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Brooklyn Made: The mark of greatness

Brooklyn Made: The mark of greatness
Photo by Jason Speakman

Just how Brooklyn is your company?

That was the question the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce posed to businesses claiming to be from Brooklyn in an effort to define exactly how Kings County a company is — with the “most Brooklyn” companies getting a gold star!

At the top of the list was Michael’s of Brooklyn, a national purveyor of pastas sauces (or gravy, but that’s a story for another day) whose owner said his new designation separates him from the Brooklyn posers.

“So many products come on to the market that have nothing to do with Brooklyn,” said Michael Cacace, who runs Micaahel’s out of Sheepshead Bay. “They just slap a ‘Brooklyn’ label on it.”

Cacace knows there is a lot in a name, especially for his sauces.

“People want a piece of Brooklyn,” he said. “Through our products and by eating our foods.”

The first crop of gold-certified Brooklyn businesses included a cornucopia of makers and shakers such as Brooklyn Soda Works, American Architectural Window, and a custom guitar company called Femenella Custom — showing the diversity of applicants. A couple of bigger names only landed on the silver list — the 3-D printing company MakerBot, which has offices Downtown and a production facility in Sunset Park, and IceStone, a manufacturer of counter tops which operates out of the Navy Yard.

Sweetness: Former science teacher Flora Pringle used her chemical knowledge to create Cracked Candy, a sugar-free sweet made with xylitol.
Photo by Jason Speakman

To be eligible for a Brooklyn seal, companies had to be headquartered in Brooklyn and produce a product — so service businesses did not qualify. The Chamber’s panel then looked at a number of factors to determine “Brooklynness” — and ranked companies as gold, silver, or bronze based on how much production is done in the borough, how many employees live here, and where it pays its taxes.

“We really want you to be all about Brooklyn,” said Chamber president Carlo Scissura, announcing the first group of companies to get the seal. “You’re not real Brooklyn if you’re not ‘Brooklyn Made.’ ”

Not every Brooklyn company has been given a designation, possibly because to be considered for the program, a company had to pay a $50 application fee. One notable company that is missing is the Brooklyn Brewery, which took a gamble banding the borough back in the day when Brooklyn meant something much different to the masses than it does today.

Scissura made the announcement Tuesday at a boutique gift store in Cobble Hill called “By Brooklyn” that only sells products from Kings County. The Chamber said 47 businesses applied for the certification, of which 41 received the stamp of approval.

The companies that made the cut are from all walks of industry, Scissura said.

“Brooklyn is not a one product town,” he said. “It’s an every product town.”

Reach reporter Matthew Perlman at (718) 260-8310. E-mail him at mperl‌man@c‌ngloc‌al.com. Follow him on Twitter @matthewjperlman.
Charmed: Chrisie Canny’s company FurtuneKeeper makes key chains, necklaces, and other charms that have a picture one side and a place to put your own inpsiring message on the other.
Photo by Jason Speakman