How this Kanien'kehá:ka couple is relishing in a 'dill-icious' pickle venture
CBC
There are few vegetables that Austin Lazare hasn't tried to pickle yet.
There's been beans, carrots, garlic, tomatoes, cauliflower … and of course cucumbers.
"I pickled grapes, even. It was actually kind of a hit," said Lazare, the owner and founder of Rowy's Preservation Nation in Kahnawake, south of Montreal.
The budding Kanien'kehá:ka (Mohawk) entrepreneur started pickling in 2018 as a hobby, making small batches of spicy pickled beans.
He'd spend weekends canning and approached a local business about selling some jars. The first case sold out within half an hour.
Now, he's turned Rowy's — named after his four-year-old son — into a full-time business producing an average of 500 jars a day. He's made everything from salsas to a wide variety of pickled vegetables, and even holds monthly fried pickle sales.
"I think people right now are really gearing towards homemade things and locally made things, so I really found a good market for it," he said.
Two dozen businesses in the community carry his products, and he's working on improving packaging and label requirements according to Quebec regulations and certifications to expand beyond Kahnawake.
"I love being from Kahnawake," said Lazare.
"My biggest goal is to get on the shelves of IGA, Costco, or Metro …. I want to be the first food product from Kahnawake to make it onto the shelves of a real retail chain."
The small business has grown significantly over the pandemic. On Dec. 3, he opened his own storefront and workshop. It's also home to the Butter End Cakery, his girlfriend Kahente McGregor's cake business.
McGregor said she is excited to share a larger kitchen and workspace, and their family is also soon to expand.
"I was baking out of my little kitchen. I am very excited to get in here and start baking," she said.
"I'm so excited. Our families are coming together, this new little baby. It means a lot."