New Brunswick

Nut allergies threatened her life. She flipped the narrative and launched a business

Self-taught chef Jenna White became profoundly allergic to peanuts. Legally blind, her restaurant business started with two folding tables, a little cash and a booth the Boyce Farmers Market in Fredericton.

Jenna White's severe nut allergy is no match for her resilience and determination to succeed

A woman holding two bags of food products and standing in front of a dessert show glass.
Jenna White started her food business in 2019 with a small farmers market booth. She now runs a restaurant and a store, and has expanded into catering and food production. (Sophia Etuhube/CBC)

When Jenna White developed a severe nut allergy in 2017, it changed her life — and in more ways than one. 

The allergy caused anaphylaxis, and left her legally blind. 

It also, however, inspired her to create a business that is now thriving in Fredericton, with nut-free recipes that are being served in her restaurant, Jenna's Nut-Free Dessertery, and products that are on grocery store shelves across Atlantic Canada. 

"I tried to take those challenges and create them into strengths. So I built a business around one of those challenges, which is the nut allergy," she said. 

Now serving customers in house and through takeout, Jenna's Nut-free Dessertery had a modest start. 

"I started at the farmers market. I started with two small folding tables and $250," she said in an interview. 

Cooking at first from her kitchen, she made nut-free muffins, cookies and cupcakes that she could sell weekly at the popular Boyce Farmers Market. 

A woman standing besides a grain milling machine holding a bowl of grains.
Jenna White was motivated to show resilience to her three children. 'I wanted my kids to see that you can make things work for you,' she says. (Submitted by Jenna White)

A stay-at-home mom for the first 13 years of her marriage, White said she needed to show resilience to her three children, whom she often raised alone while her husband worked outside the province. 

"It took me a couple of years to come to terms with all the life changes," she said.

From darkness to delights 

Starting the business was a way for White to regain independence while providing a nut-free alternative for customers with nut allergies. 

"Creating my own business, I was able to create the work environment I needed to be able to succeed," she said. 

WATCH | Jenna White explains how she turned an allergy to nuts into a growing business: 

After losing part of her sight, this Fredericton mom started a nut-free restaurant

1 year ago
Duration 2:21
Self-taught chef Jenna White built her restaurant business with just $250 and two small tables at the Boyce Farmers Market.

But thanks to the encouragement and support from her clients in Fredericton, Jenna was able to move her business from a booth to a restaurant that serves breakfast and lunch.

Her restaurant gradually became a sanctuary for those with nut allergies, where they could enjoy meals and treats without fear of cross-contamination or hidden allergens.

She then opened a second location with the same nut-free focus. 

Thriving against the odds

Born to a Métis family in Ontario, White was raised in a small Mennonite community there before her family moved to New Brunswick when she was nine. 

She has developed strong ties to Indigenous communities in New Brunswick, and is proud that one of her products – Bannock Mix — is now sold in multiple Sobeys supermarkets across Atlantic Canada. 

Inside a restaurant a woman is standing behind a snack show glass and another woman is walking by.
Jenna White uses her restaurant to showcase foods from Indigenous producers. (Jonathan Collicott/CBC)

She said having such products having more visibility in new spaces is significant.

"I created a baking mix to help share that bit of my culture with people," she said of the mix, which can be made right in the bag with oil and water, and cooked outdoors if desired. She said bannock, a staple in many Indigenous communities, can be made into many forms, including tea biscuits, pizza, cinnamon buns or bread to be eaten while camping. 

Giving back to the community 

White organizes the the Taste of the Atlantic Festival to foster collaboration and support within Indigenous communities in the region, and brings together chefs from across Turtle Island. 

In her own restaurant, White has hired people without professional cooking experience, and provides them with skills to work in the business. 

A young woman with a blue colored hair standing in front of a graffiti wall.
Victoria Polchies from Woodstock First Nation says she walked into Jenna White's kitchen and fell in love with it. (Sophia Etuhube/CBC)

Victoria Polchies, a member of Woodstock First Nation, said she always wanted to work for a female-led kitchen.

"I can feel the passion and the love and the food," said Polchies, who has been working with White for about two months. 

"It's wonderful to be represented."

Developing skills, for White, is part of building community. 

"All of these people who come in and work with me, their hours count towards their Red Seal," she said, referring to an industry certification standard. 

"It creates even more opportunities for people in the future."

A woman bending over a fireplace and roasting bread in sticks.
White demonstrates how to use bannock mix, which can be mixed with water and oil, and then roasted on sticks over an open fire. (Jonathan Collicott/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sophia Etuhube

Journalist

Sophia Etuhube works with CBC News in Fredericton. Sophia worked as a video producer in Nigeria before joining CBC News. You can send story tips to sophia.etuhube@cbc.ca.

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