• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle

Food inspiration is all around, believes Apriena

18th Feb 2021
Reports of the Land Bank’s use of force to allegedly intimidate and liquidate farmers is another instance of the Bank’s lack of empathy, unwillingness and inability to assist commercial and emerging farmers believes South African politician Noko Masipa. Photo: Supplied/AdobeStock

Lack of legislative support threatens SA’s food security

27th Jun 2022
Agripreneur 101: Sweet success for jam producer

Agripreneur 101: Sweet success for jam producer

27th Jun 2022
Real Housewife turns passion for wine into a business

Real Housewife turns passion for wine into a business

27th Jun 2022
On Monday, 20 June 2022, 35 farmworkers were injured when the truck that transported them to work overturned on the R45 between Klapmuts and Simondium in the Cape Winelands. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

‘Inhumane farmworker transport must stop’

27th Jun 2022
MEC Bongiwe Sithole-Moloi visited the Ntathakusa Citrus Farm in eShowe on Friday, 24 June 2022. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

ICYMI: Career boost ahead for KZN agri graduates

27th Jun 2022
This week in agriculture definitely offers a few events worth bookmarking. First up is the Hostex expo, followed by the Tshwane Agri X Engage round table, Food For Mzansi Gather To Grow, a table wine event, and the second African food safety technical meeting. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

This week’s agriculture events: 27 June to 01 July 2022

27th Jun 2022
As South Africa’s population continues to grow, ensuring food security into the future will depend on climate-smart and innovative farming methods. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Save on production costs with conservation agriculture

26th Jun 2022
Langeberg & Ashton Foods buildings and yards line a significant stretch of Ashton’s main road. Jacobus de Koker isn’t permanently employed but says he has been working at the factory for years. Photo: Elana van der Watt/Food For Mzansi

‘Our town will be a dead town’

25th Jun 2022
Potatoes SA recently led a roundtable discussion on the state of South Africa's fresh produce markets, which need urgent attention. Photo: Supplied/RSA Group

Fresh produce markets ‘at tipping point’

25th Jun 2022
A recent Gather to Grow session hosted by Food For Mzansi featured; plant pathologist, Diana Mngomezulu, animal scientist Thabiso Maenetje, Free State cattle farmer Annalea Van Niekerk, Agri SA chief agricultural economist Kulani Siweya, Plant scientist Henry Basson, agri- horticulturalist Vuyokazi Mtshazi, and farmer Thabo Skhosana. Photo:Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farmer 101: ‘We need farmers that are forward-thinking’

24th Jun 2022
Thailand farmers are now feeding cannabis to their chickens. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Holy smokes! Cannabis in chicken feed?

24th Jun 2022
David Mthombeni is building an agriculture empire for his family.Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farmer gets his hands dirty while building family empire

24th Jun 2022
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought
11 GLOBAL MEDIA AWARDS
Mon, Jun 27, 2022
Food For Mzansi
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
    • All
    • AgriCareers
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Farmers
    • Groundbreakers
    • Innovators
    • Inspiration
    • It Takes a Village
    • Mentors
    • Movers and Shakers
    • Partnerships
    Agripreneur 101: Sweet success for jam producer

    Agripreneur 101: Sweet success for jam producer

    Real Housewife turns passion for wine into a business

    Real Housewife turns passion for wine into a business

    David Mthombeni is building an agriculture empire for his family.Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Farmer gets his hands dirty while building family empire

    Gauteng farmers give youth a leg-up in agriculture

    Women in farming give youth a leg up in agriculture

    Watch out, these young farmers are on fire!

    Watch out, these young farmers are on fire!

    Unati Speirs has vast experience in agri-business strategy and business funding and was recently appointed as a new board director for Hortgro. Photos: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Youngest Hortgro hotshot takes transformation to heart

    Prof Kennedy Mnisi a dedicated young man who wants to help livestock farmers with animal health education to prevent diseases. Picture. Supplied/ Food For Mzansi.

    Animal scientist works hard to earn top dog status

    Eastern Cape grain farmer Sinelizwi Fakade told Cyril Ramaphosa that limited access to funding continued to constrain young farmers. The president vowed to return to the province to fully engage with issues raised. Photo:Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Ramaphosa vows to address challenges faced by young farmers

    Meet SA’s young stars taking agritech to the next level

    Meet SA’s young stars taking agritech to the next level

  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought
No Result
View All Result
Food For Mzansi

Food inspiration is all around, believes Apriena

by Noluthando Ngcakani
18th Feb 2021
in Catering Company, Mzansi Flavour
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A

You can never let 'cooking fog' get you down in the kitchen when there is food inspiration everywhere, says home cook and owner of PriMade, Apriena Jugoo Pummer. Photo: Supplied/ Food For Mzansi

So, what do you do when your cooking mojo runs dry?

Turn to that box of Salty Crax you have been saving for a rainy day? Or look to the heavens and pray for divine intervention?

Home cook and owner of PriMade, Apriena Jugoo Pummer. Photo: Supplied/ Food For Mzansi

Just do not completely lose the plot when you have been hit by “cooking fog”, Johannesburg-based caterer and recipe developer Apriena Jugoo Pummer (42) advises. “Life is too short to eat bland food, there is cooking inspiration everywhere,” she says.

Throughout her adolescence and years later her mother, Jyoti, has been the source of food inspiration behind her culinary endeavours.

RECIPE: Feeling fishy? Make this fish biryani

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2011, this inspiration became the catalyst for a dream food business, PriMade, a catering service, recipe development and spice blending hub in Johannesburg.

“My mom is a typical Indian woman who loves to feed people, she really cooks from her heart. That is what I have learned from her, to cook from the heart. I really believe it is one of the biggest ingredients you put into your food, and people taste that. When you are doing something and it is your passion, you can do anything well,” she says.

After graduating with honours in English literature and psychology from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pummer moved to Johannesburg where she worked in human resources and recruitment until she became pregnant with her first-born, Noa in 2010 and later Zen in 2013.

‘Now there’s this thing called Covid-19. Can you imagine the trauma of running a restaurant in 2021?’

“I am an extrovert. Initially my husband was concerned that I would get bored and that I would not be stimulated enough,” says the Durban-born home cook.

Opportunity knocked when she sold her famous chilli chutney at a market hosted on her residential estate. If ever there were a clear sign to pursue her cooking dream, this was it. “I said to my husband that day, if I ever want to work again, I want to do something that I absolutely love, and that’s when I decided I want to do food.”

Pre-teen chef

As a child Pummer never dreamed of a career in the kitchen. “I wanted to be a marine biologist, or a journalist because I loved writing.”

The youngest of three girls, a typical Sunday in her native Durban was spent taking family trips to nurseries to buy plants for their home garden.

However, she hated gardening and much preferred spending time in the kitchen while her family planted. “By lunchtime food is on the table, and I’ll set the table and everything.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CFM-42nALaL/

“I do love gardening now, it’s so funny I grow my own veggies, I’ve got so many things in the garden, and I just love it.”

ADVERTISEMENT

While her father may have been the breadwinner in her childhood home, this did not deter her mother from earning an income using her artistic skills and offering classes in sewing and design to women in her neighbourhood.

“My mother always did something to help supplement the income at home.  She used to give sewing lessons to make extra money on weekdays and sometimes on a Saturday for ladies who worked. As a young girl I learned women can be independent, there is always a way to make money if we apply ourselves,” she says.

This inspired her to show her own independence in the kitchen. “The first time I made us an egg chutney, because (my mother) could smell it as she came out to the kitchen, she’s like, what are you doing? 

‘When you are doing something and it is your passion, you can do anything well.’

“I said, ‘I cooked us lunch, I was hungry and I thought I couldn’t wait for you.’ I think she was extremely proud.”

The more time spent in the kitchen the more she daydreamed of one day owning her own restaurant.

“You are young and don’t know the responsibilities and what it takes to run a restaurant, it sounds easy when you are 13 or 14 years old. And now there’s this thing called Covid-19. Can you imagine the trauma of running a restaurant in 2021?”

RECIPE: Feeling fishy? Make this fish biryani

Picking up the pieces

Before the global pandemic Pummer was booked and busy catering at least two corporate events every week for international doctors attending a seminar or conference in Mzansi. “I used to feed neurosurgeons, cardiologists, cardiothoracic surgeons three course meals, now they have stopped flying in,” she says.

Since then, she has reverted to the basics of selling readymade meals and catering a few events with limited guests.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CKtuiM2pEmQ/

“It has been challenging because my husband is also in the wine industry and it has basically been six months of him having no income. I had to sell a lot of food; I did a lot of those reheat meals. I still do my weekly meals I sold when I started my business.”

Covid-19 has, however, allowed her to explore another passion. “I always liked photography, I went for a course years ago to learn how to use my camera, but life gets so busy that you become complacent. I picked up my camera and started playing again and that’s when I started getting noticed by all these brands.”

She has since made major strides in securing recipe development deals with big brands like Le Creuset and McCain, among others. “I grew small, I grew organically and I’m still going to grow,” she says.

‘If food is your passion you can do anything. Don’t limit yourself, push yourself!’

Pummer plans to further expand her business through recipe development and growing the spicy side of her business interests with her own range of seasoning, PriMade spices.

Her advice to young chefs and home cooks is simple. “Believe in yourself. If food is your passion you can do anything. Don’t limit yourself, push yourself!”

RECIPE: Feeling fishy? Make this fish biryani

https://www.instagram.com/p/CHuYNu9Avoh/
Tags: Apriena Jugoo Pummercatering businesscorporate cateringCovid-19Home cookPriMade
Previous Post

Recipe: Feeling fishy? Make this fish biryani

Next Post

Apply now for 250 internships in agriculture

Noluthando Ngcakani

Noluthando Ngcakani

With roots in the Northern Cape, this Kimberley Diamond has had a passion for telling human interest stories since she could speak her first words. A foodie by heart, she began her journalistic career as an intern at the SABC where she discovered her love for telling agricultural, community and nature related stories. Not a stranger to a challenge Ngcakani will go above and beyond to tell your truth.

Related Posts

South Africans are once again enjoying their beer after a tough 16 months. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

SA beer industry regains its fizz post Covid-19

by Tiisetso Manoko
26th May 2022
0

South Africans are once again enjoying their beer after a tough 16 months which included four alcohol bans due to...

Street traders and small scale farmers are always neglected in times of crisis and the leaders in the agriculture sector have urged government to prioritize them in future to protect our food systems. Photo: Nomfundo Xolo / GroundUp

Suspended permit payments bring relief to CT vendors

by GroundUp
26th May 2022
0

With the Covid-19 pandemic having pinched any extra penny from the pockets of those who need it most, a decision...

A recent study compiled by research revealed that a large number of farmers had received no official aid after suffering severe disruptions brought on by the global Covid-19 pandemic. Photo: Pixabay/Supplied

Farmers disrupted by pandemic still struggling

by The Conversation
9th May 2022
0

Stringent Covid-19 restrictions have seen the world's poorest, including smallholder farmers, bear the brunt without enough support of local governments.

National risk management should receive urgent attention, according to experts who spoke during a recent webinar on the impact of recent disasters on South Africa. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Tough times in agriculture ‘could have been cushioned’

by Tiisetso Manoko
9th May 2022
0

SA's farming sector has faced some tough times lately, but some of the hardship could have been warded off had...

Next Post
The positive outlook for the agricultural sector in the coming year may be dampened by rising input costs, says Wandile Sihlobo. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Apply now for 250 internships in agriculture

On Monday, 20 June 2022, 35 farmworkers were injured when the truck that transported them to work overturned on the R45 between Klapmuts and Simondium in the Cape Winelands. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi
News

‘Inhumane farmworker transport must stop’

by Zolani Sinxo
27th Jun 2022
0

Since last year, at least 200 farmworkers have experienced the trauma of a truck accident while being transported to or...

Read more
MEC Bongiwe Sithole-Moloi visited the Ntathakusa Citrus Farm in eShowe on Friday, 24 June 2022. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

ICYMI: Career boost ahead for KZN agri graduates

27th Jun 2022
This week in agriculture definitely offers a few events worth bookmarking. First up is the Hostex expo, followed by the Tshwane Agri X Engage round table, Food For Mzansi Gather To Grow, a table wine event, and the second African food safety technical meeting. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

This week’s agriculture events: 27 June to 01 July 2022

27th Jun 2022
As South Africa’s population continues to grow, ensuring food security into the future will depend on climate-smart and innovative farming methods. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Save on production costs with conservation agriculture

26th Jun 2022
Langeberg & Ashton Foods buildings and yards line a significant stretch of Ashton’s main road. Jacobus de Koker isn’t permanently employed but says he has been working at the factory for years. Photo: Elana van der Watt/Food For Mzansi

‘Our town will be a dead town’

25th Jun 2022

ICYMI: 11-point action plan to end transport chaos

Agbiz congress: Hopes are high for industry solutions

‘Our town will be a dead town’

R180m. investment ‘shows progress in North West’

Manopole gives biggest budget slice to farmer support

Podcast: Here’s how to control and prevent rabies

THE NEW FACE OF SOUTH AFRICAN AGRICULTURE

With 11 global awards in the first three years of its existence, Food For Mzansi is much more than an agriculture publication. It is a movement, unashamedly saluting the unsung heroes of South African agriculture. We believe in the power of agriculture to promote nation building and social cohesion by telling stories that are often overlooked by broader society.

Lack of legislative support threatens SA’s food security

Agripreneur 101: Sweet success for jam producer

Real Housewife turns passion for wine into a business

‘Inhumane farmworker transport must stop’

ICYMI: Career boost ahead for KZN agri graduates

This week’s agriculture events: 27 June to 01 July 2022

  • Our Story
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright

Contact us
Office: +27 21 879 1824
WhatsApp line: +27 81 889 9032
Marketing: +27 71 147 0388
News: info@foodformzansi.co.za
Advertising: sales@foodformzansi.co.za

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought

Copyright © 2021 Food for Mzansi

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version