‘Way more on our plate’: How COVID-19 transformed chefs into fortune tellers and perfectionists
May 26, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop.
It’s a tough time to be in the business of food — but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a path forward, said Chad Tillman, emphasizing Strang Hall’s readiness to tackle new challenges.
“We just look for slow and precautionary measures to get right back to where we were,” Tillman, the chef behind the food hall’s Norcini kitchen — which specializes in craft pizzas and sandwiches, said of what business now looks like at the downtown Overland Park-based chef collective.
Newly reopened for curbside service after a six-week hiatus, operations at Strang Hall have taken a safety-first approach in the midst of the city’s mid-pandemic reopening, Strang Hall told Startland News.
All employees are using a COVID-19 screening tool — issued by Apple and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — and their temperature is taken at the beginning of every shift.
In the dining room, seating capacity has been cut in half, all bar stools have been removed, and tables have been rearranged in line with social distancing standards of six feet. Tables are routinely cleaned and sanitized between guests and again with a sanitizing wipe — for added reassaurance — when customers are seated.
Click here to read about Strang Hall’s commitment to cashless sales.
“It’s probably going to take a little longer than what we want,” Tillman said of the road back to pre-pandemic operations. “[Customers are] being safe, they’re unsure, they’re timid. We have people who walk up to the doors, looking in like, ‘Are you really open?’ … I get that there’s concern from people.”
Similar concern rocked Tillman’s world as he ramped up his own plans for a busy spring, he said.
“It was an awe shocking experience. … It was like you planted a seed and that seed grew into a plant and that plant went through and produced no actual fruit — and then all of a sudden that it was gone,” he explained.
Restaurants don’t overcome such challenges just because Stay at Home orders are lifted, Tillman added.
“The ability to hire people back who have been off or furloughed — and are making considerably more than what they were making before they left. These are all challenges and tasks that we’re being faced with. And not to mention, the lights still have to be turned on and paid for. There’s way more on our plate,” he said of challenges for COVID-era restaurateurs.
“It’s not like we were just guys that cooked food before. We have to be fortune tellers and perfectionists and there’s so many different hats that we have to put on now.”
One silver lining: The unexpected time off because of the COVID-19 shutdowns helped Tillman come up with new ideas for Norcini and its menu — something he’s hopeful customers new and old will appreciate as they venture back out into the world.
“There are a couple of the concepts here [at Strang Hall] that had an opportunity to somewhat rebrand. So they took that opportunity,” he said of neighboring concepts within the food hall. “I think that by doing that, it just gives them the ability to do what they need to do to provide quality food, that people are going to buy — and are happy to buy — and are excited to come back and try again.”
Click here to place a curbside order at Strang Hall.

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Meat the moment with valor: Veteran cattle rancher deploys co-op model to save the Midwest cowboy
WESTON, Mo. — Almost a decade after launching KC Cattle Company — his veteran-owned and -operated wagyu beef company — Patrick Montgomery is forging a new path to help fellow ranchers and farmers survive. He’s now digging his spurs into Valor Provisions, a direct-to-consumer online marketplace offering premium proteins from small, independent, veteran-owned ranches like…
Student-raised meats graduate to university storefront as consumers look closer at what makes the cut
WARRENSBURG, Mo. — A new partnership puts pork chops, brats and select cuts from across farming projects at the University of Central Missouri in a retail storefront accessible to community members shopping for locally raised meat. UCM Farms — which spans more than 1,000 acres of farm ground within 10 miles of campus — is…
Nonprofit founder, tech people leader join Kauffman as trustees on shared mission: economic inclusivity
The year-long transformation of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation continues this week as the influential philanthropic organization announced two new trustees meant to bolster its rebooted grantmaking strategy and commitment to driving equitable economic mobility in Kansas City. Newly appointed leaders to the Kauffman Foundation’s Board of Trustees, Aimée Eubanks Davis and Kristen Ludgate bring…
No cookie-cutter way to create an entrepreneur, so what’s the catalyst? Inside KU’s venture test lab
Editor’s note: The University of Kansas’ School of Business is a partner of Startland News. It’s a practical testing ground for KU students to flex their entrepreneurial muscles, Ryan Rains said, describing a business program built for could-be entrepreneurs who aren’t necessarily even business majors — and who, ultimately, might choose to abandon their concept…





