Minos: Family to me, is everything. I mean without that, then what's the point of life?
My name is Minos Eliopoulos, I’m managing director of Brookhaven Marketplace in the Chicago metro area.
My father’s name is Andreas Eliopoulos. He’s my mentor. Life for my father growing up was very difficult. He was born & raised in Greece.
Andy: We’re farmers, cultivate the earth, plant corn, grow apples but only for the house.
When I got to be 18 years old, I emigrated to the United States for a better life.
Minos: My family’s been working with the Anthony Marano Company since the late 60s. I buy the majority of my produce from them. They’re a one-stop shop. Anything you want, you’re gonna find it there.
Andy: I used to take Minos with me after school, when he was like 10, 11 years old, and show him around, how to do it. And he liked it, he was full of life.
It’s like a madhouse, it’s so busy, but they work so fast, it’s unbelievable.
Minos: You have to look left & right like you’re crossing the street. It’s nonstop beeping.
Andy:
Minos: To me this is the funnest part of my day. You come in here, you wanna buy this, start yelling at each other, and tomorrow you’re best friends again, so, for me, these guys are like part of my family, because I see them 4-5 times a week for the last 25 years. I mean, I know them, I know their parents, I’ve bought from their grandparents, and now I’m buying from the kids. And the way I’m going for another 30 years I’m going to be buying from their kids, so it’s a lot of generations.
Coming down here at a young age with my father, he was trying to teach me what to look for in every type of produce. The color, the shape, and he would have me taste everything.
I like to say that I’m one of the last of the Mohicans. There’s not many companies out there that come down here every day trying to pick out the right stuff.
Driscoll’s has very high standards. It has to pass a certain level, or they won’t even pack it with their name on it.
When I’m here, going through a lot of the pallets, there’s a lot of different growing regions. So, I try to pick what’s in the middle of the season because that’s usually the right size, right color, right sweetness to it.
It is a family business and there’s no better partners than your own family, because as I see what we’ve built, it’s our blood that we’ve put into the business, and our, all our hard work, and all the successes sowing from it. And that’s what I’m trying to teach to my children and tell ‘em the more you put into something the more you’ll get out of it.
It brings back a lot of memories when I’m trying to teach my son something because I see my dad telling me the exact same thing.
20 years later, I’m like wow I didn’t realize what he was really telling me back then. So now I’m trying to instill that work ethic into my son, show him responsibility.
Blackberries, strawberries here. Do you see how I separate the colors?
It’s passing our family values onto the next generation, and I can see him in me, and I can see my father in him.
Andy: Excellent, excellent.
Andrew: It’s important because I’m learning the hard way. When you do something for such a long period of time, like my dad, my grandpa, and it’s worked, and it’s successful, they don’t want you to change it. And they’re trying to teach me the ways of success, so that’s what I’m doing.
Minos: My dad came over here with nothing. Started a business from scratch, expanded and he’s enjoying his life, and everything is great. And I’m pretty sure he wouldn’t change anything.
Andy: Family means to me everything, whatever I do it’s for my family. That’s my love, my life. You know, we’re a family. We’re tight, very tight.