NookMarket
Mosaic Foods

Mosaic Foods

Food, Drinks & Restaurants · Snacks & Sweets

Mosaic Foods sells frozen, fully-prepared plant-based meals across breakfast, lunch, dinner and snack categories; single-serve entrées average $8.99–$11.99, family-size dishes $19.99, placing the brand in the premium tier. Orders are placed only through mosaicfoods.com and ship nationwide in recyclable dry-ice packaging on a one-time or subscription basis; no retail freezers are stocked. Every recipe is 100 % vegetarian, most are vegan, and all are formulated by a dietitian to deliver ≥15 g protein and ≤800 mg sodium per serving; dishes arrive ready to heat in five minutes. Flagship SKUs include the “Vegan Mac & Greens,” “Sriracha Tofu Veggie Bowl,” and the “Family-Size Shepherd’s Pie,” each stamped with visible whole vegetables and legumes rather than meat analogues. Core buyers are 25-45-year-old urban professionals and young families who value convenience but refuse to compromise on produce intake, fiber content or sustainable sourcing; the brand’s carbon-neutral shipping and 100 % recyclable packaging resonate with climate-minded consumers. Subscriptions appeal to repeat customers seeking predictable weeknight solutions that align with flexitarian or meat-reduction goals. Mosaic competes in the direct-to-consumer frozen meal segment against other chef-crafted, dietitian-approved services that emphasize clean labels and plant-forward nutrition; it differentiates through strictly vegetarian recipes, lower-than-average sodium levels, family-size formats and a donation program that delivers one meal to a food bank for every box sold.

Dinner that's actually good for you, the planet, and someone hungry

  • Sustainable
  • Recycled
  • Vegan
Visit site

Similar brands

Getrawnutrition

GetRawNutrition sells plant-based protein powders, super-food blends, electrolyte mixes, and whole-food vitamins. Most SKUs fall between $25-$45 for a 20-30 serving pouch, placing the line in the mid-range tier. Sales are DTC through getrawnutrition.com and Amazon; no brick-and-mortar distribution is listed. The brand positions itself on “raw, minimally processed” ingredients that remain below 118 °F during drying to preserve enzymes. Flagship SKUs include the Raw Organic Protein blend (sprouted peas, sprouted brown rice, and 13 organic greens) and the Raw Electrolytes stick packs sweetened only with monk-fruit. All formulas are certified USDA Organic, Non-GMO Project verified, and produced in cGMP facilities that are free of dairy, soy, gluten, and synthetic fillers. Core buyers are 25-45-year-old fitness enthusiasts, yogis, and clean-eating consumers who scan labels for enzyme activity and bioavailability. They value vegan sourcing, transparent heavy-metal testing posted via QR code, and subscribe-and-save options that drop prices 15%. The messaging emphasizes digestive ease and “food over chemicals,” resonating with parents, trainers, and CrossFit athletes who want performance without processed additives. GetRawNutrition competes in the crowded organic, plant-based powder segment against both legacy sports brands and niche whole-food labels. It differentiates by guaranteeing raw processing temperatures, publishing third-party COAs for every lot, and keeping SKUs under 10 ingredients—appealing to shoppers who prioritize ingredient simplicity and enzymatic integrity over flavor complexity or mass-market sponsorships.

Protein that's actually food, not chemistry

  • Organic
  • Vegan
Visit site

Paleoonthego

Paleoonthego ships frozen, fully-prepared entrées, breakfasts, sides, and desserts that comply with strict paleo and AIP (Autoimmune Protocol) guidelines; single-serve meals run $15–$18, bundles drop the per-meal cost to about $11–$13, placing the brand in the premium ready-to-eat segment. All sales are direct-to-consumer through the company’s own e-commerce site; orders are packed in dry ice and shipped nationwide in insulated boxes. The kitchen is 100 % gluten-free, grain-free, dairy-free, and legume-free, and every recipe is lab-verified <20 ppm gluten; rotating monthly menus are cooked in small batches, blast-frozen, and shipped within 48 hours of production. Flagship SKUs include Bacon Beef Butternut Chili, Chicken Tikka Masala with cauliflower rice, and AIP-compliant “No-Tomato” Turkey Skillet—items frequently cited in paleo blog round-ups as compliant convenience foods. Core buyers are CrossFit enthusiasts, 30- to 45-year-old professionals managing autoimmune conditions, and time-pressed parents who want nutrient-dense meals without prep or restaurant guesswork; they value ingredient transparency, elimination-diet safety, and the ability to keep paleo or AIP compliance while traveling or working long hours. The brand competes in the niche of medically restrictive, chef-prepared frozen meal delivery, differentiating through simultaneous paleo and AIP certification, coconut-based sauces instead of dairy substitutes, and subscription flexibility that allows single-box purchases without long-term commitments.

Paleo meals so clean, you'll never compromise on compliance again

Visit site

Feedmemore

Feedmemore is a direct-to-consumer pet-nutrition brand that sells air-dried dog and cat food, freeze-dried toppers, and functional treats. Recipes are sold in 1 lb, 2.5 lb and 10 lb resealable pouches; prices run $28–$85 per bag, placing the line squarely in the premium tier. Orders are placed only through the company’s own website, with auto-ship subscriptions available at 10 % off. The formulas are built on single-source animal proteins (free-range beef, cage-free chicken, wild-caught salmon) combined with organic produce, then gently air-dried at low temperatures to retain nutrients without refrigeration. Each recipe exceeds AAFCO standards for all life stages and is promoted as a “raw alternative” that scoops like kibble while delivering 95 % meat, organs and bone. The brand’s best-known SKUs are the “Beef Booster” and “Salmon Superfood” blends, both grain-free and fortified with probiotics. Core buyers are urban millennials and Gen-Z pet parents who treat dogs or cats as family members and prioritize ingredient transparency over price. They value convenience (no freezer, no prep), sustainable sourcing, and the ability to feed a high-protein, minimally processed diet on a busy schedule. Feedmemore competes in the fast-growing premium “natural dry” segment against legacy kibbles and refrigerated raw brands. It differentiates by offering raw nutrition in a shelf-stable format, subscription personalization based on pet weight and activity level, and carbon-neutral shipping in recyclable packaging.

Raw nutrition that scoops like kibble, zeros the prep work

  • Sustainable
  • Recycled
  • Organic
Visit site

Olmafood

Olmafood sells ready-to-eat seaweed-based foods: marinated kelp salads, seaweed tapenades, dried snack strips and frozen kelp noodles. All items are vegan, gluten-free and packaged for pantry or freezer storage; most SKUs fall between $6 and $14, placing the line in the mid-range specialty grocery tier. The company ships nationwide through olmafood.com and Amazon, and also lists products in about 250 independent natural-food stores and co-ops across the U.S. West Coast. The brand’s point of difference is wild-harvested North-Pacific kelp processed with high-pressure pasteurization instead of heat, giving a 12-month refrigerated shelf life without preservatives. Their flagship “Sea Salad” medley of kelp, onions and peppers has become a reference item in seaweed deli sections, while the frozen kelp-noodle line offers 15 calories and 1 g net carb per serving, positioning Olmafood at the intersection of regenerative-ocean ingredients and keto diet trends. Core buyers are 25-45-year-old health-focused flexitarians who follow keto, paleo or gluten-free regimens and actively seek climate-positive foods. The brand’s storytelling around zero-input ocean farming and plastic-neutral packaging resonates with shoppers who want nutrient density plus low ecological impact and are willing to pay specialty-food prices for it. Olmafood competes in the niche algae-foods segment against both land-based superfood brands and imported Asian seaweed snacks. It differentiates by sourcing domestically, processing raw kelp into Western-ready formats, and leading with sustainability metrics—carbon-negative feedstock, recyclable pouches, and third-party regenerative-ocean certification—while mainstream competitors typically rely on overseas commodity nori or shelf-stable products heavy on sodium and additives.

Wild kelp, zero compromise, keto-clean nutrition from the ocean

  • Sustainable
  • Recycled
  • Independent
  • Vegan
Visit site

Eatmila

Eatmila sells ready-to-blend frozen smoothie cups and overnight-oat cups in 6- to 9-flavor rotations; SKUs are vegan, gluten-free, and sweetened only with fruit. Single cups run $5.99–$7.49, 6- or 12-pack bundles drop the unit price to $4.25–$5.50, placing the brand in the mid-range functional-snack tier. Orders are placed through eatmila.com and shipped nationwide in dry-ice insulated boxes; no retail stores carry the line. Flash-freezing produce at peak ripeness and portioning it into recyclable cups lets consumers blend a 60-second smoothie or soak overnight oats without prep, measuring, or cleanup. Each cup lists calories (130–220), protein (4–8 g), and fiber (6–9 g) on the transparent lid, reinforcing a “nutrition-forward, spoon-free breakfast” positioning. Limited-edition seasonal blends—Pumpion Spice, Dragon Berry—create repeat purchase spikes. Primary buyers are 22-40-year-old urban professionals who already own a personal blender, track macros on apps, and value convenience without sacrificing whole-food ingredients. The brand speaks to time-scarce, wellness-oriented consumers who post aesthetic food photos and prefer subscription cadences that automate healthy mornings. Eatmila competes in the intersection of frozen produce, functional beverages, and subscription meal kits. It differentiates by merging single-serve freezer format with Instagram-ready layered fruit aesthetics, lower sugar claims versus bottled smoothies, and flexible delivery frequency that skips the full meal-kit cooking commitment.

Frozen nutrition that blends in sixty seconds, no prep required

  • Recycled
  • Vegan
Visit site

Blue Circle Foods

Blue Circle Foods sells frozen and refrigerated seafood—primarily salmon, trout, tuna, shrimp, and value-added products like fish burgers and smoked salmon—at mid-range to premium prices (USD $8–$16 per 12-oz retail pack, $30–$45 for smoked sides). Distribution is omni-channel: nationwide U.S. supermarkets (Whole Foods, Wegmans, Fresh Market), club stores, and direct-to-consumer via the brand’s own site with 1-2-day frozen shipping. The company was an early adopter of ASC- and BAP-certified farm-raised salmon, sources wild tuna from MSC-certified pole-and-line fleets, and packs every retail item in 100% recyclable, vacuum-skin film and cardboard. Its “no antibiotics ever” pledge, transparent QR-coded supply chain, and carbon-neutral FedEx shipping option position the brand as a traceable, lower-impact protein choice. Core shoppers are health-oriented households earning $75k+, millennials and Gen-X parents seeking “clean” protein for quick weeknight meals, and pescatarians who prioritize sustainability claims they can verify. Buyers value the convenience of individually vacuum-packed portions, mild mercury-tested flavor profiles suitable for kids, and assurance that fish was raised without chemicals or overcrowded pens. They compete against both national frozen-seafood brands sold in grocery freezers and premium direct-ship wild-catch subscriptions. Blue Circle differentiates by combining third-party aquaculture certification, gourmet smoked and seasoned SKUs, and brick-and-mortar availability, giving consumers sustainable restaurant-quality seafood without specialty-store mark-ups or long subscription commitments.

Traceable seafood that tastes like the restaurant, ships to your freezer

  • Sustainable
  • Recycled
Visit site

Equaleats

Equaleats sells chef-crafted ready-meals that are nutritionally balanced, calorie-labelled and packaged in single portions; the range spans high-protein vegan bowls to low-carb meat dishes, plus breakfast pots and snack bars. Most entrées fall between £4.50 and £7.50, placing the brand in the mid-range meal-prep segment. Orders are placed only through equaleats.com; chilled boxes ship nationwide via next-day courier on a subscription or one-off basis. The brand’s core promise is “equal nutrition for every body”: each recipe is co-developed by dietitians so that macro ratios (protein 25-35 %, carbs 30-40 %, healthy fats 25-30 %) are identical across flavours, letting customers swap meals without re-tracking intake. Colour-coded sleeves (green, yellow, red) signal calorie bands from 350-650 kcal, a system that has made the line popular with macro counters. Limited-edition “Chef Collab” drops with fitness influencers sell out within hours. Typical buyers are 20-40-year-old urban professionals who train 3-5 times a week and want portion-controlled food that fits MyFitnessPal targets without cooking. They value transparency—every pouch lists farm sources and full amino-acid profile—and prioritise gender-neutral, body-positive branding over traditional “diet” rhetoric. Equaleats competes in the crowded UK chilled ready-meal space against supermarket “healthy” ranges and premium meal-prep services. It differentiates through exact macro parity across SKUs, direct-to-consumer data that lets it launch new flavours in ten days, and recyclable fibre trays that microwave in two minutes—faster than most rival pouches.

Macros that match, meals that change, tracking that stops

  • Recycled
  • Vegan
Visit site