Directory
Suppliers
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Website
Endless Food Co. is a Copenhagen-based startup, founded by a group of chefs who wanted to create a socially and environmentally responsible alternative to chocolate. Their 'non-chocolate-chocolate' is crafted from carefully upcycled ingredients, including spent grain leftover from beer production, and cacao shells, which are often discarded. The team's mission is to bring positive changes to the entire industry.
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Freemont Foliage is a small-scale microgreen farm based in Helsinki, run by Miles Freemont Alexander. Founded in 2023, the project grew out of Miles’ long-standing interest in permaculture and a desire to grow food right in the city. The microgreens are grown vertically under LED lights using organic soil, which is composted after use. Today, Miles supplies restaurants directly and reuses all plastic packaging for deliveries, keeping the system simple and circular.
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Helsinki-based JooSoap makes cleaning products and hand soaps using cooking oil collected from local restaurants and households. Their range covers soap bars, powders and liquids, all made and packaged in Helsinki. JooSoap also shares knowledge and techniques internationally, collaborating with the Taichung Maple Culture Association and Eco-School in Taiwan. Together, they've run over 150 eco-soap workshops in Finland, Taiwan, and online, promoting sustainable practices and circular thinking in everyday cleaning products and habits.
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Kuorttisen Luomukanala in Lappeenranta is one of Finland’s oldest organic chicken farms, now run by the fourth generation. For over 100 years, the family has focused on the wellbeing of their birds. The chickens are free to move indoors and outdoors and are fed with the farm’s own organic fodder — including oats, half of which comes from their fields, where they only use composted farm manure. The farm’s brilliant organic brown eggs are collected and packaged on site.
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Liisa Tuulikki is a painter, designer, and digital artist based between Helsinki and Paris. Her playful practice spans painting and ceramics, drawing inspiration from pop culture, anime, and video games. She was one of the first ceramists we worked with at Nolla, creating plates and bowls for our kitchen. Her signature pieces include collectible art toys like the Tuulikki bunny and BUNBUN, and her work can be found in hotels and restaurants across the city.
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Salohiili is a charcoal, biochar, and firewood producer based in Pielavesi, founded in 1990 and run by Aimo Lipponen. Their barbecue and forge charcoal is made from Finnish birch and packed without plastic. The charcoal is produced using machinery designed and built in-house, developed specifically for this purpose. Where the process once relied on a kiln, today the birch is dried in a boiler with very limited oxygen, resulting in a clean, consistent charcoal well suited for cooking over fire.
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Sanna Reponen is a small-scale organic farmer in Sulkava, growing garlic across almost her entire 500 square meter plot. She also produces small amounts of oats and feed for a neighbouring organic dairy farm. Her garlic is highly sought after, often sold out before the next season even begins. Sanna keeps a low profile online and on social media, earning her the mysterious nickname “the invisible farmer.”
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Tukkutorin Kala, in Helsinki, is a fishmonger, café-restaurant, and wholesale seller founded in 2016 by fish expert Karl “Kala-Kalle” Huttunen. Most of their products come from local Finnish fishermen, with a few carefully selected items from overseas. They offer a wide range of fresh fish, shellfish, roe, and cured or smoked products, with their own smoker fed with alder. The café is open to anyone for a coffee, lunch, or a blini.
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Tuomaalan tila is a small-scale honey producer based in Tuusula. The farm is run by Pentti Ojapalo, who cares for around ten beehives and produces honey with a focus on quality and flavour, particularly suited to chefs and pâtissiers. The main source for nectar are various flowers in near by meadows such as honey flower, dandelion, raspberry, different clovers, sunflower, and cornflower.