A loan helped a woman-owned sandwich shop grow their business within a cooperative model.


Abby's story

For many years, my sister and I dreamed about opening a restaurant and creating a space that was deeply embedded in the Burlington community. Between the two of us, we had a number of years working in food, agriculture, and restaurants, with experience on the culinary and production sides. Even in our free time, we often worked to cultivate community partnerships and bring people together around food. We often say that the seeds for Poppy were sown somewhere between the Feast of the Seven Fishes and the High Holy Days.This unlikely, yet complementary blend of Italian and Jewish heritage gave way to an obsession with food and its ability to bring people together.

We are inspired by familial recipes, travels, and dishes we love. What started in a family kitchen grew into dorms, apartments, backyards, and eventually, commercial kitchens. All along the way, we had talked about opening a restaurant, but it wasn’t until 2018 that we began to more seriously look for space and pursue this goal. Finally, in 2020 we were afforded the opportunity to work with a group of community members to cooperatively purchase a building in Burlington’s Old North End, where Poppy Café is now housed. Over the course of that first pandemic year, we were able to go from serving sandwiches from the stoop of our home to a neighborhood storefront, and it’s been a journey ever since.


This loan is special because:

It supports a small business owner with 0%-interest, zero-fee capital.



Loan details


About Poppy Cafe & Market

Industry: Food
Years in operation: 3 years - 5 years
Website: poppyvt.com

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Loan details