Dead Beet Eats: Life is hard enough — feed your soul with a big, beautiful chili dog

October 19, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Vegan chili dog at Dead Beet Eats

COVID hasn’t handed Katherine Willis many lemons, she said, but the vegan chef behind Dead Beet Eats has been given plenty of tomatoes in 2020 — and an opportunity to turn salsa into ketchup.

Dead Beet Eats

“It’s been a really hard year and I like to think that what we’re doing is really lighthearted and it’s really fun,” explained Willis, who owns the Kansas City pop-up taco shop-turned-hot dog stand and operates it alongside her boyfriend, Jon Terry. 

“We were doing these pop-ups and they were really successful; they were a lot of fun and we would pack people in bars. But once COVID hit it just didn’t make sense for us — obviously —  to sustain the same trajectory,” she continued, noting the couple pivoted the business from selling vegan tacos and junk food within a space to slinging vegan hot dogs and treats from a traveling shop.

While they couldn’t immediately afford a food truck in their quest to quickly mobilize the business in a socially distant way, Willis and Terry had the budget for a hot dog cart — made available to them by the transition of another Kansas City-cooked, vegan staple, Peaceful Pig. 

“With the cart I was just like, OK, I need a job,’ I need money to be able to buy a food truck and to one day open my own restaurant,” Willis said. “So I sort of just had this crazy idea one day to buy it.”

Jon Terry and Katherine Willis, Dead Beet Eats

Jon Terry and Katherine Willis, Dead Beet Eats

On the grill since July, the hot dog cart has found success within the local brewery scene, making frequent stops at places like Torn Label Brewing and Strange Days Brewing Co., in addition to the Barista Mercantile at Marcell Coffee Company and the Strawberry Swing Indie Craft Fair. Leaving vegan and carnivorous customers alike lining up to sample the cart’s latest creations, the menu includes such staples as a vegan chili dog drizzled with cashew cream. 

Katherine Willis, Dead Beet Eats

Katherine Willis, Dead Beet Eats

“I hate to use the word ‘trashy,’ but I really feel like it embodies what we’re doing,” Willis laughed, referencing her creative craving to turn junk food on its head for Kansas City’s vegan community. 

“I don’t know if putting mac and cheese on a hot dog or in a taco is doing anything crazy, but I try to really tap into stuff that’s nostalgic and that just feels fun and easy, and I don’t try to take myself or my business too seriously,” she continued. “I just want to make people feel good through their food.”

Click here to check out Dead Beet Eats offerings on Instagram.

Community support for the effort — which expects to get back to tacos with a brick-and-mortar space at some point in the future — has offered reinforcement for Willis that Kansas City’s vegan scene could be just as vibrant as its BBQ. 

“Everyone is just really stoked to have options,” she said. “And there are so many different types of things happening right now and I feel like people are grateful for what we’re doing.”

Reaction has been welcoming, Willis continued, noting they’ve been embraced by other vegan businesses in Kansas City.

Dead Beet Eats

While the mobile shop has made business ownership easier on Willis and Terry during the pandemic, COVID’s overall impact on local restaurants and small businesses hasn’t scared the couple away from their long-term goal to own their own space, Willis added. 

Dead Beet Eats

Dead Beet Eats

“It’s a huge commitment, especially with a pandemic happening. But what I want isn’t the traditional, big, sit down restaurant,” she explained, sharing her vision for more of a grab and go concept. 

“I really just want a little corner shop where you can come in and get some tacos and sit on the curb and eat them with your friends or take them to your back porch.”

Such a vision is all part of Willis’ quest to “make vegan food weird again.”

“I think life is hard enough, let’s just put some fun ingredients together and see what happens,” she said. 

“You can’t really be having a bad day when somebody hands you a big, beautiful chili dog or a chocolate chip cookie. What we’re doing is really simple and really authentic — and it just tastes really good and feels good for your soul. That makes a lot of people happy, including myself.”

Click here to check out Dead Beet Eats on Facebook.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Kharissa Forte, Holistic Hustle, Grace & Grind

        Faking it ’til you make it might be why you have imposter syndrome (Holistic Hustle)

        By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

        Kharissa Forte is a writer, certified health coach, and columnist for Startland News. For more of her self-care tips on how to keep your cup full, visit graceandgrind.co. I’m not one to get caught up in the hoop-lah of celebrity crushes, but if there’s anyone who I #WCW it’s my Pisces twin Rihanna. (I mean,…

        Nick Carter, Market Wagon

        Can tech save the family farm? E-commerce farmers market plants seeds in Kansas City

        By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

        An Indianapolis-based startup is planting seeds of change it hopes can enhance the ways growers and producers get their products into the hands of customers. Kansas Citians are harvesting from it in bushels.  “This is definitely a business of passion for me,” Nick Carter said, recalling his upbringing and days spent on his family’s farm…

        TripleBlind team 2021

        ‘Everybody at TripleBlind is better than me,’ founder says as top startup’s global team firewalls groupthink

        By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

        Startup companies are on a continual mission to create, define and own the category in which they operate within, Riddhiman Das noted, and to do so — startup founders must build a proficient team.  “If you’re not the category-defining company, then it’s not as big a win. Categories are typically defined at the global level,…

        Tyler Shane's artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

        First bite of Tyler Shane: This spicy new pairing with Westport favorite Café Corazón has cacao lovers going nuts

        By Tommy Felts | February 5, 2022

        ‘I want people to sit down and really have a moment with their chocolate’ When Tyler Shane bites into a piece of chocolate, all of her senses come alive to fully indulge in the experience. “Food, for me, is almost like a religious experience,” she said. After spending seven years at Christopher Elbow Chocolates, the…