This Brookside hotspot touts best chicken sandwich in KC, putting chef’s eye on fast casual food

November 19, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Spicy chicken sandwich from Brookside Poultry Co.

The chicken sandwich wars of the 21st century aren’t limited to fast food restaurant chains, Chef Charles d’Ablaing declared, touting his local lineup of comfort food classics and laying claim to serving the best spicy chicken sandwich in all of Kansas City. 

“I did it as a special, just kind of, ‘Haha, funny,’” said d’Ablaing, chef and owner of Brookside Poultry Company, recalling his attempt to jump into the fried fray that keeps restaurants like Chick-Fil-A, Popeyes, and Kentucky Fried Chicken duking it out in ad campaigns well-seasoned with social media virality.  

Charles d'Ablaing, Brookside Poultry Co.

Charles d’Ablaing, Brookside Poultry Co.

Now, the hand-pounded, marinated, chicken breast — served on a brioche bun and topped with red onions, gorgonzola, chili mayo, lettuce and tomato — is a regular sellout for the Brookside eatery, further establishing it among the metro’s most mouthwatering lunch spots and breading it in growth. 

“We sell an absolute crap-ton,” d’Ablaing laughed. “This chicken breast has been pounded out and it’s the size of your head …  it’s for people wanting something kind of different.”

And it’s a product of what Brookside Poultry was founded to do, and — as d’Ablaing points out — does best: putting a chef’s eye on fast casual food. 

“It started when I was the executive chef at the Raphael Hotel [probably] 10 years ago,” he recalled, noting his Georgia roots play heavily into the gourmet genesis of the restaurant. 

“A lady approached me from down south and she said, ‘You’re from Atlanta. You probably know how to make good fried chicken — I can’t find good fried chicken in this town,’” he laughed, adding he indeed held a stand-out recipe for sour cream-brined fried chicken and quickly added it to the Country Club Plaza hotel’s menu. 

“It was our No. 2 bestseller in a couple of weeks at [roughly] 27 bucks a plate. I told staff members there that when I get older and tired of wearing [my] coat and doing this, I [would] open a fried chicken joint.”

They all laughed, but were quick to apply for hypothetical employment, d’Ablaing said. Now, many of them work for him at Brookside Poultry, serving up sour cream-fried chicken, spicy chicken sandwiches, wings, tenders, thighs and a lineup of Southern classics from fried green tomatoes to shrimp and grits and cheddar biscuits — made with ingredients sourced from local growers and farmers. 

Click here to view the full Brookside Poultry menu or for details on holiday season poultry and pie orders. 

“We have really great people that work here. It’s a fun environment and my kitchen is open [concept],” he said of the experience of owning and operating his own restaurant and ways he and its staff have worked to innovate fast casual dining. 

Brookside Poultry Co.

Brookside Poultry Co.

“They all came from fine dining — at least 90 percent of them. [But what we’ve created means] you can come here and your kids can run around and tear the place up,” d’Ablaing said, adding his two children frequently do — and he loves it. 

“That’s why I made the place. Parents can sit down and have really awesome service at a fast casual restaurant — and eat some really good food while their kids tear the joint up,” he laughed. 

Relocation to the current space at 751 E. 63rd St. came after the restaurant found its niche and grew in popularity amid pandemic-era demand for its curbside food options. d’Ablaing hoped the move would help Brookside Poultry keep up with the steady stream of business. 

“We saw a 20-percent increase [in sales] with COVID [shutting down dining rooms],” he explained, detailing the impact of curbside operations, which still account for more than 40 percent of the restaurant’s overall business, and ways the pandemic has changed the restaurant industry. 

“We’re now in such a large space we can’t fill the restaurant,” d’Ablaing admitted, noting customers are readily returning, but curbside needs alone haven’t been able to support the larger space. 

“This year, we’re down 60 grand or so. We’ve got 5,000 square feet to fill and we just haven’t been able to fill it.”

With the holiday season at its start and a mask mandate expiring in Jackson County, d’Ablaing is confident brighter days are hatching even as daylight gets shorter. 

“This last month [sales have been] up and up and up. We’re getting comfortable again.”

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

        1 Million Cups

        1 Million Cups credits its six-year run to the strength of its volunteers, entrepreneurs

        By Tommy Felts | April 27, 2018

        After six years, the connectivity at 1 Million Cups remains as strong as the coffee, organizers said. The Kansas City-born event series is celebrating the anniversary of its first pour 9 a.m. May 2 with the program’s trademark brew — two startups delivering 10-minute pitches to an audience with the intent to educate, engage and…

        Duo creates app-based audio tour exploring KC’s history of segregation

        By Tommy Felts | April 26, 2018

        Most Kansas Citians are uninformed on the area’s segregated past, Nathaniel Bozarth said. “To be quite honest, I’m convinced that this ignorance is by design,” said Bozarth, a Kansas City ethnographer and host of the Wide Ruled podcast. “White America does not want to deal with the sins of our fathers and our own sins…

        Overland Park, Kansas

        KC suburb ranked among nation’s best cities for Hispanic entrepreneurs

        By Tommy Felts | April 26, 2018

        Strong purchasing power for Hispanics in one Johnson County community helped land the suburb on a new ranking of the best cities for Hispanic entrepreneurs. Overland Park, Kansas, cracked the list’s overall top 25, according to WalletHub, a personal finance website that examined more than 180 cities across the United States. The survey pool included…

        East Aster Brewing

        Fund Me, KC: East Aster Brewing hopes to heal Kansas City from the soil up

        By Tommy Felts | April 26, 2018

        Editor’s note: Startland News is continuing its “Fund Me, KC” feature to highlight area entrepreneurial efforts to accelerate businesses or projects. If you or your startup is running a crowdfunding campaign, let us know by contacting news@startlandnews.com. Today’s featured campaign from Kansas City-based East Aster Brewing, which applies lessons from microbiology and microbrewing to gardening in…