Happy Tuesday. This week, weโre sharing:
The โitโ labneh of NYC (and how it won 3 awards in a week)
Cool Shiny Cultureโs: The Cultural Curve of Beverages
CPG packaging gets its own bill, $2.25 per pound of tomatoes, protein-maxxing has hit the farms
Meet Ilay Karateke, co-founder of Bezi, the labneh brand that swept Expo West 2026, taking home a NEXTY Award, Americaโs Next Top Snack, and 2nd place in Albertsons Innovation Launchpadโฆ all in the same week.
Or, as someone once described it to me: the โitโ labneh of NYC.
Bezi takes labneh, a Middle Eastern dairy dip somewhere between cream cheese and yogurt, and makes it feel at home on American shelves. Same protein as hummus. No preservatives, no gums. Flavors like Everything and Hot Honey.
Ilayโs path here isnโt exactly linear. She came up through McKinsey, helped launch a $2 billion grocery delivery startup, and spent an MBA summer waking up at 5 a.m. to milk cows and make cheese by hand.
A cheese brand had been Ilayโs dream for a while. Bezi is what made it real.
00:13 - The minds behind Bezi
03:10 - I was like โHey, I love cheese!โ
05:35 - Iโm extremely opinionated as a founder
10:16 - American consumption is very functional
14:11 - Weโre selling about 10 anhour at demos
18:00 - I donโt operate on revenue
20:44 - Itโs good therapy to launch your business
๐ Jump to 1:52 for Ilayโs TMI cow-milking story (youโve been warned)
240 days: Refrigerated shelf life (2.5x longer than hummus)
10 units an hour: Average demo conversion
2 out of 4 quarters: Cash flow positive in Beziโs first year
Donโt crowdsource your product. Ilay didnโt run taste tests or surveys. She spent years cooking for friends and trying every dairy product in New York. By the time she developed Beziโs recipes, she already knew what would work. Hot Honey. Everything Labneh. A less tangy Turkish base. If you donโt have a strong point of view, the market will give you one, and it wonโt be yours.
You donโt explain a new category. You get someone to try it. For something people donโt understand, explanation is overrated. Taste isnโt. Ilay built awareness through demos, sampling, and showing up in person. โThe first years have to be very much close to the shelf.โ Be there. Get it in peopleโs mouths. Everything else comes after.
Every channel should pay for itself. Full stop. Most founders look at a top-line revenue number. Ilay looks at every store, every market, every channel separately and asks: is this paying for itself? Launching in a new market isnโt โwe need more revenue.โ Itโs โcan this cover its own costs?โ In her previous role, she watched Getir raise $2 billion chasing unsustainable growth and collapse. Bezi runs the opposite way.
Control how itโs made and how it moves. Ilay doesnโt just manage the brand. She controls how Bezi is made and how it gets to shelf. On the production side, that means custom machinery, tight processes, and a 240-day refrigerated shelf life. On the distribution side, she runs her own delivery routes and knows exactly what sells, where, and when. Owning both ends is how you actually see whatโs working.
Function is how they find you. Story is why they stay. You might want to sell culture, sourcing, or story. But consumers are buying protein, gut health, or calories. You donโt have to build your entire brand around that, but you do have to acknowledge it. Ilay is taking that into her second year and learning what actually moves someone to pick it up.
Market signal โ New categories arenโt won on awareness. Theyโre won on conversion. If trial doesnโt turn into purchase, distribution just scales the problem.
The local-first playbook
Walk stores. Build relationships. Demo constantly. Make your product feel everywhere, even when it isnโt (yet).
Step 1: Pick your fort: One city. One neighborhood. One channel. Where your product fits, and where you can actually show up.
Step 2: Go deep, not wide: Cluster stores. Build repetition. Create โIโve seen this beforeโ moments.
Step 3: Own the experience: Demo. Sample. Talk to customers. Watch how real people react in real time.
Step 4: Build pull, not just placement: Customers ask for it. Stores reorder faster. Other retailers start paying attention.
Step 5: Expand from strength: Take what works. Repeat it. Velocity in your fort is your proof and your pitch.
Cool Shiny Culture just released The Cultural Curve on Beverages and drinking isnโt really about drinking anymore. Itโs about function, aesthetics, and when itโs โworth it.โ
Helpful framing if youโre trying to figure out why everyoneโs launching something with adaptogens.
The short version: Gen Z is drinking less, drinking weirder, and when they do drink, theyโre doing it on their own terms (at home, in small groups, with a BORG in hand). Gen Alpha is coming in hot with a functional beverage agenda they absorbed from their wellness-coded childhoods. The flavor map is shifting south and east.
The old playbook was about occasion: Get in front of someone at the right moment and you win. The new one is about identity and function. And the real white space isnโt the liquid, itโs the ritual. Sober dating. Post-workout hangs. The thing you bring to a dinner party when you donโt want to bring wine. No one owns those yet.
Itโs not just ingredients being scrutinized: Packaging gets its own bill.
The battle between in-store vs online is over: Ecom sales were almost 75% of total grocery dollar growth.
Itโs not the product, itโs the space around it: Research shows a clearer aisle increases sales by ~11.5%.
Tariffs are finally getting refunded: A total of $166B is on the table.
Tomatoes are the most expensive vegetable? $2.25 per pound, brought to you by climate, policy, and fuel.
As foodservice is losing groundโฆ groceries and c-stores are picking it up.
Trader Joeโs was the affordable option: Now itโs pulling high-income Gen Z shoppers.
Get ready for food summer: 53% will buy more food and beverages this summer (more than clothing and skincare)
Protein-maxxing has hit the farms: Peas and lentils are the few crops making money.
April 29 (Virtual): From Trade Spend to True Growth
April 29 (NY): Vice Night by CPGD x Myca
May 20-21 (NY): The Lead Summit
May 31 (Virtual): Bon Appetit Pantry Awards Submission Deadline
June 3 (NY and Virtual): Clicks, Bricks & Everything In-Between
June 10-11 (Chicago): 2026 KeHE Holiday Show
June 28-30 (NYC): Summer Fancy Food Show


















