Pescavore founder hooks 'Innovator of the Year' award

The duo behind the Black Women in Food Awards, Dine Diaspora names Clarice Owens "Innovator of the Year." The co-founder of the sustainable ahi tuna jerky brand Pescavore launched the products in 2013 with her husband.

Audarshia Townsend, Content Director, SupplySide Food & Beverage Journal

March 4, 2024

7 Min Read
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Sharing some reel-y big news concerning Pescavore: Dine Diaspora, the duo behind the Black Women in Food Awards and Black Women in Food Summit, awarded the pioneering sustainable ahi tuna jerky brand "Innovator of the Year" in March 2024. It's the latest of several honors acquired by parent company Healthy Oceans Seafood Co., which includes a NEXTY award in 2020, a Black Ambition prize in 2023, The Female Founder Collective in 2024 and others.

Clarice Owens and husband Matt Owens launched Healthy Oceans Seafood Co. in 2013. The former aeronautical engineer quit her lucrative Silicon Valley career to pursue the project, while her husband used his 20-plus years of experience in the sustainable fisheries industry to reel in investors and key players. But it wasn’t until 2018 that their first brand, Pescavore, a line of better-for-you Ahi tuna jerky strips, debuted with deeply nuanced, global flavors in Smokey Poke, Caribbean Jerk and Island Teriyaki.

What was the five-year delay? She referred to Healthy Oceans as “a slow burn” company because they refused to take shortcuts during R&D and sourcing, plus their dedication to sustainability is the real deal. That’s evident on the packaging of being “wildly responsible.”

Owens, who acts as co-founder/chief technology officer for the company, elaborated. “When we started with this project, we knew we wanted to not only start out with something sustainable, but we really wanted to make sure that as we grew and serviced a bigger market, we could really maintain our credibility and our commitment to sustainable fisheries. We led with that tagline.”

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While sustainability is important for the Owens, they refuse to compromise when it comes to their products’ taste and texture. Clarice Owens admitted that choosing the perfect fish to turn into jerky proved to be challenging.

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“When you try to make fish into jerky, it just doesn’t hold up the same way [as beef does],” she explained. “That’s because of inherent limitations in the protein. If you don’t know what you’re doing when you’re drying the fish, you’ll end up with something rancid.”

The R&D team went through several types of fish before they decided upon Ahi tuna. They made this decision after several attempts to use flaky white fish, including Dover sole, rock cod and snapper, failed. They all fell apart during the process, she recalled.  

Our product really calls for a steakier fish because you must strip it down, and throughout the smoking and packaging process, you really need a fish that will stay together,” she said. “Ahi tuna has a specific characteristic in that it cuts like a piece of steak. It really keeps its form throughout our entire process … and it’s also just mild enough that it will impart flavor, yet not the overly ‘fishy’ flavor.”

Related:‘Sustainability’ needs new clarity

Why Healthy Oceans is passing on the plant-based trend

The company hasn’t jumped on the plant-based seafood bandwagon for several reasons, including the fact that it doesn’t believe it is sustainable for a growing global population.

“The global agricultural productivity gap dictates that we will need approximately 70% more food to feed a population on track to reach 9.8 billion by the year 2050,” Owens explained. “From our perspective, using arable land and crops to produce so-called, plant-based seafood to service this growing population simply does not make sense, nor is it necessarily more sustainable.

“The ocean requires no fertilizer, inputs and results in no runoff and other deleterious outcomes of monocrops,” she continued. “For immediate solutions and low-hanging fruit, we should be increasing the awareness of and consumption of real food, wild capture and aquaculture sources of seafood. Yet the sector is persistently mischaracterized with consumer education and seafood literacy trending in the wrong direction.”

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Healthy Oceans prefers to focus on what she refers to as so-called “blue foods,” which are said to be responsible for a much lesser carbon footprint than other animal alternatives.

“For instance, wild capture sources of seafood contribute up to 97% less carbon footprint than herd beef,” she said. “The food system contributes roughly one-third of all greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, thus shifting demand to real sources of seafood is a viable investment in a lower carbon future.”

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More on Pescavore’s “wildly responsible” mantra

Owens feels fortunate that her husband has strong ties to the sustainable fisheries community and that he has deep knowledge of seafood sustainability.

“We knew we wanted to stay dedicated to American fisheries, and we knew we had to have sustainable catch, so it’s very helpful to have someone with the supply chain experience and the credibility to speak to some of these very nuanced and honestly fastidiously complex issues that surround seafood,” she said. “It’s not a sector where you can just decide one day that you’re going to be a sustainable seafood expert. You need credibility. You need background and aspects that fortunately my partner brings to the project.”

While she held that ace in her back pocket, there was still much to learn about developing a product on this scale. The journey began in 2013 with a massive, 400-page business plan, many trips to Alaska’s fisheries, the purchase and renovation of a manufacturing plant, and all-nighters with her co-packer (who unfortunately passed away during the Covid-19 pandemic) and R&D team to ensure they were on the right track.

Owens’ engineering experience came in handy during the plant’s renovation as well as when the team settled on packaging. In what may appear to be a controversial move for some, they decided to use plastic. For Owens, this decision was part of the company’s “wildly responsible” mantra.

“Initially, the perception was that every plastic was bad plastic, however, the role that plastic has had in making food safe, sanitary, [with a] long shelf life [and] reducing waste [should not go ignored],” Owens said. “There are certain uses of plastics that are responsible.

“The issue becomes making it more circular … [plastics] have 97% less carbon footprint than alternatives like aluminum cans or glass. You must look at a total lifecycle analysis anytime you’re looking at packaging.”

Additionally, she stressed, whatever materials used for packaging must withstand the manufacturing process. The plastic her company uses fits the bill.

“We had to find a material that was suitable for the entire process,” she explained. “We were very thoughtful. We were extremely intentional about how we would make the least impactful, most progressive product.”

These snacks are low on sugar, sodium, big on flavor

In the end, it always comes down to, does it taste good? With Owens acutely aware of this fact, she set out to develop a tasty, savory snack that wasn’t bogged down with sugar and sodium. According to her, many fish jerky products contain “as much sugar as a can of soda” to cover up the fishy taste.

For her team, it was more important to cut down on sugar and salt and concentrate on the unique flavor profiles of Smokey Poke, Caribbean Jerk and Island Teriyaki.

“We asked ourselves, ‘How do we actually make fish jerky taste good?’” Owens said. “We decided the answer was using global flavors that paid homage to where they came from, such as Blue Mountain, Jamaica, a place we often visited. We wanted to create global flavors in a snack that would be attractive to people while still being healthier.”

While Owens claimed it took almost 10 years to perfect the flavors, her team’s efforts paid off in the end. Pescavore won New Hope’s NEXTY Award for Best New Savory or Salty Snack in 2020.

Of course, they’re not stopping there. Owens said they’re working on a new line of salmon jerky strips in the flavors of Cracked Pepper, Firecracker and Miso-Ginger.

“We just want to make them the best they can be,” Owens said.

The Black Women in Food Summit occurs April 26-27 in Washington D.C. Find out more about the event here.

About the Author

Audarshia Townsend

Content Director, SupplySide Food & Beverage Journal, Informa Markets

A lifelong Chicagoan, Audarshia Townsend is an award-winning, veteran food and beverage journalist who serves as the content director for the SupplySide Food & Beverage Journal brand. She is Informa Markets' 2024 "Star Storyteller" winner. Her experience as a visionary editor and writer spans 30 years, with an emphasis in print and digital magazines. Audarshia's professional passion is to champion and amplify underserved business communities. Some of her most recent content includes her review of 2023's F&B trends, the future of food science careers, an interview with culinary star Padma Lakshmi, and Pescavore's sustainable ahi tuna jerky strips. She also appears regularly on local and national media outlets to discuss food and beverage trends, most notably FOX-32 Chicago, WGN-TV, WXRT-FM, NPR-Chicago and the Travel Channel. She is often called on to serve as a judge for prestigious food, beverage and restaurant awards, including the James Beard Foundation, NEXTY Awards and Black Women in Food. She continues to write for Chicago magazine, and previously she has written for the likes of the Chicago Tribune, Eater Chicago, Esquire, Essence, Los Angeles Times, Playboy, Time Out Global and World’s Best Bars. With food and beverage being her longtime, chosen beat in media, she has created content for a number of prestigious brands such as AOL, Google, Lawry’s Seasoned Salt, Lexus, MasterCard, Markon Cooperative Inc., Miller Brewing Co., Resy and Simplot Foods.

To date, Audarshia has guest lectured at the following higher-education institutions: Columbia College Chicago and Loyola University Chicago for undergraduate journalism students; Northwestern University for graduate journalism students; and Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) for undergraduate, graduate and Ph.D. food science students. She also mentors aspiring young writers and journalists whenever she can. Email her at [email protected] and also connect with her on LinkedIn.

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