How a chef in The Bahamas empowers others – ShareAmerica

Posted: September 2, 2022 at 2:22 am

Chef Chant Basden serves mouthwatering guava cream cheese Danish pastries at her Bahamas Tastiest Bakery. But yummy pastries are far from her only passion. The Academy for Women Entrepreneurs (AWE) alumna also uses her cooking and entrepreneurial skills to support her community of Abaco, an island in The Bahamas.

While Basden has fond childhood memories of learning to cook with her grandma, her passion for helping others was born out of crisis. In 2019, as Hurricane Dorian approached, she baked and distributed bread until the storm hit Abaco.

Dorian destroyed much of the island, including her family bakery. Yet Basden says she resolved to turn the setback into an opportunity. Instead of allowing that to defeat me, Basden says, she felt resilient. I thought, Chant, youre bigger than this storm.

Now she uses her cooking skills, as well as the business strategies she learned through the U.S. State Departments AWE program, to help those around her. She started a fund to feed the hungry and teaches simple, cost-effective recipes that help others produce their own bread or other food important skills when COVID-19 supply chain disruptions mean rising food prices.

At her Chef Store, a second business Basden launched to provide restaurants with ingredients and other supplies, she instructs her female staff on how to run a business. If you dont have a plan, you plan to fail, she says.

Basden learned to instruct others on entrepreneurship in part through AWE, which gives women the knowledge, networks and access they need to launch and scale successful businesses. More than 16,000 women in 80 countries have participated, including over 280 in The Bahamas.

The U.S. Embassy in Nassau also has forged partnerships with local institutions to support long-term female entrepreneurship. The Small Business Development Centre, the Bahamas Chamber of Commerce and Employers Confederation, and the Bahamas Development Bank have all supported the AWE program in The Bahamas.

As Basden works confidently toward selling her products internationally, she says her AWE experience and network has prepared her to grow her business and other passions. Once youve completed the AWE program, its like youre set for life, Basden says. Its an investment in you.

This article was written by freelance writer Allie Dalola. A version of this article was previously published by the State Departments Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

See the original post here:

How a chef in The Bahamas empowers others - ShareAmerica

Related Posts