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COSTA RICA - Friday
18
February 2005
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In Costa Rica, Bagel
Entrepreneurs Offer Their
Products to a New Market
By Brian Harris, JTA
It used to be that Costa Ricans
didn’t have many choices for
breakfast: They would almost
always start the day with gallo
pinto, a hearty combination of
leftover black beans and rice,
with fresh cilantro thrown in
for flavor.
Now the Central American country
has another option - bagels.
About 4,000 bagels are made here
each day - in a country of about
four million - and three
companies are competing for the
morning nosh market. Two other
bagel companies have closed.
It’s not an outright bagel war,
exactly, but Costa Rica still is
an unlikely venue for the
occasional bagel battle.
The two biggest bagel bakeries
are owned by Americans who
suffered bagel deprivation when
they moved here. Boston Bagel,
which opened in 1997, is owned
by sesame-bagel aficionado David
Feingold.
Bagelman’s, which opened in
2001, is owned by a
husband-and-wife team, Malcolm
and Isabel Mathison. He likes
his bagel topped with poppyseeds;
her favorite is whole wheat.
“We lived in Connecticut for
seven years, right on the border
with New York, and basically
when we came back down here as a
family we started saying ‘Oh,
there are no bagels here,’ ”
Isabel Mathison said.
Feingold said he “sort of missed
bagels” when his wife’s job with
the World Bank brought them to
Costa Rica from Washington in
1996. The bagel business was
booming in the United States, so
Feingold figured he’d find a
market in Costa Rica, which
tries to emulate many American
trends.
He also was encouraged by the
fact that some 3,000 Jews and
15,000 expatriate U.S. citizens
live in Costa Rica, creating a
potential market.
Travel writer Elliot Greenspan,
a native New Yorker who loves
everything bagels, has lived in
Costa Rica for 13 years, four of
them before the first bagel
store opened.
Until then, he would bring
bagels back from his trips to
the United States, carrying “as
big a bag as you can get stuffed
in an overhead compartment,” he
said.
But they wouldn’t last long:
Friends would descend on
Greenspan’s house and polish
them off.
Boston Bagel, Feingold’s first
entrepreneurial venture, filled
that void.
“When we first opened, people
walked into the shop and yelled
‘Bagels in Costa Rica! Wow!’ ”
Feingold said.
A former official at the U.S.
Agency for International
Development, Feingold heads a
local Reform synagogue, B’Nai
Israel, which has about 250
members. He learned bagel-baking
at a store in his native
Boston..
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Isabel Mathison is Costa
Rican and her husband is
English; neither is Jewish.
They learned to make bagels
at a Chicago-based chain
also called Bagelman’s,
though they tweaked the
formula for the Costa Rican
market.
Malcolm Mathison has a long
business history in Central
America, not all of it
glorious.
In the late 1990s he formed
the Central American Coffee
Company through mergers and
acquisitions, claiming it
was the region’s largest
coffee grower and exporter.
But with the global coffee
market tanking, the company
failed in early 1999,
leaving millions of dollars
in debts. Allegations of
fraud swirled, and top
officials in Guatemala and
Honduras were indicted.
Top executives in the
region’s coffee industry are
still bitter about Mathison,
who they believe damaged the
industry’s credibility.
Mathison denies any
wrongdoing, though he admits
he never gave authorities in
Guatemala and Honduras the
opportunity to question him.
Feingold started with a
traditional bagel store
where he sold bagels,
accessories and little else.
Last year, he sold the store
to a caterer — who belongs
to the local Orthodox shul
of 2,500-members — and now
focuses on baking.
Most of his business,
though, is making dough for
a local pizza chain. Making
the business work, he
conceded, “has been rough.”
The first Costa Rican bagel
store, an Israeli-owned
enterprise called DeliMundo,
didn’t even last two years,
he noted.
The Mathisons offer their
bagels in full-service
restaurants, five at last
count. Soups and salads are
as much an attraction as the
bagel sandwiches, including
some with bacon or ham.
The bagels are different,
too: Feingold’s are small,
hard and chewy, while the
Mathisons’ are larger,
softer and lighter.
Greenspan says both are
adequate substitutes for the
bagels he ate growing up in
New York.
A Guatemalan chain, Bagel
Factory, recently opened
three sandwich shops in
Costa Rica, though it
contracts out its bagel
making. That shows that at
least some people think the
Costa Rican bagel market has
room for growth.
Neither Feingold nor the
Mathisons, however, think
there’s room for more
competition.
Now that bagels are
available, Greenspan says
life in the tropics is
easier than before — but not
yet perfect.
“You still can’t get a good
knish, as far as I’m
concerned,” he said.
But he reproached himself
for wanting too much, too
soon.
“Baby steps, baby steps,” he
reminded himself. |
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