Edible-Alpha® Live!

Thank you to all who attended and presented at this amazing event!

Catch the 2021 keynote below, recap the day on our YouTube channel, and listen to podcasts from the event with the Presenting Businesses and Famous Founders.


Follow our Facebook page for information on the next Edible-Alpha® Live!


Edible-Alpha® Live! Famous Founder Interviews:

Founder of FFI and the Edible-Alpha® podcast, Tera Johnson, interviewed pathbreaking food and ag innovators whose companies show us how impact investing can change our food system.


Paul Willis, Founder
Niman Ranch

“We believe that the quality of an animal’s life impacts the quality of the meat.”
This is the brand promise of Niman Ranch meats.  This all started with Bill Niman and Niman Ranch beef.  Then came Paul, who Founded the Niman Ranch Pork Company.  740 family farms are now in business, hundreds of thousands of pigs have lived out of confinement, and consumers and chefs around the country can choose to eat humanely raised pork because of Paul.  Join us to hear Tera and Paul talk about his journey from one farm raising pigs on pasture to a national brand owned by Purdue.

David Miller, Founder
Iroquois Valley Farmland REIT

  “In every deliberation we must consider the impact on the seventh generation.”
Iroquois Nation, Great Law of Peace. David Miller started the Iroquois Valley Farmland REIT as a way for mission-oriented investors to finance the future of organic agriculture in America.  He started by working with a small number of accredited investors who were willing to respond to an improbable investment premise: invest in farmland that is transitioning out of conventional into organic production with the only land sales by the REIT going to individual farmers.  The Fund would provide comparatively low returns and no guaranteed exit.  Despite this, accredited investors stepped up, and David began the multi-year grind to get to a Direct Public Offering that is available to non-accredited investors.  We’ll talk to David about making the improbable possible in the world of impact investing.

Gary Zimmer & Leilani Zimmer Durand, Founder
Midwestern BioAg

“Better Farming Through Soil.”
Who knew that so much depends on dirt?  And that dirt isn’t just dirt, but something that teems with minerals and water and microbial life that somehow comes together to become an environment where plants can grow.  Gary figured this out a long time ago and set out to create a company that would help organic farmers build profitability by improving their soil.  Now his company works with some of the largest farms, conventional and organic, in the world bringing the power of biological farming to their farms.  We’ll talk with Gary and his daughter Leilani, who is now the VP of R&D, about the journey of Midwest BioAg and future opportunities for innovation in biological farming.

Meet Our Presenting Companies:

Younger innovative farmers and food entrepreneurs from all over the country showcased their enterprises and their impact investment lanes through Early Look Business Presentations.

Mark and Judy Thomas,
Founders
Garfield Produce

Mike Costello & Amy Dawson,
Founders
Lost Creek Farm

John & Halee Wepking,
Founders
Meadowlark Organics

The event can be live-streamed to viewing parties at collaborating sites, in both rural and urban areas, across the U.S. Contact us if you want to host!

Kickoff Event

There was an interactive hour of food storytelling brought to you by Mike Costello and Amy Dawson of Lost Creek Farm. Each attendee received a set of recipe cards that tied into the story.

This event offered additional engagement with our participating Edible-Alpha® Live! interviewees, presenting businesses, and the stakeholders that support them.

Edible-Alpha® Live!

Participate in interviews with path-breaking innovators in food and agriculture.

Listen to presentations from early-stage farm and food entrepreneurs.

Network with a wide range of stakeholders.

Early Look Presentations

Edible-Alpha® Live! featured Early Look presentations from younger innovative farmers and food entrepreneurs from all over the country, showcasing their enterprises and their impact investment lanes.

These ten businesses received one-on-one coaching from Tera as well as facilitated peer group meetings and mentorship to help them grow and get capital ready.

Schedule:

Wednesday December 9th 2021 – All times are CST
Edible-Alpha® Live! (Main Event)

9:00 – 9:30AM
9:30 – 10:00AM
10:00 – 11:05AM
11:15AM – 12:25PM
12:25 – 1:05PM
1:15 – 2:10PM
2:10 – 3:20PM
3:30 – 4:40PM
4:40 – 4:55PM
4:55 – 6:00PM

  • Welcome & Tech Overview
  • Opening Remarks: Tera Johnson- Investment Cases for Impact Investing in Food and Ag
  • Lightning Talk: AVL Growth Partners

Interview: Briana Warner, Atlantic Sea Farms

  • Live Podcast Interview: Growing an Impact Ag Tech Company – Gary Zimmer & Leilani Zimmer Durand – Midwest BioAg
  • Lightning Talks: Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation & Ogden Glazer + Schaefer
10-minute Break
  • Business Presentations
    • Dairy Grazing Apprenticeship
    • Regenerative Agriculture Development
    • Prairie Fruits Farm & Creamery
    • Meadowlark Organics
  • Presentation Commentary
  • Lightning Talk: Kitchen Table Consultants

Lunchroom Table Curated Connections

10-minute Break
  • Live Podcast Interview: Farmer Investing – Iroquois Valley Farm REIT
  • Lightning Talks: Farm Credit & Compeer
  • Business Presentations
    • Garfield Produce
    • Brix Cider
    • Lost Creek Farm
    • Honest Bison
    • Breadtopia
  • Presentation Commentary
  • Lightning Talks: Summit Credit Union & Madison Gas and Electric

10-minute Break
  • Live Podcast Interview: Creating a National Impact Food Brand – Paul Willis, Founder, Niman Ranch Meats
  • Lightning Talks: Michael Best Friedrich LLP & Agriculture Utilization Research Institute
  • Fun with Tera!
    • Sample Box opening
    • Next Steps
  • Cocktail Curated Connections

Schedule:

Wednesday December 8th – All times are CST
Edible-Alpha® Live! Kickoff (Pre-event)

6:00 – 7:00PM
7:00 – 8:00PM

  1. Welcome
  2. Lost Creek Farm – Food Story Telling

Curated Connections

Edible-Alpha® Live! Sponsors

Thank you to all our sponsors for making this event possible!

Contact Penny Molina at or 608-335-3550 to start building the next generation of profitable food & farm businesses.
Note: All sponsorships must comply with the University of Wisconsin’s sponsorship guidelines.


Presenting Business Descriptions:

Briana Warner, CEO Atlantic Sea Farms

What do you do when a changing climate erodes the livelihoods of the food producers in your community?  You do something different that mitigates the effects of climate change and creates new economic opportunities.  Sound too good to be true?  You get to meet Brianna and her company Atlantic Sea Farms.  Located on the coast of Maine, Atlantic Sea Farms is helping lobster fishermen transition to kelp farming.  Brianna’s company works on every level of this transition, from helping fishermen switch to kelp farming, to harvesting and processing the kelp, to developing products for chefs and consumers, and bringing branded foods to the market.

Eric & Denyce Rusch & Family, Founders Breadtopia

In 2006, Eric found himself living in a town of 10,000 people in rural Iowa called Fairfield.  Entrepreneurial by nature, committed to eating a plant-based diet, Eric discovered sourdough bread.  Good for the gut biome, great for making traditional breads from all sorts of grains.  A bakery wouldn’t work (not enough people) so Eric and Denyce started an online business selling a wide range of organic grains and all of the accoutrements needed to make sourdough bread at home.  Fast forward 14 years and Breadtopia is a thriving business that includes two generations of family members working in the company.  This year Breadtopia moved into the former Fuller Brush building in downtown Fairfield Iowa where it also mills grains.  The building will also be the home to a new cooperative food processor space for small local food startups.

Marie & Matt Raboin, Founders Brix Cider Orchard Initiative

What do you do when you are bored in the bush in Africa?  Take on-line brewing courses, of course.  When Matt and Marie came back to the US, they both got jobs in Madison Wisconsin and bought their farm.  Then they started planting cider apple trees and making cider.  With the help of Marie’s sommelier uncle, they perfected their cider over time, they started selling cider wholesale and making cider in their own facility and taproom.  Passionately committed to preserving local farms, they started working with other local apple orchards, making cider with their apples, identifying the orchard on the label, and making it possible for these orchards to sell hard cider.   Sometimes it takes one company to raise the tide that helps all of the boats…

Joe Tomandl, Executive Director Dairy Grazing Apprenticeship

Dairy grazing isn’t just about letting the cows out of the barn or farming the way grandpa did.  It’s a very different approach to raising dairy cows that started in New Zealand and migrated to the US.  Cows graze on new pasture every 12 hours, pasture composition and genetics are important.  Pastures sequester carbon and change the gut biome of cows.  Milking parlors are different.  A dairy grazer and educator himself, Joe started the DGA as a way to bring the tradition of trade apprenticeships to farming.  DGA currently has 180 approved Master Dairy Graziers in 13 states: Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Wisconsin.  The program has 46 active Master-Apprentice pairs, 32 Journey Dairy Graziers, and more than 100 Apprentice Candidates seeking to be hired.  With the dairy industry facing unprecedented shifts in consumer preferences, DGA is taking its role one step further toward developing an entirely new integrated business model for dairy grazing farms.

Mark and Judy Thomas, Founders Garfield Produce

Time to retire. Travel, golf, and yet…  With an MBA, years of business experience, and religious faith leading them to want to make a difference in the lives of people who are struggling, Mark and Judy started a journey.  They started Garfield Produce Company, an indoor vertical hydroponic vegetable farm, to create sustainable local employment and wealth in East Garfield Park.  East Garfield Park is one of Chicago’s most economically challenged neighborhoods.  It is also one of seven Chicago neighborhoods that are home to a majority of the formerly incarcerated men and women who have great difficulty in securing employment.  Since their inception, over 50% of the company’s employees were formerly incarcerated.  Many of them have graduated to better jobs after building a track record of employment success at Garfield.  Even more impressive, Mark and Judy have done what has been illusive for many other indoor and urban ag companies: they are doing a social enterprise profitably.  Garfield is a model that is ready for replication by other social entrepreneurs in other neighborhoods that need it.

Mike Costello & Amy Dawson, Founders Lost Creek Farm

The “new thing” in marketing is telling stories.  Social media makes a story out of everything and everyone can be a storyteller, at least in theory.  In practice, no one really cares what your plate of food looked like (unless you’re already famous) and it is actually hard to tell compelling stories that produce actionable results.  And yet, there are people who live in places where story telling is deeply imbedded.  Mike and Amy of Lost Creek Farm, came back to their home in Appalachia to tell stories through food.  Their, “Story-rich, heritage inspired, mountain food” was featured on one of Anthony Bourdain’s last episodes. People fly in from all over the country to have dinner on their farm in Dawson Co West Virginia.  Local people also come, and cry when they see their food and stories elevated out of poverty and celebrated.  Such is the power of stories and food to transform communities.

John & Halee Wepking, Founders Meadowlark Organics

It’s simply impossible for a young farmer to take over a 950-acre farm from someone who isn’t family.  Paul Bickford and John and Halee hear that all of the time, but they know otherwise.  It doesn’t happen fast, and it doesn’t happen without a significant change in the farm business model.  Paul was a traditional, large-scale dairy farmer who transitioned to dairy grazing, then converted to organic crop production.  With no one in the family willing to take over, Paul found John and Halee.  John grew up on a conventional farm, knew how to do things like run a corn picker, and wanted to farm organically.  Halee was a professional baker, which led them to start growing organic grains on the Bickford farm.  They launched a brand, Meadowlark Organics, and are now working toward a milling operation on their farm.

Leslie Cooperband & Wes Jarrell, Founders Prairie Fruits Farm & Creamery, LLC.

Wes and Leslie are soil scientists who decided they wanted to farm themselves.  Inspired by the farmstead goat cheesemakers in the Madison area, they started their Prairie Fruits and Farm Creamery when they moved to Champaign IL.  They make cheese that they sell into Chicago, then added gelato, then started farm dinners and on-farm events.  Now they know that their creamery needs to get bigger, but they don’t want to bring the goats into a barn.  What does a grass-fed goat dairy look like?  Goats don’t graze, they browse, think eating leaves off bushes.  This is going to require a completely different production and business model for a goat farm, one that intersects with growing interest in agroforestry and permaculture farming.

Bryce & Jen Riemer, Founders Riemer Family Farm

Conjure up in your mind a picture of thousands of monarch butterflies overwintering in Mexico.  Then imagine that many monarchs on a farm on their way to Mexico, and the farm is in Wisconsin.  Impossible?  No.  Bryce and Jen’s 230 acres of pollinator-friendly pasture is becoming a resting point for monarchs as they gather and travel to Mexico every year.  Now imagine what would be possible if the 230 acres become 5000.  The regenerative ag district, “RAD” has a vision for doing just this. Bryce and Jen or Riemer Family Farm, are working with the Southern Wisconsin Land Conservancy and Applied Ecological Services to transform a former golf course into a restored prairie and regenerative farm.  This combined with the Reimer’s own farm are the beginnings of a RAD future.

Sean Lenihan, Founder The Honest Bison

Bison.  A symbol of the American west, a sacred being for many indigenous peoples, an “exotic meat” for mainstream consumers.  When Sean decided to cash out of the grind of a career in digital marketing in San Francisco, he did the obvious thing: buy a farm in Wisconsin and put bison on it.  Actually, the obvious part was starting the digital marketing company and online brand.  But it is a journey to go from marketing other people’s things to becoming an online meat brand, even if you are someone like Sean who actually knew how to do the online part.  The meat part, not so much in the beginning. Sean will be sharing his story and what’s next for the honest bison.