River Watch Beef envisions pure range of ‘farm-to-fork’ products delivered to your door
September 20, 2018 | Austin Barnes
The beef industry is broken, said Chris Kovac, sitting just an ironic stone’s throw away from the historic Kansas City Stockyards.
“We should all educate ourselves on what we’re eating and who we’re buying our food from,” the founder of River Watch Beef said, impassioned as he shared his concern for the health of consumers.

“Most animals do not have a 100-percent natural diet. They’re given all kinds of additives. In fact, they’re given food waste of [products like] Twinkies and Skittles,” Kovac said.
Launched in 2016, Kovac’s company specializes in producing grass-fed beef and beef jerky made with minimal, all-natural ingredients.
“Grass-fed beef — because it’s raised free range and not confined — it’s able to eat native grass, which has a much higher vitamin content, it has lower fat, it’s got more antioxidant vitamins,” he said.
River Watch Beef aims to transform the mindset of an industry Kovac has come to know through his deep family roots in agriculture and agribusiness. Research and realization combined to form Kovac’s outlook on mainstream beef producers, he said, describing an industry that’s become poisonous.
“We were able to acquire a small piece of property in Colorado about 11 years ago, which is an active cattle ranch,” Kovac said. “That was one of the first epiphanies for me that, ‘Hey, the beef business is really different than I would have expected.’”
As Kovac, who previously worked in marketing, spent vacation days working the land in Colorado, he developed a love for animals and compassionate handling. The combination of the two generated the early ideation for River Watch Beef, he said.
“They’re starting with bad ingredients with the animals, in their feed, to begin with,” Kovac said, detailing the style of ranching operations he’s rebelling against. “And so it’s kind of like ‘bad food in, bad food out’ — it’s a poor quality of the animal.”
Armed with a “farm-to-fork” philosophy, beef jerky has quickly become a sought after product for River Watch Beef, Kovac said. The company currently markets three flavors of jerky –– mild, teriyaki, and sweet peppered –– aged for 21 days. Products are also free of GMOs, antibiotics, and added hormones.
“We want to make sure that everything is 100-percent safe from a reliable source for you and your family,” he said.
Tales of days gone serve as creative fuel for the team behind River Watch Beef. The flavors of the company’s jerky were inspired by family recipes, Kovac said.
“We used to talk with the cowboys –– and we still do –– and you tend to not be able to pack a lunch when you’re out there,” he said. “So, a lot of people eat beef jerky and they would tell us about their grandpas and great-grandpas on the range and they all have family recipes for their jerky. So we’re able to experiment.”
As the company extends its reach, Kovac intends to expand upon his belief that beef should be pure, he said.
“The future is to build additional relationships in Kansas City with the food service industry,” he added.
Kovac hopes River Watch Beef will be stocked in local grocery stores by the end of the year. In the meantime, the company’s products can be purchased here.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Missouri House advances pro-entrepreneur bill that would lower taxes on self-starters
A vision to make Missouri more entrepreneur-friendly moved closer to reality Monday as state legislators passed a first-in-the-nation Right To Start Act, advancing the bill to the Senate on an 85-69 vote. “We made progress today to make Missouri a state that welcomes risk takers, the crazy ones, who want to build the next generation…
SafetyCulture rides deeper into unicorn club with $73M round, reaching $1.6B valuation
The evolution from a checklist app into an operations platform for working teams is paying off for SafetyCulture, which Monday announced a massive funding round from the East Coast — pushing the unicorn company even deeper into the realm of startups valued at more than a billion dollars. Led by New York-based Insight Partners, the…
Made in KC goes West: Why the local-first retailer is opening a marketplace (with shuffleboard) in Lenexa
A newly announced Made in KC Marketplace at Lenexa City Center will make local goods — and the makers behind them — more accessible to a fast-developing piece of Kansas City, said Keith Bradley. “Part of our mission as a company is to make shopping local a habit,” said Bradley, co-owner of Made in KC, a…
Coffee for the culture: Porter House KC founders partner with Messenger to craft Black-owned coffee brand
Black Drip Coffee brewed from within a desire to bring coffee culture to historically disenfranchised and underserved communities, said Charon Thompson and Daniel Smith. “It’s more than coffee,” noted Smith, who co-founded the brand, Black Drip Coffee, as well as the Porter House KC with Thompson. “We always talk about breaking down barriers and creating…
