Native Pittsburgher Reaches for the Stars With L.A.-Based Zac’s Sweet Shop

The nostalgic candy company, which started in a McKeesport kitchen, now caters movie premieres and Oscar parties.
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PHOTO COURTESY OF ZAC’S SWEET SHOP

Zac Coughlin is a Pittsburgh-born candy maker who counts Beyoncé as one of his biggest fans.

In June 2020, Beyoncé Knowles-Carter, the most Grammy-nominated artist in history, put Zac’s Sweet Shop on her list of Top 20 black-owned food businesses in the United States.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF ZAC’S SWEET SHOP

Coughlin was in his dorm room at the University of Southern California when he noticed an influx of traffic on his company website – it was all coming from Beyonce.com.

“It was life-changing,” says the 27-year-old, who launched Zac’s Sweet Shop in his family’s McKeesport kitchen when he was 13. “It was a really personal thing for me; to be proud of who I am and where I come from. I hope to inspire other little Zacs into following their dreams.”

This Gen Z Willy Wonka spent his childhood in several Pittsburgh neighborhoods, including White Oak, Squirrel Hill and Shadyside, but his heart and mind never wavered far from dessert. After sampling a Godiva-brand chocolate-covered strawberry at the mall (and balking at the $5 price tag!), Coughlin vowed to make his own, more affordable confections.

At a holiday party, he debuted his first batch of colorful chocolate-dipped strawberries, pretzels and Oreos. They were a hit.

He started writing his own recipes for nostalgic treats such as cookie dough truffles, cake-butter cookies and caramel-drizzled pretzels. With his parents’ support, he bought $50-worth of business cards and started a Facebook page. The pint-sized entrepreneur sold sweets to friends, family members, neighbors and even his classmates — until district administrators gently told him it wasn’t permitted on middle school grounds.

He now runs Zac’s Sweet Shop out of a small commissary kitchen in Los Angeles. The sugary products ship nationwide. Thanks to a communications degree from USC, he pours just as much artistic passion into branding and marketing as he does the sweets, often creating custom flavors for Hollywood trendsetters.

“It’s not just a chocolate-covered pretzel, it’s an experience,” he says. “I want people to feel something — like a kid in a candy store — when they open a box.”

Earlier this year, Oscar-winning celebrities such as “Oppenheimer”-star Cillian Murphy gobbled up the goods during an Academy Awards ceremony after-party. Coughlin’s also made snacks for the 2023 premieres of “The Color Purple” and “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem.”

Although his family just relocated to North Carolina, Coughlin makes frequent trips back to the ‘Burgh to catch a Pirates game, eat breakfast at Pamela’s and appear on PTL. This summer he’s planning a collaboration with a beloved local ice cream stand and he hopes to someday open a Zac’s Sweet Shop storefront in his hometown.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF ZAC’S SWEET SHOP

Coughlin says being adopted gave him grit and the determination to prove himself in a variety of different environments, from the 412 all the way to 90210.

“I want my business to appeal to different kinds of people,” he says. “It’s hard being a fish out of water, but if I’m the only person who looks like me, then that’s my secret weapon.”

Categories: PGHeats