The eighth-grade class at Imago Dei Middle School downtown had a crazy idea for their entrepreneurship class: pickle fruits and vegetables with a tajΓn spice blend.
βMy favorite thing was citrus, which is crazy because Iβve never had pickled fruit before,β said Cameron Taylor, Imago Deiβs head of school. βIt was delicious.β
The project was part of the schoolβs THREAD (Together for Hope, Resilience, Empowerment And Development) Project, a business development venture that the school created during COVID. Projects have included a making 16,000 masks for healthcare workers, tribal members and others in the early days of the pandemic.
The class is taught by Frank DiPietrapaul, who went through the StartUp Tucson Recipes for Success Food Accelerator program this fall to help his students take their tajin project to market.
βFrankβs job was to take what he learned in the accelerator and translate that for the kids,β Taylor said.
Taylor said the kids came up with the product and the business, THREAD Provisions, but couldnβt participate in the StartUp Tucson program because they were too young β and classes were held on school nights.
The product is a spice blend that consumers can mix with vinegar. Taylor said the students also proposed selling bottled pickled vegetables and fruits, as well.
The next step is to decide how to bring it to market, but Taylor said heβs confident the kids will figure it out.
βI think it is a real possibilityβ that it will land on store shelves, he said.
Students in Imago Deiβs THREAD program have used proceeds from their projects to reinvest in their communities including community gardens, Taylor said.