Cherry on top: 9-year-old baking entrepreneur cuts check to pay off KC students’ negative lunch balances
June 19, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Baking is the perfect recipe for spreading joy — owning a small business should be too, said 9-year-old Ire Cherry, recalling the moment she stood before administrators at University Academy in Kansas City, holding a check wider than she is tall.
“My mom and her sister were talking about people in Virginia who couldn’t pay their lunch accounts,” Cherry, a budding entrepreneur who launched Very Cherry Bakery from her parents’ home last year, said of the moment she decided she could use her income to sprinkle a little kindness.
“She also witnessed that some kids couldn’t go on field trips because they had [an outstanding lunch] balance,” added Karien Cherry, Ire Cherry’s dad.
“She took it upon herself to say, ‘Hey, I can contribute to this. I can use some of the money that I made for my bakery to help pay off these accounts.’ … Then it went from there.”
Ire Cherry hand-delivered a larger-than-life $150 check — inspired by her love for such competition baking TV programs as “The Great British Baking Show” — to school officials in May, paying off negative balances on a handful of lunch accounts, explained Karien Cherry.
“We didn’t think anything would come from it. It was just a good idea, we thought, just to help out other kids … that’s what we teach her in the household,” he said of his daughter’s decision to give back to her peers.
Long drawn to the allure of candy-coated, binge-worthy baking shows, artistry and the thrill of competition first inspired Ire Cherry’s passion for baking, she said.
“It’s a lot of pressure,” the 9-year-old Kansas City girl said of “Cupcake Wars” — the Food Network reality show she most frequently daydreams of competing on. “I like all the different things they can make.”
It was no surprise to Cherry’s family when the interest manifested into something more, recalling the day she found a stray package of peppermint Oreos and quickly transformed them into a silky cheesecake, recalled Karien Cherry.
“I told her she can’t keep it in the house ‘cause I’ll be 300 pounds,” he laughed, pinpointing the moment his daughter decided she could start her own business.
Ire Cherry’s piggy bank is primarily filled by showings at bake sales and events along with a decent flow of catering work — a hands-on lesson in entrepreneurship, she noted, sharing her wish to see more business classes in the area’s public schools.
“To me, its a life course,” Karien Cherry added. “She gets so many skills from outside of school.”
A year into life as owner of Very Cherry Bakery, Ire Cherry has found new confidence, her father said in example of the ways he’s seen her grow.
“A lot of kids don’t look at adults in the eye or talk to adults. So, you know, having that confidence, building that confidence when she’s out there selling goods and talking to adults and you know her math skills [have improved], then it’s science. Like it’s the full STEM thing,” he said with pride.
“I just see it bettering her at this young age. ‘Cause I’ve always taught her, it doesn’t matter how old you are or what size you are, you can contribute to this world,” he added.
Watching his daughter fold her business sense into a love for the community she’s growing up in has been a valuable experience for Kieran Cherry, he added, highlighting an observed and newfound sense of fearlessness that now serves as his daughter’s motivation to someday land a spot on one of her favorite shows.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kansas City’s Five Elms injects $4M in Omaha startup
Kansas City-based Five Elms Capital recently led a round of financing for an Omaha blog-hosting startup. Five Elms led a $4 million round for Flywheel, allowing the startup to add features to its platform for designers and agencies, as well as beef up marketing and sales operations. Linseed Capital and the Nebraska Angels, a network…
Rapid growth propelling grand ambitions for PopBookings
Only weeks after releasing its latest product, event staffing tech firm PopBookings is hiring staff and looking for capital to accommodate for rapid growth. In the last six weeks the Kansas City-based startup has added thousands of users to its platform on which staffing agencies can hire and manage temporary labor for specific events. Now…
Video: Foosball and whimsy are integral to the RFP365 ethos
Kansas City foosball virtuoso Stuart Ludlow knows his way around the fútbol table. With a strike rivaling a Black Mamba’s, Ludlow’s instincts and supple wrist on the foosball pitch puts to shame most any adversary. But perhaps equally as cunning is Ludlow’s savvy to integrate the table game into the workplace culture of RFP365, of which he’s a co-founder. Founded in 2012,…
MIT-modeled mentorship arrives in Kansas City
A new MIT-modeled mentorship program is available to Kansas City entrepreneurs. The Enterprise Center in Johnson County is now accepting applications for its new mentoring program, the Growth Mentoring Service, which adopts the approach of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Venture Mentoring Service. The free, two-year program is welcoming all entrepreneurs who meet its guidelines…

