Bamboo Penny’s plants KC Thai in Leawood, plating culture alongside pineapple fried rice

April 13, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Penny Mufuka, Bamboo Penny’s

Fearlessness is on the menu for Chef Penny Mufuka, a 25-year veteran of the stovetop, bringing to boil plans for a second Johnson County-cooked restaurant in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Bamboo Penny’s Leawood

Bamboo Penny’s Leawood

“It makes me sweat everyday,” Mufuka laughed, musing the decision she made with husband and co-owner, Doug Mufuka, to open Bamboo Penny’s in a two-story, 5,400-square-foot space within Leawood’s Park Place shopping center.

Slated to open later this spring, Bamboo Penny’s will mark the couple’s third metro restaurant. Thai House opened in 2013 in South Kansas City. KC Thai followed late last year in Overland Park, amid the global health crisis. 

“We’ve had second thoughts — and third thoughts about doing it,” Doug Mufuka added. “We just had to have some confidence in the future.”

And Bamboo Penny’s aims to inspire just that as the metro enters a period of re-emergence. 

The restaurant is expected to launch with a (retractable) rooftop bar called “The Bamboo Room,” set against a vintage hollywood-inspired backdrop that serves up cocktails tropical cocktails — including a prohibition-era staple bamboo, which combines sherry, vermouth, and bitters. 

Click here to learn more about Bamboo Penny’s or here to discover additional Park Place businesses. 

“There’s a lot of outdoor dining space which we don’t have in our other restaurants at all, so it lends itself to this [pandemic] environment,” Doug Mufuka said. 

As for its menu, Bamboo Penny’s will debut Polynisian-inspired takes on Thai staples, the Mufukas dished, serving up plans to use tropical fruits like mango, banana, and pineapple in dozens of recipes. 

“The Pad Thai is something I want customers to try the first time they’re here. It’s really simple — but its good,” Penny Mufuka said, detailing ways she hopes customers will take a chance on the restaurant’s bold approach to flavor and its menu. 

Mufuka’s signature pineapple fried rice, for example, is expected to take a Polyniesian twist, served to guests in a pineapple shell. 

Additional menu items — including mango duck, papaya salad, soft shell crab, thai ribs, and crab rangoon — will be paired with the restaurant’s signature cocktails.

“We want [customers] to be open-minded and try things other than our fried rice,” added Doug Mufuka. “Thai food is very diverse and I think it’s really important people try going in without any preconceived notions like, ‘Oh it’s just Chinese food.’ No, its Thai food. It’s different. Let us show you how.”

But Bamboo Penny’s isn’t just an experience of cultural immersion. The Mufukas (especially Penny) are eager to show restaurant-goers how deep their love for food and the people of Kansas City runs. 

“Kansas City is our home, but we also want to share our background, our culture, our food with you,” Doug Mufuka said, noting the couple is equally eager to embrace the family-style environment of the Park Place retail district — values they believe align perfectly with the mission of Bamboo Penny’s and their other restaurants. 

“All the kids and parents [can come together] and she really liked that,” he added, noting the chef’s excitement.

“I’m from Chicago and we’ve gone back to visit. She’s just kind of put off by the way people don’t know each other — neighbors don’t know each other. Here we know each other. Everyone is kind of looking out for each other.”

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

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

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        USDA approves KC biotech startup’s secret weapon in the fight against cancer in dogs

        By Tommy Felts | April 18, 2025

        Full USDA approval of a Kansas City startup’s bone cancer therapy for dogs reflects a more-than-decade-long commitment to improving the lives of pets and their families, said Tammie Wahaus, CEO of ELIAS Animal Health. The U.S. Department of Agriculture Center for Veterinary Biologics recently approved the first-in-class ELIAS Cancer Immunotherapy (ECI) treatment for canine osteosarcoma…

        This (still) ain’t luck: How a decade of grit proved these urban heroes are ‘more than just clothes’

        By Tommy Felts | April 18, 2025

        MADE MOBB’s ‘collaboration is community’ mindset takes the stage as streetwear brand named an Urban Hero Earning the title “Urban Hero” allows the owners of MADE MOBB an opportunity to publicly give themselves flowers, they said, sharing a twist on the slogan from one of their most popular tees. MADE MOBB — a Crossroads-based streetwear…

        Nonprofits need merch too: How Sandlot is helping local orgs get the goods with no risk, low waste 

        By Tommy Felts | April 17, 2025

        HelpingHats’ debut celebrates the 10-year anniversary of Made in KC — and helps raise money for a high-profile nonprofit Sandlot Goods’ newly launched HelpingHats programs aims to help like-minded organizations reach their fundraising goals while also supporting American manufacturing, explained Thomas McIntyre, noting local-first retailer Made In KC serves its test case ahead of a…

        Look inside: North KC brewery adds game bar to the block (plus one of KC’s favorite sandwiches)

        By Tommy Felts | April 17, 2025

        A game bar with a vintage national park theme is coming to North Kansas City next month — with Bay Boy sandwiches packed for the short trip. The Commons is an extension of Cinder Block Brewery at 110 E. 18th Ave. The craft brewery opened in September 2013. When a dance club recently closed next…