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'Gourmet
to Go' for people on the run
By
Amy Pearson
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Photo/Amy
Pearson
Judy
Baker, left, and
her daughter Melissa
Holmes founded
'Gourmet to
Go.'
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For
Melissa Holmes and Judy Baker,
daughter and mother respectively,
the
key to success was right under
their noses.
And
boy, did it smell good.
What
started out as an enjoyable hobby
for the two has morphed into
a
booming business that has made
its mark on 49 states.
Gourmet
To Go was born out of the kindness
of Holmes' and Baker's
hearts.
"We
were making gifts to give our
family and friends," Holmes said.
"And
they really liked them and kept
asking for more."
What
they were making were gourmet
mixes; mixing and packaging dry
ingredients to favorite family
recipes so that recipients only
had
to add such ingredients as water
or sour cream, or mix it with
ground meat to have a savory
home cooked meal or a delectable
dessert ready in no time at all.
Since
everyone liked the treats so
much, including the Mexican Meatloaf
and Cheesy Potato Casserole,
Holmes and Baker decided to sell
the
mixes at a craft show. And they
sold and sold and sold some
more.
Now,
The Gourmet Cupboard has distributers
in 49 states and is overflowing
the
building built behind Baker's
and Holmes' Sour Lake home.
"Our
success has shocked us completely," Holmes
said. "But we love
what we do and we are glad that
it's been so popular."
The
twosome didn't start out as kitchen
scientists or Cordon Bleu chefs.
Holmes, a former fourth grade
teacher in the Hardin-Jefferson
Independent School District,
just wanted to stay home with
her two
sons, Kaden and Kale. She originally
planned on baking and
decorating cakes for weddings,
birthdays and other special events.
Baker just retired from her job
as a teacher in HJISD, as well.
"We
were just fooling around in the
kitchen, making things we liked,"
Holmes said.
Baker
calls Holmes the creative one;
the one who will mix and pour
and
experiment until she gets a recipe
right. Holmes complements her
mother on her work ethic and
organization. They make a good
team,
bouncing ideas off of each other
and finishing thoughts and
sentences the other has begun.
Mother
and daughter started by paring
down family recipes into packages
that were shelf stable and could
be given as gifts. Some of their
first endeavors included Heavenly
Chocolate Pie, a recipe from
Holmes' great-grandmother; Key
Lime Pie, Jambalaya and Spinach
Dip.
"We
do a lot of Cajun cuisine," Baker
said. "What's interesting is
that
many of our Northern distributors
haven't heard of a lot of our
dishes, like etoufee. They don't
realize that people really eat
crawfish!"
Becoming
a distributor is as easy as signing
up on the The Gourmet Cupboard website
at: http://www.gourmetmixes.com/.
There are distributors in 49
of the 50 states, Hawaii excluded.
But
even with their business spread
out literally all over the country,
Holmes and Baker have kept the
warm family atmosphere of Gourmet
to
Go.
Their
website is peppered with recognition
of family members like Mama
Joy, Melissa's grandmother, and
her sister, June.
Mixes
are named after family members
as well, like Big Shan's Chicken
Fajita Seasoning, for Holmes'
husband, Shannon. Keeping it
in the
family, Shannon Holmes helped
build the The Gourmet Cupboard building
that
adjoins his house and plans to
put in sweat equity on the business'
future expansion.
The
building that houses Gourmet
To Go is cozy and family friendly,
too.
All the mixes are created, packaged
and shipped from the small
facility in Sour Lake. The sun-kissed
walls are lined with shelves
bearing orders to be sent all
over the country. The large work
island in the middle is where
employees mix the recipes for
Gourmet
To Go.
"We
all have to get along really
well," Baker said jokingly of
the close
quarters.
"But
our employees are like part of
the family," she added.
And
in keeping with the family feel,
there's no heavy machinery. No
mixing vats or time clocks or
assembly lines. All the gourmet
mixes
are still mixed by hand.
"They're
actually homemade and stirred
together by one of our eight
full-time
employees," Baker said.
Holmes
likes being next door to her
house, where she can keep an
eye on her
sons and be home with them as
they grow.
"Our
distributors can't believe we
actually answer the phone when
they
call to place orders," Holmes
said. "But we're very hands-on
and
right in the thick of things."
Before
Holmes and Baker wrote their
business plan, they talked to
vendors
and distributors with other companies,
like Mary Kay, Arbonne
International, Pampered Chef
or Avon.
"We
went to trade shows and arts
and crafts shows and put together
a
business plan that worked for
us," Holmes said. "We get a lot
of
compliments on the way we do
business and that's very important
to
us."
In
November, The Gourmet Cupboard will
expand. They've outgrown the
current
facility with their 135 different
mixes, weekly orders of 100-pound
bags of sugar and flour, 50 pound
bags of chopped onion and the
accouterments that go with a
gourmet mix and gift business.
So
they're building on Hwy
105 between Sour Lake and the
Pinewood
and Countrywood subdivisions.
The
new facility will be hewn out
of stone and cedar and feature
a
retail shop and a café, with
daily specials made from Gourmet
to Go
mixes, of course.
"Sampling
the food is the key," Holmes
said. "When people taste what
the mixes
can make, they can't resist buying
it."
The
new shop will also proudly display
messages from the Gourmet to
Go
distributors all over the country.
"They're
sending us prayers, scriptures,
blessings or notes to put on
the
wall," Holmes said. "And we'll
put it up on our website as
well."
Holmes
and Baker consider themselves
blessed with the success of their
business.
"We
try to run it in a Christian
way," Holmes said. "We try to
do the
right thing and treat our customers
as we would like to be
treated."
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