Partake

Partake

Free from the top nine allergens, Partake’s cookies and baking mixes are made for every family.

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About Partake

Denise Woodard is a mom on a mission. After her and her husband’s daughter, Vivienne, was diagnosed with severe food allergies, Woodard founded Partake to help families like hers find safe snacks they’d actually enjoy. Partake now produces crunchy and soft-baked cookies and versatile baking mixes with an impressive “free-from” list: no peanuts, eggs, tree nuts, soy, dairy, gluten, artificial flavors, and more. And, determined to improve representation in the industry, Woodard launched Partake’s Black Futures in Food & Beverage fellowship for students enrolled at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Now in its second year, the program provides students with mentorship, workshops, and access to industry leaders. Now that’s paying it forward.

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Why we love them

Made from real ingredients for real families, Partake’s cookies and baking mixes are almost too good to be true. We’re fans of the Pizza Crust Baking Mix for pizzas, breadsticks, cinnamon rolls, and more recipes on Partake’s blog. (It takes the stress, guesswork, and complexity out of allergen-free baking.) For a perfectly sized, healthier alternative to your typical packaged cookie, go for the Crunchy Variety Pack to find your favorite flavor. KCM’s Mary Kate said this is the first gluten-, nut-, and dairy-free cookie she’s tried that hasn’t tasted like it. The Soft Baked Double Chocolate is — you guess it — super-chocolatey, and her favorite choice to curb an afternoon sweet tooth. 

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Meet Denise Woodard

Denise spent nearly a decade at Coca-Cola in various sales positions and working with mission-oriented brands before starting Partake in 2017. In the process, she became the first Black woman to raise more than a million dollars for a food and beverage startup — both an amazing accomplishment and a signal of the disadvantage women and people of color are at in the industry. Through her work with Partake and the Black Futures in Food and Beverage fellowship program, Denise is aiming to make the food and beverage industry more inclusive in both its offerings and its make-up.

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In Conversation with Denise

What inspired you to start Partake?

Denise: I learned my daughter had a lot of food allergies right around her first birthday. She’s allergic to eggs, corn, tree nuts, and bananas. I was frustrated with the options I could find for her from a taste perspective and from a nutritional perspective, so I left my career at Coca-Cola and launched Partake with the mission of bringing foods that are more inclusive, safe to share, and better for you to the masses.

What were your first steps in starting Partake?

Our nanny, Martha, got tired of hearing me complain about all the things I couldn’t find for Vivienne and encouraged me to do something about it. I spent the next year taking every single early morning, late night, and weekend I could to figure out how and where to make allergy-friendly products, and after we launched in 2017 I sold cookies out of my car for nearly a year.

I was scared to take the leap, but I always felt hopeful and inspired by our mission. The name “Partake” is based on the idea of allowing people with food allergies or dietary restrictions to partake in delicious, safe snacks. Through my experience as a woman, a first time founder, and a person of color, I’m realizing that there’s a whole heap of other people who have been underestimated and underrepresented for too long and need an opportunity to partake. As our brand has grown, it’s grown to stand for inclusivity and lifting as we climb. 

Part of that is the work we do to eradicate childhood food insecurity. Nearly 13 million kids in America are affected by it, and in 2022 we’re partnering with No Kid Hungry to provide at least 1 million meals to food insecure kids.

Had you ever thought about being an entrepreneur prior to finding this problem you needed to solve?

I really loved my career at Coca Cola and had no intention of leaving, but I have always had an entrepreneurial spirit that I attribute to my dad. He was in the U.S. Army, and when he left the army he became an over-the-road truck driver. Over time he saved enough money to buy his own truck and then multiple trucks, and now he runs a small trucking company in my hometown of Fayetteville, North Carolina. 

What were the biggest challenges you faced along the way?

One of the biggest challenges was funding. In the earliest days, we bootstrapped as far as we could. I sold my engagement ring, I maxed out every credit card I had, and I emptied my 401(k) to keep the business going.

We got nearly a hundred “nos” before we got a “yes” on our seed round of funding. We raised a million dollars in June of 2019, which made me the first Black woman to raise a million dollars for a food or beverage company. I’m proud of that, but I also think it’s a dismal statistic given the rate at which Black women and women in general are starting companies. It speaks to the lack of funding that goes to women.

We’re guessing that inspired you to start the Black Futures in Food and Beverage fellowship program.

I was inspired in part by my experience at Coca-Cola, where I was so often the only woman or the only minority in the leadership room. The second part was that I wanted to make sure our team at Partake was diverse: Diverse in ethnic background, in gender, in lived experiences. As we were hiring, I found the applicants to be extremely homogeneous. 

I wanted to think about how we could work to increase diversity in the food space. We thought, “What better way than helping students get access to the social capital, the mentors, and the education to develop a career in the food or beverage industry?”

We run an eight-week curriculum that covers everything from food safety and food science to marketing and selling a product to the finances of starting a business. We have members of our team participate, but we’ve also had a lot of people from both emerging and established consumer-packaged goods companies who have been willing to donate their time and expertise to teach our students. It’s open to juniors at Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

We see a lot of foods that are gluten-free or nut-free or vegan, but you cover all those bases. What was the process to find a recipe that would taste great but is still free of the top nine allergens?

That was one of our other biggest challenges in getting Partake off the ground. Martha and I got into the kitchen, but we couldn’t crack the code. Thankfully, we found a product developer who was able to bring my vision to life and still use ingredients you can understand. My daughter Vivi is our chief taste-tester on everything we create.

What advice would you give to other people looking to start a new venture?

Start small. I learned this out of necessity because we didn’t have the capital or the resources to start big. We just started in the way that we could. For us, that meant starting by selling cookies out of our car, which created discipline and knowledge in the business that has allowed us to scale. At the time, I was wishing away that part of the journey, wondering, “Why aren’t we growing faster, why aren’t we able to raise capital?” but it ended up being beneficial.

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