Better the next day: Halal street food thrives to-go with a simple recipe — optimism, good food and hungry neighbors
October 1, 2020 | Austin Barnes
While countless local restaurants have struggled through pandemic-served challenges, business has been nothing short of amazing for Brookside Pakastani staple Chai Shai, said Aasma Tufail.
“I cook simple food — and people love it so much. I am so blessed, business has been better than before,” said Tufail, who owns the restaurant alongside son, Kashif, and serves as its cook.
There’s no secret recipe for Chai Shai’s success, she added, just careful planning and early adoption of curbside service offerings — noting the restaurant has focused on carryout as a primary way of reaching customers for the entirety of its decade in business.
“And our food is better the next day than the first day,” Tufail joked.
Free from the threat of an operations upheaval, Chai Shai has instead been able to focus on the thing Tufail loves most: making street food that can be enjoyed with tea.
“I love cooking simple food. I put so much love into it. Simple food has no crazy spices, it’s not spicy,” she said. “It’s healthy food — healthy food I cook for my family.”

Aasma Tufail making beef samosa, Chai Shai; photo by Zachary Linhares
Boasting menu items like a lamb roll, pakora curry, and chicken, beef or vegetable samosas — with emphasis on finding ways to reach vegetarian customers, the restaurant’s menu adds as much heart to Kansas City’s plate as it does culture, Tufail said.
“People say, ‘It’s just like my mom cooked this food,’ so many people have told me that. It’s home cooked food, it’s nothing special. But people like it.”
Click here to place a curbside order at Chai Shai.
Such a fondness from neighborhood customers has been more than enough to keep the doors open amid uncertain times, Tufail added, grateful for the support of the Brookside community and customers from across the metro.
“We’ve made so many good friends, met so many wonderful people. So many people online will say, ‘We love the food,’ or, ‘We miss you guys,’ we know our customers so much,” she said.
“Hopefully this thing will get over and we’ll get to see all our friends. They’re wonderful people.”

Aasma Tufail, Chai Shai; photo by Zachary Linhares

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How Meshuggah Bagels ‘built a bakery without a recipe’ — now expanding to Liberty, Lawrence
Pete Linde tested 72 bagel recipes before hitting perfection with number 73, said Janna Linde. She knows because she tried every single test bagel. “Pete worked on that recipe for about a year. He had a notebook and took notes on every little tweak and modification he made. I’d see the big hand mixer come…
Royals preview ballpark of the future: Now they need to decide where to put it
Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter. The Royals are choosing between a stadium and entertainment district in Kansas City’s East Village or in North Kansas City. The…
Chingu Coffee blends ‘familiar with not-so-familiar’ in a shop that embraces its neighbors alongside Korean heritage
Keeyoung Kim’s latest concepts — Chingu and Chingu Coffee — revolve around community, the Sura Eats chef and owner shared. Chingu means “friend” in Korean, he explained, and friendship is the recurring theme between the restaurant — which debuted July 2022 in Westport — and the coffee shop — which soft opened in mid-May in…
Serial entrepreneur jumps back into the founder seat with smart online advertising platform
Two years after becoming a twice-exited startup founder, Matt Watson is back at the helm of a new venture: At Capacity — a smart advertising platform geared toward small business owners who offer home services like plumbing, HVAC, and electrical work. Serving as co-founder of At Capacity alongside Meg Stapleton, Watson said the company officially…



