IPFS News Link • Agriculture
-
Special Editions
- Global
- Due Diligence
- Love Bus Liberty Tour
- Vaccine Education Summit
- Bitcoin Summit
- US-Arizona
- US-Tennessee
- Ernie's Favorites
- THE R3VOLUTION CONTINUES
- "It's Not My Debt"
- Fascist Nation's Favorites
- Surviving the Greatest Depression
- The Only Solution - Direct Action Revolution
- Western Libertarian
- S.A.F.E. - Second Amendment is For Everyone
- Freedom Summit
- Declare Your Independence
- FreedomsPhoenix Speakers Bureau
- Wallet Voting
- Harhea Phoenix
- Black Market Friday
IPFS News Link • Agriculture
For some inventors, the problem with creating a hit product is that you become pigeonholed by your own brand’s success. Take the so-called Mushroom Guys, Nikhil Arora and Alejandro Velez, two friends who started out growing mushrooms in recycled coffee grounds in the kitchen of a UC Berkeley frat house back in 2009. Their company, Back to the Roots, eventually sprouted into a smartly designed kit for grow-at-home oyster mushrooms, which pop out of a container about the size of a boxed-wine box. The kits were cool enough for a classroom and pretty enough to sit atop the kitchen counter, which led to deals with the likes of Whole Foods and Nordstrom’s--and the eventual nickname. “We are not the Mushroom Guys,” Velez says, noting that their ambition was always larger than that. “We love urban farming. Our passion is about food being discovered and other types of growing methods.”
Current News | Contents By Subject
Additional Related items you might find interesting:Related items:
News Link •
Food And Drug Administration / F.D.A
WOW This Is Unbelievable. Moms Across America Meeting With The FDA
News Link •
Off Grid Living - Survival Prepping
WHICH IS BETTER: Grass Fed or Pasture Raised Beef - Jeremiah and Amy Harris
News Link •
Agriculture
What the HOME-GARDENER Can Do To Protect From GMO Seeds | Pantry Chat Podcast
News Link •
Agriculture
Insect Biodiversity Plummeting As Global Food Supply Teeters Toward Collapse
News Link •
Agriculture
(Family Life) Father and Son working together to set up rotational grazing on the homestead
News Link •
Pandemic