
After nearly 15 years growing Fruition Chocolate Works from its main factory and retail café in Shokan, New York, chocolatiers Bryan and Dahlia Graham saw an obvious next step – cross the Hudson River and bring the brand closer to a new set of customers in Westfair country.
In a recent interview with the Westfair Business Journal, Bryan Graham explained how expanding to the vibrant Eastdale Village location in Poughkeepsie seemed lika a natural progression as Fruition’s Hudson Valley business continued to build momentum.
In the first year, he and wife Dahlia are tracking a range of indicators for the new shop – particularly the basics of whether people are discovering Fruition and walking through the door.
“We’re certainly interested in foot traffic and brand awareness,” Graham said. But when it comes to judging early performance, he made clear that the most reliable scorecard is financial: “Ultimately, we are looking most closely at revenue targets.”
To keep the evaluation grounded, Fruition – already the recipient of 75 national awards for its product, made from ethically sourced Latin American cacao – is benchmarking the Poughkeepsie shop against the established Shokan location.

“We are measuring it against revenue at the factory store in Shokan and, so far, we’re pleased with the trajectory.” But he added cautiously, “Because the store only opened officially on Feb 1, 2026, we will see what the future brings.”
Retail growth is only part of Fruition’s broader footprint. On the wholesale side, Graham pointed to one channel as the most repeatable. “Specialty grocers have been the most scalable in terms of our wholesale market,” he said, adding that Fruition’s reach now extends well beyond the Hudson Valley. That may be an understatement, as Fruition products can now be found in 600 stores nationwide, including Adam’s, Bread Alone and Whole Foods in the Northeast.
That expansion hasn’t come at the expense of local identity. If anything, Graham views “Hudson Valley-made” as a built-in advantage.
“People love shopping local,” he said, emphasizing that Fruition remains tied to its Catskill Mountains / Hudson Valley identity.
Graham also described a company structure designed to protect that identity and the creative decisions behind the product. He and his wife own the business outright and value the control that comes with it. He said that while the company is exploring opportunities for the future, the team is happy to have built a strong foundation and “to maintain full control over the creative process and pace of growth.”
That preference for control also shaped how Fruition approached the costs of opening in Poughkeepsie. Rather than adding new borrowing for the second shop, the company financed it internally without taking on additional debt.

Earlier in Fruition’s growth, however, Graham did make use of local financing support to expand manufacturing capacity. The business received loans from the Ulster County Economic Development Alliance and the Catskill Watershed Foundation to help scale the factory. The trade-off, Graham said, was administrative lift. But he described the terms as “worth it,” citing low interest rates and adding that Fruition was very close to having both paid off in full.
On the people side, Graham acknowledged that staffing can be difficult in chocolate and retail – particularly keeping teams stable. “Turnover is a challenge, especially in our industry,” he said. Fruition’s response has been to invest in internal culture and development. “We do a lot of team building,” he added, as the company “incorporate(s) room for growth into our plans with respect to employees.”
Lastly, when asked what most singles out Fruition chocolate in a crowded premium chocolate market – and which marketing levers deliver the best returns – Graham put it down to the product itself.
“Just taste the chocolate, and you will see,” said Shokan’s – and now Poughkeepsie’s – rightfully proud chocolatier.













