This Venezuelan Entrepreneur Craved His Favorite Comfort Food – So He Started a Business Selling It

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

German Sierra, founder of Pana Food Truck in Santa Cruz, California, never imagined his craving for a childhood comfort food would lead him to build a thriving business with a loyal following and the distinction of Yelp’s Top 100 Food Trucks.

“My brother and I came to the United States in 2016 [from Venezuela],” he says. “There weren’t any arepas. We actually eat arepas every day in Venezuela, so we needed them. My brother was like, ‘Hey, why don’t we make some arepas and take them to the streets, and maybe people will buy them?'”

Armed with foil-wrapped arepas and homemade Venezuelan juices, the brothers set up outside a supermarket. They didn’t sell a single one. A police officer stopped them, asking for a permit they didn’t know they needed. Instead of giving up, Sierra gave the food away and kept searching for a way forward.

Related: They Built Their First Restaurant With Their ‘Bare Hands.’ Now They Have 380 Locations.

“Sometimes there’s a little miscommunication between entities. Sometimes the health department will [have] different rules than the city,” Sierra says, describing the challenges he faced trying to get his business off the ground. “There are specific places to park. You cannot park everywhere because there’s gonna be competition with restaurants.”

As a business with one core offering, Sierra had to sell the value of arepas to customers who had never heard of them.

“It was hard in the beginning — and [is] still hard — to convince people why we don’t have other dishes,” Sierra says. “We wanted to focus on arepas [so] there is no confusion of what we sell, and it’s memorable.”

Small adjustments, like listing arepas as “chicken” or “beef” on the menu, helped introduce the dish to American diners and reduce confusion without losing cultural authenticity. “When customers come, they want 30-second decisions — no half an hour figuring out the menu and what to get,” Sierra says.

Related: He Grew His Small Business to a $25 Million Operation By Following These 5 Principles

As word spread, Sierra focused on making connections with customers, pairing education about the food with free samples to encourage repeat visits. Early on, he recognized that an excellent customer experience made people more likely to choose Pana over another restaurant.

“I didn’t wanna be just in the food truck business,” he says. “I want to be in the heart-warming business, because the food makes your heart warm. That’s the emotion I want to create every time.”

Now celebrating six years in business, Pana continues to grow while staying true to its roots. In 2025, Sierra and his wife, Gabriella Ramirez, opened their first brick-and-mortar restaurant in downtown Santa Cruz. “It wasn’t an overnight success, and we’re still growing and improving,” Sierra says. “We are just a baby, and there’s so much that we can change and improve.”

For Sierra, every arepa is a chance to share a piece of home, and to build what he calls “an arepa empire, one arepa at a time.”

Related: These Brothers Turned a 2-Man Operation Into One of the Most Trusted Companies in Their Area. Here’s How.

After turning a craving for arepas into one of Yelp’s Top 100 Food Trucks of 2025 and opening a brick-and-mortar, Sierra’s advice for current and future business owners is clear:

  • Start small but stay consistent. Break overwhelming challenges into smaller steps and commit to showing up for your customers every day.
  • Adapt to your audience while staying authentic. Customer education can help your audience understand new offerings and grow goodwill in your community.
  • Lead with generosity. Warm service and meaningful interactions matter just as much as what’s on the menu. Customers return not only for flavor, but also for connection.
  • Think about the big picture. For Sierra, selling arepas was never just about food — it was about creating heart-warming experiences. Any platform, whether it’s a food truck or restaurant, can be a vehicle to share your mission.
  • Play the long game. Building something meaningful takes time, patience and passion. If your business isn’t an immediate success, research the steps you’ll need to take to achieve smaller goals that get you closer to your vision.

Watch the episode above to hear directly from German Sierra, and subscribe to Behind the Review for more from new business owners and reviewers every Wednesday.

Editorial contributions by Jiah Choe and Kristi Lindahl

Read More
Emily Washcovick

Latest

Study suggests fibroid rates in Latina women may be lower than previously thought

🛡️ Just a quick check We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse

Rimas Entertainment Presents SONAR: ‘A Record Label Where Artists Can Develop with Freedom’

The label's roster includes Cris MJ, Yan Block, Hades66 and more. Jesús Rodríguez, head of label, SONAR SONAR / Rimas Entertainment Español Rimas Entertainment officially unveils SONAR, a record label focused on the development and projection of artists within the Latin music market, Billboard can announce exclusively today (April 29). The initiative is part of

YouTube’s Tuma Basa to Exit as Director of Black Music & Culture

MusicAfter eight years at the streaming giant, the...

Feza – Khanyisa

MusicDOWNLOAD MP3 SONG...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Study suggests fibroid rates in Latina women may be lower than previously thought

🛡️ Just a quick check We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse

Rimas Entertainment Presents SONAR: ‘A Record Label Where Artists Can Develop with Freedom’

The label's roster includes Cris MJ, Yan Block, Hades66 and more. Jesús Rodríguez, head of label, SONAR SONAR / Rimas Entertainment Español Rimas Entertainment officially unveils SONAR, a record label focused on the development and projection of artists within the Latin music market, Billboard can announce exclusively today (April 29). The initiative is part of

YouTube’s Tuma Basa to Exit as Director of Black Music & Culture

MusicAfter eight years at the streaming giant, the...

Feza – Khanyisa

MusicDOWNLOAD MP3 SONG...

The Vogue Business Funding Tracker

Introducing the Vogue Business Funding Tracker, a running list highlighting the most notable and intriguing investment and M&A activity in fashion and beauty. From emerging disruptors to legacy giants undergoing major changes, we spotlight the deals that are shifting the dynamics of the sectors we cover, including fashion, beauty, tech and sustainability. April 2026 Icicle

Family Business? Tee Grizzley Reacts After His Mom Accuses Him Of Leaving Her To Struggle (PHOTOS)

Y’all… it looks like some family tension might be brewing behind the scenes involving Tee Grizzley and his mom. What seemed like a regular social media post quickly turned into something deeper. And now, folks are side-eyeing the situation and wondering what’s really going on. RELATED: Tee Grizzley Shares A Message For Artists After His

SoE necessary but not sufficient, business leaders say

PE­TER CHRISTO­PHER Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter pe­ter.christo­pher@guardian.co.tt Heavy hand­ed but nec­es­sary giv­en the state of crime in T&T. This was a com­mon as­sess­ment from var­i­ous busi­ness groups when asked for their per­spec­tive on the lat­est de­c­la­ra­tion of a state of emer­gency in the coun­try. The T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce, in a re­leased is­sued yes­ter­day