Meet the original Goodfoodies

Our founders, Jonathan Ferrari and Neil Cuggy, are truly the original Goodfoodies. Before they started Goodfood in 2014, they each had an interest in our food supply chain that goes way back.
Jonathan opened his first bank account at age six, with the goal of saving up to buy a tractor. While Neil developed a kitchen inventory management system when he was a kid, designed to recognize when something, like peanut butter, was half empty and automatically trigger a replacement order. Fast forward a few years, and the friends and former investment bankers found themselves starting what would become the #1 Canadian Meal Kit in a tiny Montreal apartment.
âWe always thought about ourselves as really differentiating by getting food on the table but making it exciting. Because Montrealers know how to do food. We were able to create really interesting recipes by just going to the market, finding a couple interesting things, putting them together in a dish and then serving it to friends and family at a dinner party,â reflected Neil.
Nearly 10 years later, Goodfood has hundreds of thousands of customers across Canada, but weâre still choosing our recipes and ingredients just as carefully. âWe wonât serve anything that we wouldnât be proud to serve our families at Sunday dinner,â explained Jonathan.

Good for business, good for everyone

Weâre doing this by sourcing our ingredients responsiblyâa strategy thatâs good for the business, our customers and the planet.
âFrom a business perspective, we want to be involved in solving the world's biggest challenges because thatâs where the greatest opportunities can be found. One of the biggest problems of our generation is to solve our climate crisis. Itâs our generationâs responsibility to drive sustainable transformation across all industries, and Goodfood is leading the movement towards creating a sustainable food future we can all be proud of,â said Jonathan.
âNeil and I live and breathe sourcing, manufacturing and delivering responsibly to take care of our planet, inside and outside of Goodfood,â he continued. âA couple years ago, we bought a beautiful piece of land in northern Quebec where we grow our own organic heirloom produce and eliminate 1,150 tons of carbon emissions per year. Itâs our intention to leave it better than we found it for future generations and weâre striving to do the same with Goodfood.â
Better supply chain = better food

We prioritize providing local, seasonal ingredients in our meal kits because itâs whatâs best for our customers, our communities and the environment.
âWhen people really care about where their food comes from and how it's grown, it creates better food. It's so much more flavourful. It has a better impact on the environment because it's coming from somewhere that's closer to home,â Jonathan explained. âWeâre also nurturing partnerships with farmers who are using the latest Earth-friendly technologies to do things like reduce water use and transportation times, and eliminate pesticides.â
âBy focusing on local partnerships, weâre enabling nearby economies, which will benefit both our customers and employees,â Neil added.
âThe old saying âyou are what you eatâ really applies here. By contributing to the betterment of the planet, and providing fresh and nutritious home-cooked meals, Goodfood has a role to play in fueling active, healthy lifestyles and ultimately, helping Canadians live longer,â concluded Jonathan.
We canât wait to cook with you.
Meet our head chef
When you enter Jordana Rebnerâs home youâll immediately notice cookbooks âand lots of themâon her bookshelf and coffee table, in her kitchen, on her bedside table. Theyâre fitting decor for someone whose lifeâs passion is food. And theyâre a source of inspiration for the 30+ weekly recipes she develops, alongside her team, as Goodfoodâs head chef and vice president of culinary development.
Jordana has been with Goodfood since its early days. A culinary school graduate, she joined the team after working at an upscale Montreal restaurant. She also has a Bachelor of Arts degree in industrial relations. Perhaps a surprising combination, but one Jordana finds works perfectly for her role.
âI love being immersed in food all the time. Thinking about it, seeing it. Itâs what I know best and what I get excited about. My role at Goodfood allows me to be creative, while activating the business side of my brain,â she said. âItâs a dream.â

The joy of sustainable dining: More variety, less waste
Every month Jordana and her talented recipe development and test kitchen teams put together a menu of exciting dishes designed to help Canadians discover the joy of home cooked meals. They start by considering which local produce is currently in season, then account for any upcoming holidays and whatâs currently popular with Goodfoodies.
âThe beauty of Goodfood is that weâll look through cookbooks and scour social media to find the most interesting and trending flavours, then plan your weekly meals for you. The team also draws inspiration from blogs, restaurants theyâve eaten at and family recipes,â explained Jordana. âThen weâll provide you with fresh, seasonal ingredients that perhaps you have never imagined cooking with, in exactly the portions you need, so you can cut down on your food waste.â
All of that saves you valuable time on meal prep and planning, but we know that perhaps the number one reason Canadians are cooking less is a lack of time in the evening âso Jordana and her team account for that, too.
âWe developed 30, 20 and 10 minute meal options because we know Canadians are busy and we want them to be able to discover the joy that comes from creating a delicious and nutritious home-made dish without the stress and time investment.â


