This Farm-to-Bottle Hot Sauce Creator Left Fashion to Help Farmers

Sufia Hossain, originally from Bangladesh, is the founder and CEO of Silly Chilly Hot Sauce. Photo: Nina Roberts

Sufia Hossain, originally from Bangladesh, is the founder and CEO of Silly Chilly Hot Sauce. Photo: Nina Roberts

Published in the Observer on May 8, 2019

Competing bottles of hot sauce in deep reds and oranges line the shelves of supermarkets and gourmet shops. Amazon devotes more than 150 pages to hot sauces, from classics like Cholula to a multitude of artisanal brands with names like Colon Cleaner or Da Bomb Beyond Insanity.

What kind of entrepreneur would jump into the saturated hot sauce market? Meet Silly Chilly Hot Sauce founder and CEO Sufia Hossain, based in New York City.

Hossain had no professional experience in the food industry or consumer packaged goods. Gloved and masked, Hossain began making her peppery concoctions in her apartment kitchen, always using fresh peppers grown in New York and New Jersey. In 2016, while still perfecting the recipe, she began selling jars with scrappy labels at local outdoor markets.

Today, more than 120 stores in greater New York City sell her hot sauces, from the famous spice shop Kalustyan’s to neighborhood shops like Foragers and Westerly. The bright orange, life affirming, “super duper hot” habanero is the most popular of the three flavors. Silly Chilly will soon be for sale on the shelves of the renowned Light My Fire shop in Los Angeles’s historic Farmers Market.

When Hossain isn’t giving tastings, zig-zagging around the city following up with buyers, or traveling on selling tours, she can be found working from a brand new WeWork co-working space of blond wood, part of its Food Labs program, where Hossain was recently accepted.

While urban foodie types might fantasize about launching a business based on their jams, pickled beets, artisanal breads or funky ice cream flavors, very few attempt it, never mind succeed. Sitting in WeWork’s communal area on a minimalist felted sofa, Hossain, originally from Bangladesh, explains how she transitioned from a secure job in the fashion industry to a free wheeling hot sauce impresario.

Bangladeshi cuisine is quite spicy, is Silly Chilly based on a family recipe?
No. We use a lot of spices in Bangladeshi food, it’s spicy by default, so we never need hot sauce; it’s already flavorful. I never used hot sauce growing up.

Why did you launch a hot sauce business?
I used to spend a lot of time at the farmers markets on the weekends, Union Square, Hoboken and Jersey City. I noticed the peppers, “Oh, wow, they are so pretty and cute—so cute!” The colors, the shapes; I would just buy them.

Then, I’d come home and have all these peppers. As an experiment, I started making hot sauce and realized I was enjoying it.

You worked at the Gap in merchandizing at the time, were you miserable, a frustrated entrepreneur?
I liked the job, but I was unhappy inside because I wasn’t doing anything impactful. I actually never had the entrepreneurial spirit, I wanted to be in corporate and climb the ladder.

What made me passionate about launching Silly Chilly is the connection to the farmers. I had a vision that if Silly Chilly could grow, I could fund many farmers.

Had you become friends with pepper farmers at the markets?
Oh yeah! I built a relationship with Rutgers University Agriculture Farm; they grow a majority of my peppers right now. I work with Dr. [Albert] Ayeni, he managers the program, which has student farmers.

I also use other farmers. I pay them directly, whoever is touching the soil, watering the plants, harvesting, so there’s no middleman.

After experimenting in your kitchen, did you plan your next business steps?
I haven’t followed a traditional path. There wasn’t a business plan. I didn’t have a grand launch, it just happened, like falling in love with your best friend, you know?

What made you think Silly Chilly could be successful?
Validation from people. I used to force my co-workers [laughs] at the Gap to try it, also my aunt, uncle, roommate. I got validation from strangers (friends sometimes don’t want to hurt your feelings, so they say it’s good) at the markets.

What was your first big retail break?
I chased the owner of Chelsea Market Baskets, David [Porat], for three months to be in his store. I still remember when he left a voice message, “Sufia, yes, we’d like to have the product in our store.” I had a little tear in my eye, at that time we were probably in one store. He has been amazing to me.

Do you still walk into a store with samples and say, “If you like it, let me know,” and then follow up? How does it work?
We work with a buyer at the headquarters if it’s a chain store. If it’s an individual shop, you might see the buyer or owner. But, “let me know” doesn’t work, because they will never let you know. It’s more, “I’ll call you.” I also have clients like WeWork and my product is on W.B. Mason, one of the third largest business-to-business distributors.

How did you get Silly Chilly into so many stores in a few years?
It’s hustle, hard work and being genuine helps. I’m also good at smelling opportunities, meaning, if I smell that potentially something can happen, there’s an opportunity, I’ll jump in, work on it and follow up.

Have you sought any financing?
I’m bootstrapping it and I’ve taken out personal loans, which I am paying off right now. I’m small, but I’m profitable. I have grown, from 2017 to 2018, I think we grew the business over 500 percent.

In terms of revenue?
Yes, revenue. I’m very focused on selling and putting that money back into the company to scale up, versus raising funds from VCs. I’d rather do what I’m doing now—hustling, I’m never in one place—versus raising tons of funds.

I am looking for the right investor, someone who will support the mission. As my mom says, “Be careful what kind of hand you welcome into your home, that hand can put food on your table or mess up the whole apartment.” [laughs]

Maybe you don’t need venture capital investment.
It helps. There are certain marketing things I want to do, and I can’t because I don’t have the funds. I could grow the company a lot right now, a lot!

Is there anything about being an immigrant from Bangladesh that impacts Silly Chilly?
I could never do what I’m doing in Bangladesh, I’m so grateful to be here. In the U.S., even if you don’t have the biggest funds, you can still do things. But back home, it’s not that easy unless you have a lot of connections and money.

I immigrated with my parents when I was 12 years old, we lived in Jamaica, Queens. There’s a big Bangladeshi community in Jamaica now, people don’t go to Jackson Heights anymore; Jamaica has better restaurants and grocery stores.

But in terms of the Bangladeshi community and Silly Chilly, well, I don’t have a lot of positive things to say. When I did my Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign, many Bangladeshi friends said they didn’t have the funds or gave me excuses. I’m sorry, but it was freaking $40, these people live the New York City life, they go out for dinners, drinks.

One or two cousins were very supportive. I’m going to write an article one day: if you want to detox your surroundings and find out who your friends are, run a crowdfunding campaign.

What is in the future for Silly Chilly?
I have 40,000 units in the warehouse, I’m going to sell them this year. We are projecting 300 percent growth from last year.

I’m launching an initiative with global farmers to produce unique hot sauces with their peppers. The first country I’ll be working with is Bangladesh. Although I was born there, I don’t have any connections, so I’ll visit some villages and find one farmer.

The hot sauce will be manufactured here, we’ll see how the market reacts. Eventually, I want to produce locally so we can give back to their community, create jobs; that’s my long-term vision.

This Q&A has been edited and condensed for clarity.

 

FOOD ENTERPRISES & TECH STARTUPS

FinTech Startups Boosting Main Street Businesses

A Star Farmer’s Newest Workers: His Former Customers

Some Small Businesses are Flourishing During The COVID-19 Pandemic

As COVID-19 Spreads, Manhattan’s Chinatown Contemplates a Bleak Future

He Sells Jollof Rice Outside The Nigerian Consulate: Q&A with Godshelter Oluwalogbon

He Sources, Exports and Roasts Colombian Coffee: Q&A with Devoción Founder Steve Sutton

For the Love of Licorice: A Chat with The Owners of BonBon Candy Store

This Iranian Entrepreneur Makes Home-Cooked Persian Food Inside a Flatiron Pizzeria

Trinidadian Frozen Treats: Q&A with Island Pops Co-Founder Khalid Hamid

Chef Pierre Thiam Gives NYC a Taste of Senegalese Hospitality at Teranga

LittleBits CEO Talks New Disney Partnership, Girls in STEM & Immigrant Entrepreneurship

Brothers From Algeria Launch Dynamic Pricing Food Delivery App

'The Immigrant Cookbook' Celebrates Immigrant Chefs and 'Recipes That Make America Great'

From Busboys to Steakhouse Restaurateurs, Two Albanian Entrepreneurs Hit Prime Success

What Drives Social Entrepreneur Daniel Lubetzky, Founder & CEO of Kind Snacks

Upending The Beauty Industry with Customized Hair Formulations Based on Algorithms

Refugee Chefs Fuel Catering Startup Eat Offbeat

Futuristic Cooking Lessons with Gabriele Corcos in Virtual Reality

Belarusian Buzz: He Sells Raw Honey, Aims to be Transparent in Unregulated Industry

He Sold Two Companies to Google, Won a MacArthur 'Genius Grant' and Launched Free Duolingo App

He Leapt from Finance to The World of Artisanal Raw Chocolate

Why This Lebanese Street Food Is Gaining Traction in The US

Ethiopian Coffee Shops Sprout Up Across The US... Thanks To Starbucks

The Finnish 'Rye-volution' Begins in New York, without Wheat or Yeast

Fonio: The Grain That Would Defeat Quinoa as King Among Foodies

DESIGN ENTREPRENEURS & SERVICE BUSINESSES

Party Planners on Pause, Awaiting Revelry’s Return

Kidmoto Offers Safe Airport Car Services for Children: Q&A with Founder Nelson Nigel

From Refugee Camp to NYC with Only $200: Q&A with ModaBox Founder Monica Phromsavanh

Palestinian DJ Infuses Female-Only Celebrations with Arab Rhythms: Q&A with DJ Fatin

African Prints in Modern Silhouettes: Q&A with The Sisters Behind EnnYe Collection

Nepali Tattoo Artist Starts Over Mid-Career in New York City: Q&A with Mohan Gurung

Aussie Investment Banker-Turned-Facial Entrepreneur: Q&A with Adam Ross

Simplifying the Work Visa Process: Q&A With Legalpad’s Sara Itucas

KidPass Co-Founder, YC Alum, Harvard Grad, Refugee: an Interview with Chhay Chhun

A Creepy Incident Prompted AptDeco’s CEO to Launch Her Startup

This Designer From Siberia Makes Handcrafted Eyeglasses for the Stars

A Male Strip Club for Women Worth Millions: Q&A with Hunk-O-Mania’s Founder Armand Peri

Instant Edible Selfie Cookie is The New Party Photo Booth

The Niche Fashion Designer Who’s Maintained Entrepreneurial Longevity

From Google Staffer in London to Lisbon Entrepreneur

Enterprising Designers Fuel Apparel Market with Ankara Wax Prints

How Two Refugees Created a Design Agency That's Changing The World

Elephant Dung, Chewing Gum and Human Hair: The Life of a Contemporary Art Restorer

DJ Rekha: Turning 'Cab Driver Music' into a Viable Business

A Moroccan Entrepreneur Brings Argan Oil to America By Way of Women's Co-ops

Blood-suckers in Brooklyn: How The Old World Medicine of Leeches Survives

He Plays Arab Music, Makes and Fixes Ouds

Zut Alors! Zey Hate Us! But Those Mean, Gorgeous Speedo-Wearing Frenchies Are Partying Among Us

POLICIES IMPACTING IMMIGRANT BUSINESS

The Travel Ban Takes Its Toll on Small Businesses

Undocumented Immigrants Quietly Pay Billions into Social Security and Receive No Benefits

Undocumented Entrepreneurs: How They Started Businesses Without Papers

New York City Wants to Track Street Vendors with GPS Units

Can Immigrant Owned Businesses Survive Rezoning in The Bronx?

What Economically Depressed Cities Can Learn From NYC's 1970s Immigrant Revitalization

ENTERPRISING NETWORKS

These Immigrant Entrepreneurs Faced Looters and Bullets To Save Their Market

Conversations With Black VCs on Economic Justice and Black-owned Startups

Investing While Foreign-Born: The Advantages of Being an Immigrant Venture Capitalist

What US Investors Can Learn From an Immigrant Venture Capitalist

Banker From Mexico Launches FoodBytes! for Food/Tech Startups

The Iranian Tackling Silicon Valley's Diversity Problem with 'Persian Women in Tech'

This Momo Food Crawl Supports Queens Immigrant Entrepreneurs

Investing in Overlooked Startups Could Bring Social and Economic Equilibrium

Meet The 'Visa Whisperer' of Silicon Valley

Immigrant Entrepreneurs Poised to Shake Up The US Culinary Landscape

Five Immigration Lawyers Who Specialize in Startups

OTHER PUBLISHED STORIES

Toilet Advocate Brings Levity to Dark Matter

Heather Raffo Opera 'Fallujah' Tracks a Marine’s Return Home From Iraq

Conflict Kitchen, Stomaching Cross-Cultural Differences

Musicorps: Helping Soldiers Cope with Trauma

Dr. Strange Glove

Raising Anchor at The Fulton Fish Market