| My Speculative appeal of CYAN gets upped.  TWO hypothetical Hunters -Meridian OHC Partners & TerraBrands 
 This Company Went From Making Biofuels to Health Food
 
 
 
 
 
   Using a surprising ingredient.
 
 TerraVia and VMG Partners are coming together in a new venture they’re calling TerraBrands.
 
 The two entities are working to bring algae to the mainstream market  in food, pet, and wellness products. They plan to invest in and acquire  already established, lower middle-market companies that they can build  on using TerraVia’s suite of algae-based ingredients and VMG’s capital  and experience with consumer brands. TerraVia has also brought founder  and former CEO of Popchips, Keith Belling, on board to leverage his  brand-building expertise.
 
 The partnership between TerraVia and VMG is fitting considering the  latter’s company portfolio, which includes other health-focused brands  like Justin’s, which is known for its nut butters, and Health Warrior,  the creator of the Chia Bar. “We, in our business and our portfolio  companies, are spending a tremendous amount of time thinking about how  to bring better, more nutritionally available ingredients to food  products,” Kara Cissell-Roell, managing director of VMG partners, told Fortune. “Algae is one of those ‘mothers of all nutrition.'”
 
 This can almost be taken in a literal sense as many plants  derive from algae,  and it has a nutrition profile superior to a lot of other so-called  “superfoods” on the market. It supposedly has more omegas than chia,  more protein than spinach, more fiber than kale, and less saturated fat  than olive oil.
 
 TerraVia recently  changed its name from Solazyme  				 					  						 SZYM 						1.56% 					 				 			, a company that was known for making biofuels using algae  oil. With petroleum-based oils priced low these days, the company could  no longer compete in that arena. Its stock reached a high of around $27  in 2011, and has since  fallen dramatically  by about $25. With what Cissell-Roell says is a “massive opportunity”  in the plant-based protein market, TerraBrands is likely a shot at  turning that around.
 
 Though the company has been focused on biofuels since its inception  13 years ago, Belling says that it began to realize the potential in the  food sector in the last 8 or 10 years. In the past nine months, before  making the official change from Solazyme to TerraVia, it saw a handful  of early adopters incorporate some of its algae products into their  foods, including Enjoy Life brownie mix and Califia Farms coffee  creamers. The company changed its name to TerraVia to better fit its new  focus. “Terra” means earth and “Via” means path or journey. Together,  as Belling explains, they refer to “a path to a healthier food system  that’s better for people and better for the planet.”
 
 
 
 As has been previously reported by  Fortune,  it will be interesting to see whether or not consumers will be open to  the idea of eating algae. When people hear algae they think of pond  scum, but at least it isn’t the  strangest food product  to hit the market. According to Cissell-Roell, TerraVia’s algae  products—which include various oils and powders—have a neutral taste  profile and a palatable base, making it the perfect ingredient to  replicate certain foods. She claims that they “taste and feel and act  like incredibly close replicas” so much so that you wouldn’t be able to  tell the difference.
 
 TerraVia’s products are made in fermentation tanks, which Belling  said is comparable to the way beer is brewed. However, Cissell-Roell  stressed that the algae’s molecular composition is never altered and the  result isn’t some kind of “frankenfood”—a likely dig at soy, which  happens to be genetically modified.
 
 The plant-based trend is “not just a trend,  it’s a reality right now,  and it’s continuing to accelerate,” according to Belling. There are a  growing number of products and brands turning to algae as an alternative  ingredient, and TerraVia is coming in at the forefront of that  movement.
 
 fortune.com
 
 
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