By
Brinda Upadhyaya

It’s hot, very hot outside. Rising temperatures and rumbling
tummies are the order of the day. The cool, warm yellows of Aparna
Somani’s
Home Made
cafeteria in
Mumbai’s happening Juhu suburb, are inviting.
And the bite-sized
‘pav bhaji’ and pizza, the star-shaped ‘idlis’, the
fluffy cakes, the delicious melt-in-the-mouth ‘dal ki puri’ and
‘sangri ka saag’... the menu looks extremely tempting. It takes a
mammoth effort for anyone to resist the goodies in her endless menu.
ROUTINELY CREATIVE
But it has taken hard work, convincing and a bit of moolah for these
delicacies to make their presence felt on the shelves of
Home Made
.
Gifted with a flair
for cooking, 20-something Aparna was content churning out new recipes for her
conservative Marwari family, till the constant persuasion of her friends and
mother-in-law led her to start the enterprise.
I would often try to get
creative with routine snacks, the results of which were stupendous, if I might
say so myself, says Aparna, All my friends noticed this and with my
mother-in-law’s support, I drew up an elaborate menu of snacks, cakes and
desserts.
Aparna left the menu at a local beauty parlour, and the response
she got was tremendous. With an initial investment of Rs 5,000, Aparna began by
catering for small and simple orders, from people who lived nearby.
Working from home, and with her family as the main critics, Aparna
perfected her culinary skills. But it was only during Diwali that business
picked up rapidly, she gushes.
All of us worked round the clock, and by
the end of the fortnight, my cash box was overflowing. It was amazing.
That’s when I decided to turn professional and earnestly began to look
around for a catering outlet.
TURNING
PROFESSIONAL
However, it took some time for Aparna to venture out in the
competitive world of marketing and sales. Although her training at the N M
Institute of Management, Mumbai and a brief stint at a bakery course stood her
in good stead, she still had a long way to go as an entrepreneur.
Eventually, she bought a workshop in Andheri and rented a shop in the posh
Juhu suburb and thus began
Home Made
.
I equipped the work kitchen with huge industrial ovens, a superb exhaust
system, an elaborate gas connection and two large refrigerators, explains
Aparna. There is also a separate air conditioned icing room for cakes, which is
far removed from where the fresh food is cooked.
While trained chefs clad
in smart uniforms, aprons and caps cater to the orders placed in advance rolling
out the dough, a few employees look after the sorting and classification of
supplies.
HONING HER
SKILLS

Over the years, Aparna has acquired a sharp business sense fine
tuning herself to the vagaries of the market. Learning on the job, by trial and
error, she is quick to innovate, create and experiment with different dishes.
Quality and hygiene are the watch words at
Home Made
and Aparna makes sure that
unsold items are never carried over the next day.
Sourced mainly from
regular and known retailers in the suburbs, Aparna picks and chooses each
product personally. Special items like fancy sauces, chocolates, exotic wines
and dry fruits are bought only from specialists.
She also enlisted the
help of a professional restaurateur to hone her skills in the nuances of varied
cooking, preserving shelf life, packaging, maintaining attractive and hygienic
exteriors and keeping an elaborate and accurate record of goods.
All this
has definitely helped Aparna in acquiring new clients, while retaining the old
ones. A lot of my customers come to me through acquaintances and by word of
mouth, she explains. This also requires me to be constantly innovative. The idea
is to provide people, especially kids, new and exciting food; the day I stop
innovating, I am finished.
MAKING THE BUCKS
Talking about prices, Aparna is very clear about costs and profits. The menu is
prepared with an approximate budget in mind. The prices are based on the cost of
the raw material, labour and other charges like transport, gas and electricity.
Our pricing is also influenced by customer reaction, but we can’t bend
over backwards to accommodate their wishes, Aparna is quick to add.
She
has ambitious plans for the future of the still-in-its-infancy food shop. With
newly renovated and increased seating space, Home Made is trying hard to entice
youngsters with coffee, mocktails, masala buns, sandwiches, burgers, and an
elaborate Italian menu. The ‘mithais’ and desserts are always in
demand.
Aparna is presently in the midst of making a wide variety of
breads in fantastic shapes and sizes checkered, peppered, oblong. These along
with oven fresh buns with some coffee... nothing like it, eh? Stackers are
another of Aparna’s amazing brainchild nutritious food including veggies,
patties and sauces.
Staunch in her vegetarianism, 30-year-old Aparna
Somani has managed to set a trend of healthy but yummy food. With such
delightful, delicious stuff under her banner, it’s time for her
competitors to mind their step, oops soup!