Ep. 136 — What If Caribbean Cuisine Funded Caribbean Futures with Taymer Mason

Caribbean food travels the world as flavor, nostalgia, and restaurant culture but what if it also traveled as real economic infrastructure? We’re asking a harder question: how do we move from beloved recipes to Caribbean food systems that reduce import dependence, strengthen food security, and create durable industries across the region. I’m joined by Taymer Mason, a Barbadian food scientist and Caribbean product developer with more than 20 years of experience across food safety, kitchens, and innovation. Taymer breaks down why so many islands still carry a massive import bill even when breadfruit, cassava, and fruit trees are all around us, and why the missing piece is often not farming alone but systems: consistent raw materials, regional cooperation, accessible financing, shelf-life testing, packaging options, and reliable transport between islands.

We also get practical about what “legacy products” look like, why shelf-stable ambient foods often scale better than cold-chain exports, and how standardizing recipes can protect quality as brands grow. Taymer shares eye-opening stories, from green seasoning selling better when people used it like a dip, to learning from boxed fufu as a convenience model, to reimagining moringa as an everyday seasoning that boosts nutrition. Then we zoom out to solutions: farmer-producer planning, government policy changes, white labeling pathways, CARICOM-style data sharing on crop gluts, and smarter diaspora investment that builds market pipelines, warehouses, and storefronts. If you care about Caribbean agriculture, sustainable food entrepreneurship, disaster resilience, and the future of Caribbean economies, this conversation is for you. 

Taymer Mason is a food scientist, cookbook author, and entrepreneur based in Barbados. She is the founder of Harbourvale Foods, a modern Caribbean vegan pantry brand built on clean-label formulation and plant-based food science. Her debut cookbook, Caribbean Vegan, has been in print for sixteen years and holds a starred Library Journal review. Taymer's work sits at the intersection of Caribbean culinary heritage and innovation, with a deep conviction that the region's food systems deserve both scientific rigour and world-class storytelling.

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Ep. 135 — Caribbean Futures Through Creative Power with Alistair Scott