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    Feed the world

    SMU grads and social entrepreneurs impact world hunger with craveable granola

    Jennifer Chininis
    Jan 13, 2013 | 4:30 pm
    • Impact Foods recently got picked up by Whole Foods.
      Photo courtesy of Impact Foods
    • Impact Foods founders and SMU grads Ben Hurt (left) and Blaine Iler.
      Photo by Leslie Katz/Urban Photography
    • Maple oat granola makes a healthy breakfast.
      Photo courtesy of Impact Foods
    • Ben Hurt in Honduras, on an exploratory trip to learn more about the area'shunger problem.
      Photo by Leslie Katz/Urban Photography
    • Ben Hurt, at a school in Honduras.
      Photo by Leslie Katz/Urban Photography
    • Ben Hurt (left) and Blaine Iler (right) delivering a $20,000 check to the WorldFood Program in October.
      Photo courtesy of Impact Foods
    • Impact Foods granola is good for breakfast and snacking.
      Photo courtesy of Impact Foods

    Picture two mid-twentysomething guys, a couple of years out of SMU. What do you see? Maybe you see two well-educated young men, following a certain prescribed path, settling into corporate careers and assessing how to climb the proverbial ladder.

    But that's not the picture Ben Hurt, 26, and Blaine Iler, 25, want to paint.

    These social entrepreneurs, inspired by companies like Patagonia and Tom's Shoes, founded Impact Foods with a simple — if big — mission: To end world hunger.

    "If we want to end hunger, we have to make a product so good that someone buys it over and over again," says Impact Foods co-founder Ben Hurt.

    The seeds of the big idea

    Hurt and Iler met in an entrepreneurship class in 2008 and started their company a year later. They will both tell you that they didn't know what they didn't know. But they were willing to do whatever it took to find out.

    During that class, they realized that the model of a mission-driven business wasn't just a fad, that it was something that could be their life's work.

    "That's what encouraged us to look at the really, really big problems — poverty, education, hunger, healthcare, things like that," Hurt says.

    "We learned that if you prop up or support the hunger problem in any given community, you fix those other pillars. You're fixing healthcare because children aren't susceptible to certain diseases. You're fixing poverty because you're buying food from local markets and providing jobs.

    "You're fixing education because the attendance shoots way up at schools with meal programs, because moms send their kids to school knowing they're getting a meal. As a result, the kids can retain what they're learning because they're getting fed."

    The start of something good

    Hurt and Iler started by finding people who knew more than they did. They knew they wanted a one-to-one food company — meaning for every product sold, a child gets a meal — and they chose granola because it was something they could tackle right away.

    So they enlisted a family friend, who had experience as a chef in New York, to help them create a recipe for an all-natural, wholesome granola unlike anything else on the market.

    In those early days, they were buying their own ingredients, labeling their own bags and baking their own granola in a commercial kitchen in Garland. After selling to family and friends through their website, Eatzi’s picked up the line that now includes three flavors: Maple oat, vanilla almond and blueberry honey.

    "The recipe was awesome," Iler says. "We struck something with this. We got fanatical emails from people, saying this was the best granola they've ever eaten."


    "
    "Our trip to Honduras rounded out the story — both the inspiration, why we are running a business the way we are, and the tactics of how that might be carried out," says co-founder Blaine Iler.

    "We're responsible for making sure we have the best product out there," Hurt says. "People might buy it once because they're helping to feed children, but people buy what they like. If we want to make an impact, end hunger, all of those things, we have to make a product so good that someone buys it over and over again."

    The turning point

    A fortuitous meeting with Stephen White of Company Cafe would change the trajectory of the startup. White wanted to put the granola on the menu, along with Three Happy Cows yogurt. The yogurt company was in talks with Whole Foods and ultimately opened the door for Impact Foods, which is now available in Whole Foods stores in Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Utah, New Mexico, Kansas and Arkansas.

    But first Hurt and Iler had some more learning to do. In July 2011, they visited an orphanage, after-school program and health clinic in Honduras. To hear them talk, this was the real turning point.

    "One of the amazing things for me about Honduras was, at that point, we were still really, really small," Iler says. "This was sort of a side project for us, something we knew we wanted to put some time and effort behind, but we were really rounding out our learning of the problem and our business and how we could go about solving the problem with the business."

    During the trip to Honduras, the business model clicked.

    "That completely rounded out the story — both the inspiration, why we are running a business the way we are, and the tactics of how that might be carried out," Iler says.

    Part of that education included seeing piles of rice and beans and other foods, donated by well-meaning organization, sitting unused because there was no clean water, heating source or person to cook it.

    "We knew there had to be a better way to deliver food to these types of communities, where there wasn't infrastructure in place," Hurt says. Their research into a ready-to-use product led to a partnership with the World Food Program.

    "We don’t want to be the company that writes a check and never thinks about it. That's the exact opposite reason why we started Impact Foods," Hurt says.

    Buy a bag, feed a child

    Among other initiatives, the WFP has a program focused on the first 1,000 days of life, so the organization developed a series of ready-to-use products, either chickpea or peanut based, packed with micro and macronutrients to nourish children during those first few critical years.

    "The packs can be opened up and consumed, and they are medically designed to treat malnutrition," Hurt says. "Gone are the piles of rice and beans."

    Hurt says that the big takeaway from the trip to Honduras was a commitment to knowing how the giving process worked, down to the last detail.

    "Any time we say, 'You buy a bag of granola, and we feed a school meal,' we know what school, what they’re being fed and the red cups they get their meals in — all of it.

    "We don't want to be the company that writes a check and never thinks about it. That’s the exact opposite reason why we started Impact Foods. Until you see it, you don't know what's important."

    Speaking of what's important, Hurt and Iler credit their parents — not for passing along the entrepreneurial genes, but for instilling values.

    They learned the importance of giving and volunteering from their families. Hurt was an Eagle Scout; Iler was a volunteer EMT.

    "Our families are almost anti-entrepreneurial, but both sets of parents made sacrifices," Hurt says. "They had the steady jobs so we could have the education. Now what are we going to go do with it? How do we make the world a better place?

    "There's a sense of responsibility. It's not lost on us what they did."

    There's no doubt these two take that responsibility seriously. This past October, Hurt and Iler traveled to Washington, D.C., to make a donation of 20,000 meals to the World Food Program. It was their biggest donation to date, and they finally got to meet their partners in this endeavor.

    "It was a proud moment," Iler says.

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    Coming soon to Fredericksburg

    Houston restaurant vet serves up Roman-style eatery in the Hill Country

    Brandon Watson
    Dec 26, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Bottega Salaria Fredericksburg
    Photo courtesy of Bottega Salaria
    Valerio Lombardozzi is opening Bottega Salaria in the former home of La Bergerie.

    Valerio Lombardozzi’s culinary career has taken him to the world’s finest kitchens, including restaurants owned by icons like Alain Ducasse, Giorgio Locatelli, and Joël Robuchon. In Houston, he led La Table and Tavola, where he earned a reputation for being one of the city's most engaging front of the house personalities.

    But his latest project might be his biggest accomplishment yet. The hospitality veteran is opening Bottega Salaria, a homey Italian osteria and artisan market, in the former home of La Bergerie at 312 E Austin St in his adopted home of Fredericksburg.

    Lombardozzi says the restaurant, expected to arrive in winter 2026, fills a gap in the Hill Country dining scene, but, more importantly, it's a reflection of his personal history and time spent working at his family’s restaurant in Rome.

    “[It’s about] where I grew up, how I grew up, and how I eat,” he shares.

    The three-concept experience is inspired by Italy’s Via Salaria, the ancient route Italians used to transport salt from the Adriatic Sea to Rome. The menu acts as a sort of travelogue, borrowing from the different cultures along the road, and the way village fishermen and shepherds ate.

    Lombardozzi is quick to say he didn’t want to open a chef-driven restaurant. Instead, the osteria will serve traditional Roman staples such as cacio e pepe, amatriciana, carbonara, saltimbocca with sage and prosciutto, and branzino carved tableside.

    “I was one of the last to be exposed to the old generation of professionals who knew how to carve elegantly for the guests,” he says.

    The adjacent bottega will stay open during restaurant hours, offering fresh pasta made on-site, house-made sauces, imported Italian pantry items, cheeses, salumi, breads, and biscotti. Patrons will be able to shop for individual items or put together custom gift baskets.

    Outdoors, La Fraschetteria will debut a new hospitality experience in the U.S. The self-guided experience invites diners to grab wine directly from garden shelves, gather a spread of meats, cheeses, bread, or pasta, and linger around long communal tables lit by string lights.

    Keeping the chit-chat going will be a thoughtful beverage program anchored by a primarily Italian wine list and imported beer. Lombardozzi says the cocktail menu might be a surprise, offering only gin and tonics, spritzes, and negronis. The latter has been made into a game where diners roll dice to determine the evening's combination of gin, vermouth, and bitters.

    After dinner, guests can select an amaro from a rolling cart, sip grappa and limoncello, or sip a neat whiskey.

    Lombardozzi shares that he wants Bottega Salaria to be just as comfortable for Fredericksburg locals as it is for destination travelers. Beyond daily service, Bottega Salaria plans community events such as garden wine nights with live music, Sunday movie nights, and hands-on cooking classes.

    The space is designed for ease with a warm palette combining olive green and pomegranate reds. The decor blends heritage and modernity, bringing in objects like antique mirrors, plates, custom-made lamps, and even old tablecloths and curtains for an Old World feel.

    "We’re not just opening a restaurant,” Lombardozzi says. “We’re creating a gathering place. A home for everyone who loves Italian food, culture, and the joy of sharing a meal with others.”

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