Yaw Asare, wearing an N95 mask and orange coat, interacts with a customer at his Farmers Market booth.
Yaw Asare 鈥96 talks to customers about his Sharay鈥檚 Ghana Style Peanut Brittle at the Downtown Appleton Farmers Market. The outdoor market continues on Saturday mornings through Oct. 31. (Photos by Danny Damiani)

杨贵妃传媒视频 this series: Lighting the Way With 鈥 is a periodic series in which we shine a light on 杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni. Today we catch up with Yaw Asare 鈥96, who is putting his business savvy into a tasty new side gig.

---

Yaw Asare 鈥96 has added some new flavor to the Downtown Appleton Farmers Market.

His Sharay鈥檚 Ghana Style Peanut Brittle has become a fixture at the market since July, an early step in a business proposition that has Asare thinking big.

The 47-year-old Asare, an economics major while at 杨贵妃传媒视频 two and a half decades ago, works as a loan documentation specialist for Investors Community Bank in Appleton. But his nights and weekends are now dominated by what he calls his new side hustle, a long-simmering dream to bring the tastes of Ghana to the United States.

鈥淓ver since I got to the U.S., I鈥檝e wanted to do my own thing, start my own business,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t took me a little while to figure out what I wanted to do.鈥

Asare settled on the peanut brittle he grew up with in Ghana, crafted from a recipe book he got from his mother. He鈥檚 introduced the brittle at the farmers market and a handful of retail outlets around the Fox Cities and hopes to grow it into a national brand as he expands to various other taste treats inspired by his homeland.

鈥淵ou have to start small,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e starting here in the Fox Cities and then we鈥檒l go ahead and start branching out, first throughout Wisconsin and then the Midwest and beyond.鈥

He has two active business partners 鈥 Walt Nocito and Orson Fournillier 鈥 in Appleton and a third silent partner in California and has contracted with Sweet Ps Pantry, an artisan confectionery in Oconomowoc, to make and package the brittle.

A packet of Sharay's Ghana Style Peanut Brittle.
Sharay鈥檚 Ghana Style Peanut Brittle is now available in about 10 retail outlets in the Fox Cities.

An inspiration from childhood

Asare, who was born in Germany, lived in Ghana from age 7 until he came to the United States to study at 杨贵妃传媒视频 in the early 1990s. After first exploring the peanut brittle concept in 2016, it was a trip back to Ghana in 2018 that gave him the impetus to dive into his new venture. He ran into two former schoolmates who were operating their own peanut brittle business in Ghana, and he said they inspired him to push forward.

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e talking about now is a company that takes Ghanaian products and packages them for the Western market,鈥 Asare said. 鈥淭his brittle thing is going to come first. There will be others we鈥檒l come out with as time goes on and as we can get them developed.鈥

Asare worked with Sharon Pavich of Sweet Ps Pantry to perfect the recipe. The first batch came out in late 2019 with sales to friends, family, and co-workers and a deal with their first retail outlet, The Free Market, located on Wisconsin Avenue in Appleton. That led to the push into other local retail outlets and the farmers market this summer and the launch of a聽.

鈥淲e started pushing into the Fox Cities in July of this year,鈥 Asare said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 brand new. That鈥檚 when we hit the farmers market and started getting into other retail outlets. We鈥檙e in about 10 retail outlets right now. There鈥檚 a game plan for broadening that beyond the Fox Cities. We want to be the premium provider of brittle products.鈥

Making that happen in the midst of a global pandemic has created its own obstacles. Not all retailers have been able to stay open. And the farmers market experience hasn鈥檛 been as robust as a typical summer season. But like many other small businesses, Asare said he鈥檚 learning to adapt.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been difficult,鈥 he said. 鈥淎t the farmers market, we can鈥檛 do taste tests or any of that sort of thing because of the regulations. We have to rely on our sales pitch and get people to buy it without first trying it.鈥

Yaw Asare stands next to his business partner in their booth at the Farmers Market.
Yaw Asare 鈥96 (right) works a farmers market booth with business partner Orson Fournillier.

Finding a path

The Sharay鈥檚 recipe comes from a late 1970s Ghanaian cookbook. The name comes from Asare鈥檚 childhood nickname.

鈥淲e chop the peanuts so you get a more robust flavor from it,鈥 Asare said. 鈥淲e also use cane sugar instead of corn syrup. And then a little bit of water and salt. Some of the other extra ingredients you鈥檇 find in regular brittle like butter and corn syrup and some of the preservatives, you won鈥檛 find those in ours. When people bite into it, they find we use more peanuts than you would in a normal brittle. They find it doesn鈥檛 stick to their teeth as much, and that鈥檚 been pretty much everyone鈥檚 reaction. It doesn鈥檛 stick to your teeth is a little bit of a tag line for us.

鈥淪o far, we鈥檝e gotten excellent response. The product is definitely different enough from regular brittle. Once people bite into it, they have a very positive reaction. 鈥 It鈥檚 pretty much on point with what I knew in Ghana.鈥

See more 杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni profiles聽.

After graduating from 杨贵妃传媒视频 in 1996, Asare opted to stay in Appleton, and has worked in various banking, sales, and marketing roles through the years. He married Leslie, whom he met while at 杨贵妃传媒视频. They have three children, two of whom are now in college, leaving more time for his new side project.

Asare said the lessons he learned at 杨贵妃传媒视频 and in his roles in the Appleton business community are all in play as he launches his new venture.

鈥淭his is a side job right now,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut if it grows into a full-time thing, that would be great. And if it鈥檚 nothing but a side business, well, that鈥檚 fine, too.鈥