More recently, global supply chain disruptions have tested his model. A cargo ship delay from Izmir meant no Turkish apricots for six weeks. Rather than substitute inferior fruit, Tomassian communicated openly with chefs and offered alternative recipes. “Trust is harder to rebuild than a supply line,” he says.
Now in his late 50s, Tomassian is wrestling with succession. His two children, both in their 20s, have shown interest but not commitment. “I don’t want to hand them a burden dressed as an inheritance,” he says. “They have to fall in love with the grind themselves.” What is Ohannes Tomassian’s true legacy? It’s not the revenue (estimated $45–60 million annually, private) or the awards (including IACP’s “Distributor of the Year” in 2019). It’s the quiet transformation of the American palate. Ohannes Tomassian
This is the story of a man who turned a family recipe into a multi-million-dollar empire—without ever losing sight of the soil, the spice, or the story behind each dish. Ohannes Tomassian was born into the Armenian diaspora. His parents, survivors of displacement and hardship, settled in Beirut, Lebanon, where the aroma of spices—cinnamon, allspice, sumac—was as common as the Mediterranean breeze. “My grandmother’s kitchen was a sanctuary,” Tomassian recalls, sitting in his sunlit office outside Boston. “She had no measuring spoons. She had memory, touch, and instinct. That’s where I learned that food is not just fuel. It’s identity.” More recently, global supply chain disruptions have tested
Ohannes Tomassian rarely gives interviews. He prefers the hum of a walk-in cooler to the glare of a camera. But on a chilly November afternoon, over a plate of olives and fresh flatbread, he offered a final thought: “Trust is harder to rebuild than a supply line,” he says
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