Pubdate: Tue, 12 Feb 2008
Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB)
Copyright: 2008 Winnipeg Free Press
Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/info/letters/index.html
Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502
Author: Larry Kusch

HEMP FOODS TURN HEALTHY PROFIT

Manitoba Continent's Main Source

AS an 18-year-old, Mike Fata weighed 300 pounds and decided to go on a
no-fat diet.

It almost killed him.

But while researching essential dietary fats, he got excited about the
nutritional benefits of hemp.

Thirteen years later and more than 100 pounds lighter, Fata heads
Manitoba Harvest Hemp Foods & Oils, a company with projected sales
this year of $6 million and customers as far flung as Europe and Australia.

This month, the company's Hemp Bliss -- an organic hemp beverage and
milk substitute that won the best-new-product award at a major U.S.
natural products trade show last fall -- will be sold in Sobeys
stores. It has become a staple, along with soy-based and rice-based
milk alternatives, in local health food stores in the last 10 months.

Hemp Bliss, an organic product sold in three flavours -- original,
chocolate and vanilla -- is the latest Manitoba Harvest product to hit
North American natural, organic and mainstream grocery stores.

The company also sells hemp seeds, hemp seed oil, hemp seed nut butter
and a protein powder that can be used in power shakes.

Besides Sobeys, Manitoba Harvest products are also found in Loblaws
stores in Eastern Canada and many Superstores. The company has 31
distributors throughout North America.

An employee at the McPhillips Street Vita Health store, which carries
the full line of Manitoba Harvest products, said Monday that sales of
the hemp milk have been steady, though hemp seeds are the brand's
biggest seller.

"A lot of people can't stand the taste of soy. It's very dry," said
the employee, who did not give her name.

Manitoba has become the centre of hemp food production in North
America.

Fata's company and Ste. Agathe-based Hemp Oil Canada Inc., which
supplies food manufacturers with hemp seed and oil, are the two
biggest players on the continent, Hemp Oil president Shawn Crew said
Monday.

"We're shipping to about 15 countries," said Crew, who would not
reveal the private company's sales figures, but said they are in the
millions of dollars annually. Sales were up 40 per cent last year, he
said.

Manitoba Harvest, meanwhile, has also been riding a new wave of
interest in hemp and other alternative food products, earning a spot
on the Profit 100 list of fastest-growing businesses in Canada.

Fata has seen his company's wares featured on a U.S. network
television segment on new health products. Manitoba Harvest was also
front and centre last spring in a full-page Los Angeles Times article
on hemp foods, headlined "Soy's new competition: hemp."

Hemp, once banned in North America because it is related to the
marijuana plant, produces a high-protein seed rich in Omega 3 and
Omega 5 essential fatty acids.

Fata, 31, turned the knowledge he gained in researching the health
benefits of these essential fats into a business in 1998, along with
co-founders Martin Moravcik and Alex Chwaiewsky. That year, their
sales of hemp oil, made with a cold press imported from Europe, were
under $50,000. By 2004, company sales reached $1.4 million.

Manitoba Harvest is owned by 50 investors, including friends and
family of the company founders and 21 of the 30 farmers that supply it
with seed.

The company, located on Notre Dame Avenue, is investing $1.5 million
in new equipment this year and moving to a new location on Eagle Drive.

Next week, Fata is off to Nuremberg, Germany, where he will promote
his company's products at the largest organic trade show in the world.

Hemp Bliss passes the taste-bud test

So how does it taste?

We asked Free Press Recipe Swap columnist Darlene Henderson to sample
Hemp Bliss -- an organic hemp beverage and milk substitute that won
the best-new-product award at a major U.S. natural products trade show
last fall. It will be sold in Sobeys stores starting this week.

Here's what Henderson had to say:

"This doesn't taste at all like regular milk and the 'Original'
flavour I sampled is not sweet, but if you have ever eaten hemp seeds,
you'll immediately find the flavour of this beverage familiar. It has
a nutty taste, somewhat similar to raw sunflower seeds, with a bit of
creaminess. The nuttiness would make it a good milk substitute to use
in a bowl of hot, cooked cereal, or in certain baked goods, such as
banana or bran muffins, and certainly for shakes and smoothies. I
usually drink coffee black, and tried adding some, and it added a
mellowness, with an almost hazelnut flavour. I can see it being an
acquired taste for some, but worth trying for the nutritional benefits
or as an alternative to other milk substitutes."
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MAP posted-by: Derek