaging and price.  Whole Foods retails them for something like $16.00 bucks for 8 in a tub.  A little too pricey for my budget.  I hope Jeff can get the extra financing to get them individually wrapped and produced for a lower cost, because I think if he achieved that, it’s a home run for the Granola Gourmet.

51xobr8kznl_sl500_aa280_pibundle-2topright00_aa280_sh20_

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

and we’re waiting…

August 27th, 2009
Comments Off

Still waiting on that announcement I promised a couple of posts back.  Meanwhile, after several unsuccessful attempts at getting through to the buyer at Bristol Farms, I finally got them to agree to trying some samples of Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread.  I had sent info. packets earlier this year, spoken to grocery store managers, even left several messages at Bristol Farms corporate, but to no avail.  I found out the buyers name and took a guess at his email address.  My email was simple,  ”I have a product that might be good for your stores, if you have a moment, please watch our story.” – followed by a link to that short mini-documentary available on our web site.  That did the trick – within a few moments, the buyer emailed back that he liked the story, and was interested in samples.  My odds of breaking in to a place like Bristol Farms are slim, but getting some sample product in a key buyers hands was a tiny success, and a another reminder about the similarities between pitching in Hollywood and pitching in the food biz.  If they like your story, you’re halfway there.

Here’s my mom and Dad at their 50th wedding anniversary. They look amazing!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread Cheesecake?

August 14th, 2009
Comments Off

After we bake the mandel bread loaves and create the slices, the ends are thrown away.  So thinking about mass production and what to do with all those ends as to not waste them we used the ends to make a cheesecake crust.  The cheesecake in this picture is a ricotta cheesecake with Wilbur 10,000 count chips on a mandel bread crust.  Dusted with cinnamon sugar on top.  Pretty tasty!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

An official announcement

August 13th, 2009
Comments Off

Is coming soon, can’t say just yet what is happening.  

On the product development front.  We tracked down a local distributor for our Wilbur chips – as luck would have it, the chip we needed was in stock at Divine Specialties in Woodland Hills, considering we were looking at a minimum 3 week delay in getting the chips through another Wilbur distributor this was quite a find.  Our custom tool is working great (see June 13th post), but I had to come up with a wood block contraption to help push the product back out of the slicer.  It’s a true Rube Goldberg thingie that works, but the block of wood itself is so heavy that I’ve been noticing that pressing on the mandel bread to get it out of the slicer is compressing the mandel bread a bit, which is not cool.  So over the weekend I had this idea that maybe the wood block needs to be bevelled a bit so that the wood strips that press on the mandel bread are in concave shape and would press the edges of the mandel bread instead of putting all that weight on top of it.  I bought a $5.00 file at the Do-It Center, and this morning fired up another batch – using our all-natural Wilbur chips and ‘viola!’  Seems like we finally nailed it!!  This mandel bread is the closest to what we make at home, and ready for mass-production.  

Picked up some case packing boxes at Absolute Packaging – great prices, and a case box and foam only adds about a nickel to our per box cost.  Never thought I’d get so excited about cardboard.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Stay tuned….

July 31st, 2009
Comments Off

For an announcement coming soon from Team Mandel Bread!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Just walked in…

July 28th, 2009
Comments Off

I took a piece of advice from one of my connections at Whole Foods Northern California region.  After Whole Foods Regional turned us down on a technicality (vanillin, not vanilla in the chips….really Whole Foods?  From a place that sells water in plastic leaching bottles?)

Anyway, I was encouraged not to give up on Whole Foods, and try the grass roots approach.  I made a small batch of Aunt Erma’s with some chocolate chips from Wilbur Chocolate (the place we get our cinnamon chips), patched over the ingredients with a new ingredients label that lists the chips with ‘vanilla’, and drove to the Whole Foods Beverly Hills store.  The assistant grocery team buyer (that’s what they call them – not ‘manager’s') was very cool, I said I had a local product that I thought would be a good fit for a store with Jewish customers.  I’m heading back tomorrow to talk to Eddy, the grocery team buyer and give him some samples.  My up north connection says if I can get a few stores to carry our product, we may yet get the attention of regional.

Bottom line is Aunt Erma’s tastes better with the Nestle’s Mini Chips, but if Whole Foods only accepts ‘vanilla’ then that’s what it’ll be..

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

“Kosher Style”

July 18th, 2009
Comments Off

We’ve been away – visiting the real Aunt Erma in Maryland.  I sent samples of Aunt Erma’s finest to online judaica store Modern Tribe – and waiting for some feedback on whether they think Aunt Erma’s might be a fit.

For little start-ups like us, kosher certification is so freaking expensive!!! (see April 23rd post).  Kosher certifiers want something like $600.00/mo. for the right to put their kosher mark on your product.

I personally don’t care if Aunt Erma’s is kosher or not,, and I don’t think anyone else does either.  But from a marketing stand point, I think mandel bread is so associated with jewish culture that it needs some kind of nod to the kosher thing.  So we’re experimenting with sealing labels that say “100% Kosher Ingredients.“ All of Aunt Erma’s ingredients are kosher – the flour, chips, sugar etc. , we’re just not ready for the expense of going to a kosher kitchen yet.  Anyway, I got the idea thinking about all these great jewish deli’s in Los Angeles like Jerry’s, Art’s and Brent’s – They aren’t kosher either, they are ‘kosher style’ I think that’s kindof thing Aunt Erma’s is going for.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Custom tools & other things..

July 5th, 2009
Comments Off

Whole Foods market turned us down on our mini chips, which contain – vanillin. That ingredient I guess is not approved for Whole Foods, problem is, we’ve tested other chips, fancier chips, and the chips taste the best.  So now looking to other markets for our mandel bread.  Other thing is we have over a 100 lbs. of mini-chips in storage waiting for mandel bread baking.  Picked up another small web order last week.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

We have custom tools!

June 26th, 2009
Comments Off

In the long quest to speed up the baking process we had two custom tools manufactured.  One is a custom slicer, it’s manual, but with it we will be able to cut the mandel bread in to even slices that should fit snugly inside the mandel bread box.  The second is a type of spatula type thingie that serves a dual purpose, one is to slip a full order of mandel bread quickly into our boxes, and the second to quickly unfold the boxes in preparation to seal them up.  Meanwhile, I have just had a bit of communication with Whole Foods So Cal. region – slow slow slow, I’m hoping with the right brokers we can finally ramp up to fill some orders.  The original Aunt Erma herself has been back home in Maryland baking batches and packing them in her namesake box and handing out samples.  Pretty hip for an 87 year old!

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

And about the web site…

June 21st, 2009
Comments Off

The web has been great for our business.  I found our packaging producer on alibaba.com, use Google Voice for our company phone number, Skyped the 400 meg packaging design photoshop file to Shanghai for printing, Google Ad Words for online advertising, Zen Cart for our online shopping cart system and GetAFreelancer.com to program the site….  But here’s a word of caution regarding GetAFreelancer, after I did the refresh on the AuntErmas site (May 13th blog post), I started to get warning messages from Google that there was malware on my site.  I called my web host who said the site was clear, and tried unsuccessfully to contact Google (they have no phone number)…  Making things stranger was the fact that the Google Malware Warning only showed up in the Apple Safari browser, not in Firefox or IE.  After a week or so of poking around I stumbled on a Google page of someone else having the same problem.  A scan of my index files and I noticed that there was a string of text in the code that matched what the guy on google was complaining about.  I deleted the text, and the warning messages from Google stopped.  So, here’s the deal, if you work with GetAFreelancer, be wary of handing over any kind of ftp access to your site, like I did.  And make a back up of your site before anyone get the keys to your site.  Additionally, give limited access to your site.  Thankfully I only gave access to the AuntErmas part of the site.  My animation company is the main domain, and that could have been bad if a hacker got in to there.  My little understanding of these trojan malwares is that sometimes they exist on the programmers computer without the owner even knowing it, and when they user accesses an ftp the code writes itself to all the index pages. All is well that ends well, www.auntermas.com is clear — Oh, and Back East Bialy kitchen is nice, not finished but nice…

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

What else?

June 13th, 2009
Comments Off

We filled our second decent sized order (7 boxes) this week.  Meanwhile Silviano at 3D Stainless is making some custom cutting tools for us to help speed up our mandel bread slicing, and he’s making us a spatula that is the exact width of our boxes to fit the mandel bread in to.  I met with Moshe at Orel manufacturing in North Hollywood to look at his used equipment – but his used mixers were too big – 160 qt. – We need 30 at the most for right now.  Moshe pointed me towards Back East Bakery who apparently has a commercial kosher kitchen available for rent – so we’ll see if that pan out.  Next step is a meeting with Jeff and Nancy Cohen too see if the are interested in repping our mandel bread – Hopefully we can get someone to generate sales, then step in to a large rental kitchen, bring in 2 bakers and get to work.  One of the kids favorite shows is called “Unwrapped” on the Food Network, they take a look behind the scenes at big food manufacturing.  I often wondered where exactly you go to have a huge piece of custom baking equipment made….now I know 2 places right here in LA that do just that.  So much different than animation – but really interesting.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Filling our first order

June 2nd, 2009
Comments Off

Thanks to one of our very generous mom’s at the kids school, we set out to fill our first official order of mandel bread.  20 boxes. Crystal went back to the rental kitchen and this time managed to get the convection ovens to produce something fairly close to what we’ve been able to do at home.  But baking for production brought up other issues.  With no way to control the width of the mandel bread, Crystal eye balled the loaf widths, but either the oven factors or an alternate brand of aluminum free baking powder caused the mandel bread to be wider than expected.  This meant trying to load 16 pieces per box (as labeled) was almost impossible.  

 I made a least of the things we’ll need to invest in to make the baking and boxing of the mandel bread more efficient.

#1).  A custom spatula exactly the width of our boxes.  So we can slip 16 pieces in to the box in one swoop.

#2). A professional mixer – maybe a 20 or 30 qt. Hobart to produce 20 box batches at a time.

#3). A custom slicing tool so we can evenly slice the mandel bread in to exact sized segments to fit in to the box

#4). Some kind of machine to fold and seal the boxes. (this might be something we get down the road…)

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

zero hour at the rental kitchen – Lessons learned

May 22nd, 2009
Comments Off

This afternoon Crystal and I went over to the rental kitchen for a test run.  We met our 86 year old kosher certification Rabbi Goldblatt on location where he spent more time showing us his biceps then anything else.  Meanwhile,  Crystal unloaded the recently blessed raw ingrediants and we got to work with the 4 available blenders in the kitchen.  I fired up the rack oven and off we went.  Two things really hurt us in the end.  #1 the temperature of their kitchen is much higher than our home kitchen so the raw dough softened much more quickly.  #2 the rack oven temperature varies, and I made the newbie mistake of not turning on the convection fan until the first cycle of baking was done.  The end result was 4 full sheet trays in varies states of unusability.  The middle tray (the one with the oven thermometer) had the most promise, until I fired up the convection fan and basically blow torched the mandel bread.  While trays 2-4 were in various states of mush.  It was a train wreck to say the least, but a good learning experience and the property manager graciously only charged us for 1 hour of baking even though we were there for 2.5 hours.  Rabbi senior muscles didn’t charge us a thing, so we were only out some of our time and a few buck for raw ingredients.  The other thing that is a killer is when we get in to volume baking we must have a custom die to slice the mandel bread.  Measuring and slicing as way too time consuming to be cost effective as is the flipping of the pieces…..

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Aunt Erma in China

May 14th, 2009
Comments Off

Here’s our packaging at the International Packaging Expi in Hong Kong.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Web site refresh and other stuff…

May 13th, 2009
Comments Off

Thanks to the fantastic online service GetAFreelancer Aunt Erma’s web site got a nice refresh.  Cleaned up the look slightly and made it easier to find the Donny Deutsch and Erma documentary.  Found food product liability insurance through The Hartford with special thanks to Michel Algazi, founder of the totally awesome Food Networking site LA Fine Foods Group

 

The next step, and hopefully a final step – is coordinating the kosher certification rabbi, the distribution first drop off at the temple, and the our first trial run with the rental kosher kitchen.  Meanwhile, our credit union has ceased their business loan programs – thank goodness we got in when we did, our loan still remains in good standing – and now the Team Mandel Bread plan is to do a 1.5 hour trial run in the kitchen, and take the experimental batches to sell at a farmer’s market.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown

Licenses, Permits & Insurance….blah blah blah

May 7th, 2009
Comments Off

Who says Los Angeles isn’t business friendly?  Business Permits in the City of LA are free.  For the first two years, new businesses pay no city tax on their sales.  After that, sales up to $100,000 annual are also city tax free.  The catch is that you have to renew and maintain the permit in a timely fashion.  City tax office reps told me that lots of people blow off the permitting process and then get nailed for tax.  If they had only filled out a form they’d be city tax free.  Conversely, The California Board of Equalization charges no tax on food products.  Not that that’s unusual I guess, but they don’t require a seller’s permit registration at all, which I thought was a odd, considering LA’s filing requirement.  I’ve got leads on 4 food product liability insurance brokers – all leads from the LA Fine Food Group – and as a bonus, I can play a little insider baseball and post all of their quotes on the LA Food Group site, so the food entrepreneurs will know if they’re getting the most value of not.

Team Mandel Blog Development Countdown