Happy Food gathers ingredients for nationwide grocery platform, meal-locating app

July 24, 2018  |  Elyssa Bezner

Happy Food

Happy Food Co. has grown beyond distributing flavorful meal kits through small, standalone coolers at Kansas City-area Price Chopper and Hen House locations, said chef and co-founder Kiersten Firquain.

Happy Food

The 2017 Startland Under the Radar startup has now developed a software platform — in partnership with retailers nationwide and 75 local vendors — to enable grocers across the country to assemble and sell their own meal kits. Happy Food provides the boxes, marketing materials, the culinary engine as well as the software component, Firquain said.

“We want to help the groceries use [the platform] to track their supply and to help them execute at store level,” she said. “It’s for meal kits, but also to keep track of inventory.”

The more traditional side of the Happy Food operation has nearly tripled in size and moved locations three times since the company’s founding in 2015, Firquain said. She and co-founder Jeff Glasco hope the most recent space fulfils their needs for a while, she said.

Happy Food meal kits feature boxes of prepared ingredients and recipes for customers struggling for dinner ideas, Firquain said, with popular options including a bison cheeseburger quesadilla and a soba noodle bowl with spicy chicken.

Meals run the spectrum of flavors, uniting comfort foods with uncommon ingredients, she said, with pricing for each box varying based on the cost of the ingredients inside.

“We say that we are good food for real people, so we know people are still going to go out to eat sometimes, but people still want to cook at home,” she said. “And for those people that want a high-quality, restaurant style meal that’s locally sourced, it’ll be done in 20 or 30 minutes.”

Happy Food

Eighty percent of Americans don’t have a specific plan for dinner, she said — and that’s why Happy Food’s meal kits and nationwide platform work.

The company also recently launched Give Some Happy gift boxes, which include mugs, coffee, and Happy Food gift certificates, Firquain said. They’re functional presents for clients or friends, she said.

What’s next?

Happy Food plans to enlist three more grocers this year as part of an app release that aims to solve the most common problem customers face with the meal kits: finding them.

“Right now, you don’t know when you go to the grocery store if the meal that you’re looking for is there or not,” Firquain said. “You just see what’s there and you buy what you want and, but a lot of times customers are looking for a specific item and so this would enable you to know where exactly to find that item and which location.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        How one veteran’s early struggles with soft skills inspired tech to boost a new generation

        By Tommy Felts | November 1, 2024

        Editor’s note: The following story was produced through a paid partnership with MOSourceLink, which boasts a mission to help entrepreneurs and small businesses across the state of Missouri grow and succeed by providing free, easy access to the help they need — when they need it. ST. LOUIS — Gavin Pringle knows firsthand the struggles…

        Accessibility platform AskSAMIE expands to 500+ partners thanks to national homecare deals

        By Tommy Felts | November 1, 2024

        A pair of significant new partnerships not only allow Kansas City-based AskSAMIE to expand its national reach, said Dr. Brandy Archie; the deals put her startup a pivotal moment in its mission to deliver on-demand support to seniors and their caregivers. Working with homecare organizations ComForCare/At Your Side and CarePatrol will push AskSAMIE — a…

        Stripping Missouri’s supplier diversity goals stifles state’s prosperity potential, says women’s business advocate

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2024

        Ending nearly a decade of benchmarks that helped ensure greater equity in state contracts for businesses owned by minorities and women is a move in the wrong direction for Missouri, said Jennifer Brungardt, emphasizing the coming impact of lost opportunities for underrepresented entrepreneurs. “Diversity and economic growth will be stifled without proper support from our…

        Kelly Sievers and Lauren Lawrence, Innovation Exchange

        Capital connector’s message to women: Your investor pool isn’t just sharks; dive in and learn to swim

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2024

        When it comes to navigating the waters of capital and equity, Women’s Capital Connection angel investment network and the Women’s Business Center serve as a guide to both entrepreneurs and investors, Kelly Sievers shared. “All the education that we do and all the connections that we make, I would say that’s really the key,” explained…