Happy Food gathers ingredients for nationwide grocery platform, meal-locating app
July 24, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
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.
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.”
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.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How a KC startup is using Bluetooth to help ranchers ID sick cows days before symptoms
Just-released geolocation technology from MyAnIML can flag and locate sick cattle two to three days ahead of symptoms — protecting the health of the herd and offering a revolutionary new security tool for the beef and dairy supply chain, said serial tech entrepreneur Shekhar Gupta. The Kansas City startup’s patent-pending technology uses artificial intelligence and…
Just-launched initiative aims to capitalize on Kansas City’s promise as a global leader in health tech, renews call for KC investment
Advancing Kansas City’s digital health industry begins with attracting and nurturing talent, said Dick Flanigan. “What [Digital Health KC] seeks to do is connect ideas to talent; talent to capital; capital to companies and companies to marketplace — and we do not lack for ideas,” said Flanigan, who serves as the CEO of Digital Health…
How Urban TEC used eye-opening VR tech to bring teen mental health into the real world
Students at two Kansas City, Kansas, high schools are tackling teen mental health issues with the help of virtual reality, shared youth and tech advocate Ina P. Montgomery. From February through April, 28 students from Wyandotte and JC Harmon high schools learned Unity programming software, identified and researched a health concern for youth ages 13…
‘Mr. K’ finalists tease what it’s like to work for the next Small Business of the Year
Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. Finalists for the KC Chamber’s Small Business of the Year award highlighted their companies’ commitments to strong workplace culture, DEI initiatives, and community relations during a panel…


