Meet the Owners

Denanche' is a small business owned by husband and wife team, Lenny and Pika Fejeran. After 11 years in the Guam restaurant industry, creating and operating award-winning restaurants including Pika’s Café, Kitchen Lingo, and Kadu, Lenny was eager to fulfill a dream he had for Guam: to create a hot sauce made of local hot peppers, in tune with the local palate, and balanced so that it does not overwhelm the flavors intended by the cook. Thus, Denanche’ Brand was born, since day 1 we have been supporting local farmers and helping the island move away from imports. Biba!

Denanche’ Brand

A CHamoru-owned and Guam-based business, Denanche’ Brand manufactures craveable hot pepper condiments made from locally grown hot peppers.

By purchasing from Denanche’ Brand, you can trust that your money goes directly to supporting our local farmers. Our vision for Denanche’ Brand is to grow our business and become Guam’s #1 value-added export, so that we can be a guaranteed buyer for farmers throughout the region.

With your support, we can achieve our vision and share our unique local hot pepper and our CHamoru culture with our brothers and sisters around the world!

Lenny cooking hot sauce in a pot

FAMILIA INSPIRED

In Guam we are always with family. There is always a barbeque to go to and a fiesta to eat at… but the best is at your grandma’s house. The Hot Pepper Drizzle has a great influence from Lenny’s grandma’s back kitchen. He remembers his uncles and aunties taking a donne’ pepper, roasting it over the fire, toche’ (dip) it in some salt and lemon, and then taking a bite of it with each spoonful of food. 

This is exactly what our OG sauce, the Hot Pepper Drizzle, is. Made from hot peppers grown on Guam and naturally ripened under the tropical sun. The hot peppers are handpicked by farmers and fire roasted for full flavor. Each bottle is handcrafted in small batches and made with simple ingredients just like the way our uncles and aunties liked it! The Hot Pepper Drizzle is a taste of the Mariana Islands—grandma’s back kitchen, our home.

Pika & Lenny Fejeran, 2014

from restaurant to retail

By Lenny Fejeran

First of all I’m a native of Guam. Both my parents from the southern village of Agat and that’s also where I spent the first 18 years of my life and got my first job in F&B.

I moved to the states and built up my cooking resume immediately starting in Arizona to San Diego, Texas, Sacramento and finally built up most of my restaurant career in downtown LA.

After working and eating through those cities in a span of 10 years. I was finally ready to return home and open my own place.

My wife Pika and I moved back to Guam in 2010 and we started a small breakfast and lunch place called Pika’s Cafe. The popularity of Pika’s allowed us to expand to a location that was 2 1/2 times bigger. Although I created Pika’s cafe mostly for the local’s, the tourist were flowing in so we had to open a second location in Tumon Guam which is the the main tourist area. We called it Little Pika’s.

At Pika’s we served local style breakfast and gourmet style sandwiches. We made our traditional Donne’ Dinanche’ hot pepper paste in house. But as far as hot sauce goes, we only offered imported ones. I just never felt like it went well with all our dishes and would over power the dish pretty much ruining the flavors I intended to create. After all, that’s what being a cook is all about, putting your heart and soul into a dish and presenting the flavors you imagine in your mind.

So, I felt a little insulted sometimes when guests would use imported hot sauce on certain dishes. Of course I would always keep this to myself.

With the success of Pika’s cafe, we created a small fine dining concept called Kitchen Lingo. This time my partner was the head chef. This place also became very popular and very busy pretty much from the start. Chef Lingo’s dishes were at a much higher skill level and execution than the menu I did at Pika’s. It was very difficult to get in due to reservations being booked 3-4 weeks in advanced. Whoever was able to get a seat was in for a culinary adventure. So again being that Guam loves their hot sauce, ofcourse people would still request hot sauce with their food. Chef started making his own hot sauce but would always run out. Just didn’t have the time. So again we’d end up giving imported hot sauces which had either sugar or vinegar and we didn’t like that but we had to do it.

My next restaurant concept was called KÅDU. It was a local style soup concept that was super fast and convenient. All take out. It was meant to service the elderly and families with children who had no time to cook KÅDU after school or work. It was here that I was able to experiment with my dream hot sauce. I not only sold bottles at KÅDU for about a year but also served it at Kitchen Lingo to see what our fine dining guests thought about. The response was pretty much the same. Everyone enjoyed it with their meal.

KÅDU was open for a little over a year before the pandemic hit. Although we shut our doors permanently, one good thing that came from it was the Denanche’ hot pepper drizzle was created, tested and ready to hit the market. So we decided to go full on and make it a business.

So to put it simply, I wanted to create a hot sauce that was unique to Guam and that went well with all the dishes on my three completely different menus. Satisfy the spicy craving while still respecting the chef’s creations. The drizzle did just that.