The Prospect: ‘Cutthroat Kitchen’ winner on the move with chef-inspired workforce training
April 16, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
Everyday consumers can elevate Kansas City through the simple of act of eating a meal, said Chef Shanita McAfee-Bryant.
Her in-the-works non-profit urban eatery concept — The Prospect — caters to a marketplace hungry for culinary-oriented workforce development training: students looking for a window into entrepreneurship through cooking, said Bryant, 2014 winner of Food Network’s TV cooking competition “Cutthroat Kitchen” and owner of local catering company Magnolias on the Move.
“We have lots of workforce development programs that give people an opportunity to get training, but they won’t deal with the whole person,” Bryant told a crowd gathered Wednesday for 1 Million Cups Kansas City at Plexpod’s Medallion Theater. “We don’t address the issues that can keep them from keeping the job, so they wind up going from place to place to place.”
Click here to learn more about The Prospect.
The Prospect is named after its students, she said, preferring to call the population in need of training “prospects” rather than characterize them as “poor” or “underserved.”
“I don’t like those terms because that’s not always the case,” she added. “They’re just people who need a little extra support, and if we’re all honest, [we’ve all] been in a moment where [we] could use a little extra support.”
The 16-week program — in a space yet to be determined — is expected to address all the needs of a student, Bryant said, noting additional wraparound services aided by other non-profits.
“The restaurant is going to have training and then all the additional support we’re going to bring in is going to make it easier for them to be successful,” she said.
Catalyst Kitchens, a Seattle-based social enterprise network with a similar concept, is expected to work closely with The Prospect to supply the curriculum and models for instructor trainings, she added, noting that other workforce development training programs in the metro can be pipelines in or to continuing education for students.
“They are not competition,” Byrant said. “I’ve talked to several of them and they can be partners. [Students] can start there and then come to me, then we can support them until they’re able to move on. Any program that you can think of in the city — whether it be the culinary program at the Kansas City, Missouri, school district or the Job Corps — we can all work together.”
The idea requires $200,000 to get off the ground, she said, noting that if fundraising goes well, the non-profit is expected to find a Kansas City home in early 2020.
“We’re in negotiations with a couple of places now,” she added. “Some of them are ready to go, and some of them are more work … [The time frame on getting students] really is based on location [as well].”
The next steps will also include gathering a board and an addition of seven to nine instructors, said Bryant, noting her network of peers in the culinary industry can be tapped for supplemental learning.
“We are for the [people] of the world who are trying to make a difference and trying to do better for themselves, but are not getting the opportunity,” she said.
Watch The Prospect presentation at 1 Million Cups Kansas City below.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
This ‘Tiny Town’ just opened on Spring Hill’s Main Street; here’s how it’s connecting kids growing up in KC’s urban sprawl
SPRING HILL, Kansas — Two sister companies on the edge of the Kansas City metro are now offering a scoop of ice cream with a drizzle of imagination on top. Three years ago, Dale and JoAnn Romano opened Pop’s Sweet Shop on Main Street in downtown Spring Hill, a nostalgic ice cream parlor that also…
Serial entrepreneur Matt Watson completes strategic buy-out of Full Scale
A prominent, twice-exited Kansas City entrepreneur has acquired full control of a company he co-founded five years ago — with plans to expand its leadership team and grow its employee count from 300 to 500 in 2025. Matt Watson announced Monday the completion of a strategic buyout of his co-founder, Matt DeCoursey, at Kansas City,…
He dreams of a pickle truck driving through your neighborhood; How word of mouth fuels Ritchie Cherry’s Good Ass Pickles
Ritchie Cherry has good friends to thank for his latest business venture, Good Ass Pickles, he shared. After trying his sweet and spicy garlic pickles during the pandemic, he said, they encouraged him to sell them — with one friend even buying him a case of jars to fill. “They all just started me off,…
KC’s first Hispanic beer company faces make-or-break holiday season; this popup could tap its potential
A holiday-time popup location for Kansas City’s first Hispanic brewing company offers a taste of what’s to come if Rizoma Liquid Creations gains the support it needs for a brick-and-mortar space of its own, said Damon Arredondo. “We can’t get the capital at this moment, so doing these events allows us to bring in potential…


