Jessamyn Waldman Rodriguez is a Canadian-American social entrepreneur. She is the founder and served as the Chief Executive Officer of Hot Bread Kitchen, a social enterprisebakery in East Harlem, New York City, that trains low-income and immigrant women in culinary and professional skills. The project has spun off HBK Incubates, a culinary incubator and support service for small culinary entrepreneurs. Rodriguez was named to Fortune magazine's 2015 list of the 20 Most Innovative Women in Food and Drink. She is the author of The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook: Artisanal Baking from Around the World, a bread-making book for home bakers.
In 2007 she founded Hot Bread Kitchen, a non-profit social enterprise to teach bread-making and employment skills to low-income minority women and immigrants. Started in her own home kitchen, the operation moved into part-time rented kitchen space in the Long Island Artisan Baking Center and in 2010 into the city-owned La Marqueta market in East Harlem. The project trains women for professional careers baking many types of breads - including Moroccan msemen, Persian nan-e barbari, and Jewish challah - which are sold in retail outlets and online. By 2012 Hot Bread Kitchen had 40 wholesale clients. In 2012, the bakery was producing 25 varieties of bread, Many products are based on traditional and ethnic recipes contributed by the trainees themselves. All participants are paid during their enrollment in a 100-hour culinary training course, which includes classes in "English, kitchen math, bakery science, professional skills, and management". All graduates are placed with culinary employment partners. Trainees are referred by community partners, and they often refer their own relatives to the program. As of 2019, Hot Bread Kitchen has graduated 162 women from 60 countries. Graduates earn an average of 70% more than they did before entering the program. In 2010 Hot Bread Kitchen opened HBK Incubates, a small-business incubator that assists entrepreneurs in opening culinary businesses. HBK Incubates rents out of affordable commercial kitchen space and provides business and marketing advice and workshops for both men and women. Priority is given to "minority-owned businesses, graduates of the bakery program and residents of Harlem and the surrounding area". In 2015 Rodriguez published The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook, a bread-making book for home bakers, featuring recipes made at the bakery, bread-making tips, and stories and photographs of the women at work. There are also recipes for main dishes and a chapter on re-purposing leftovers.
Honors and awards
In 2013 Rodriguez was the recipient of the Global Citizen Award from the Clinton Global Initiative. In 2014 she was named to Crain's New York's "40 Under 40" list and received the Celebrating Women Award from the New York Women's Foundation. In 2015 she placed 18th on Fortune magazine's list of the 20 Most Innovative Women in Food and Drink. In 2008 she became a fellow of Echoing Green.
Personal life
She and her husband, Eli Rodriguez, have two children.