Before he founded the plant-based burger company Impossible Foods,
Patrick Brown, who spent 25 years as a biochemistry professor at
Stanford, also co-founded a Hayward, Ca.-based food company called Kite Hill
that has developed numerous nut milk and cheese products that it says
are healthier and more sustainable than their dairy counterparts.
Investors seem to agree. According to a new SEC filing,
the now nine-year-old company is sealing up $15 million more in funding
(and has at least $10 million in fresh capital locked down). The
company most recently closed a round if funding last fall,
including from backers General Mills, CAVU Venture Partners, and New
Crop Capital, and this newest infusion should bring the company’s total
funding to around $80 million, according to Crunchbase.
It’s
easy to understand their enthusiasm for the space more broadly. The
vegan cheese market has seen double-digit growth over the past few
years, according to Nielsen data, which recently found that sales of
plant-based cheese grew 41% through August of of 2018, compared with the
flat sales of traditional dairy cheese. Sales of almond, soy, oat and
other plant-based milks are soaring, too. According to Nielsen data,
sales of plant-based milk beverages rose 9% in the year ending in June
2018, up from 3% the previous year. Meanwhile, traditional cow’s milk
sales fell 6% during the same period.
Kite Hill makes almond milk
yogurts, greek yogurts, cream cheese, ricotta, pastas, dips, and kids
tubes that are sold in Safeway, Whole Foods, and Amazon, among other
retail outlets. Along with Brown, it was founded by Monte Casino, a
former instructor at Le Cordon Bleu in Boston, and Tal Ronnen, a chef
and the founder of the vegan Los Angeles restaurant Crossroads Kitchen.
It’s a crowded space to be operating in. Califia Farms,
for example, which makes non-dairy milks and yogurts, among other
things, was founded the same year in Bakersfield, Ca., and has raised
$115 million so far, including from Stripes Group. Five-year-old Ripple Foods,
in Emeryville, Ca., has similarly outpaced Kite Hill on the fundraising
front, raising $120 million so far for its non-dairy milk products.
Kite
Hill is also competing with big companies that are eager to stay
relevant as customer preferences change. Among them, Danone last fall
revealed plans to triple the size of its plant-based business — including its non-dairy beverage and yogurt products — by 2025.
Indeed,
a strategy for most brands like Kite Hill seems to be to accept funding
from the growing number of giant food companies that have established
venture arms and then hope they’ll help grow the younger brand, rather
than try extinguishing it.
Among the behemoths currently funding their smaller rivals is General Mills (its venture arm is 301 INC), Campbell Soup (Acre Venture Partners), Tyson Foods (Tyson Ventures), and Kelloggs (1894 Capital).
Source. Techcrunch, Connie Loizos, September 8, 2019
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