A Volunteer’s time in Panama sparks superfood startup


News from Panama / Friday, May 5th, 2023

Simon Roca was working with his rural community in Panama on a variety of income-generating projects when COVID-19 hit in March 2020, triggering the evacuation of Peace Corps Volunteers around the globe. Though he departed after only nine months of service, Roca retained his desire to nurture economic opportunity in Panama. This desire ultimately led him to launch a superfood startup, partnering with coffee growers in Latin America.

Roca’s journey to the Peace Corps began in his childhood home, a fruit farm in Wisconsin.

“Growing up, my mom fed me organic foods, so I grew to really love natural foods that are grown sustainably and help your body feel good,” Roca said. “She also served in the Peace Corps in Paraguay, so I always heard stories about her experiences and some of the crazy things she ate. I never thought I’d do it.”

The child of divorced parents, Roca visited his father, who lived at different times in Costa Rica and Venezuela, every year. “Traveling to those countries I quickly realized there’s a huge disparity between how people live in the U.S. and how people live in other parts of the world,” Roca said.

By the time he went to college, Roca had taken a path away from his childhood on the fruit farm. He studied business at The University of Wisconsin and, after graduating, went to Europe. During his travels, Roca realized he didn’t want to go to sit in an office all day for work, so he returned to his childhood home in Wisconsin to figure out which direction to take.

“I began to understand that I needed to follow my heart. And my heart told me I wanted to help people and express my love for nature. I wanted an experience that would put me more in touch with myself and my passions, something that was meaningful and fulfilling,” Roca said.

•	Picking coffee cherries at a farm in Mexico that Roca sources from.
Farmers pick coffee cherries at a farm in Mexico that Roca sources from.

He applied to the Peace Corps and was accepted to serve in Panama, where he was assigned a dual role in business development and sustainable agriculture. In that capacity, he worked with a 600-member farmers’ cooperative that connected four communities.

“We were trying to develop a business model to harvest lumber sustainably. Farmers had about 300 hectares of Caribbean pine they wanted to sell to a local lumber mill in a larger nearby city. We also planned to secure fish tanks for tilapia farming so that communities could feed themselves and grow some to sell commercially. And we implemented more sustainable and organic practices, such as reducing the use of slash-and-burn techniques and using environmentally friendly alternatives to fungicides, like garlic spray and Neem,” Roca said.

COVID-19 cut short these plans and suddenly put Roca back in the U.S. Roca wanted to pursue graduate study, but was too late to apply for a Paul D. Coverdell fellowship. Instead, he took advantage of a special scholarship for evacuated Volunteers at the Thunderbird School of Global Management at Arizona State University. While there, Roca’s experiences in Panama continued to percolate in his mind.

“Coffee is a major cash crop in Panama. During service, we visited some farmers who were super excited about growing Geisha coffee, which sells for upwards of $50 a pound. There was a lot of focus on coffee being a way for farmers to increase income,” Roca said.

During his first month of training in Panama, Roca saw on an online video of a CEO who mentioned a cognition supplement made with coffee cherry (cascara) extract. Roca started doing research and discovered cascara’s benefits.

“It has a crazy number of antioxidants, more than many other superfoods. It also contains the brain-derived neurotrophic factor, BDNF, that stimulates brain function,” Roca said.

Roca learned that smaller farmers composted cascara while larger farmers sent much of it to the dump. “As the waste from coffee harvesting rots, methane is emitted that is a huge contributor to global warming. About 16 million metric tons of methane are released from coffee cherries each year. Once I learned that, I kind of fell in love with the idea of being able to help solve so many issues by developing a cascara product,” Roca said.

The cognition supplement was patented, so Roca had to figure out if cascara was edible in its raw form.