How the relaunched Classic Cookie plans to craft KC’s best breakfast sandwich (without overcomplicating it)

November 27, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Classic Cookie & Cafe ownership partners

A longtime Waldo restaurant and sweets shop is under new ownership, Chef Bryan Sparks announced, serving up a plan to fix the broken restaurant industry he thought he’d left behind.

But a more immediate and daunting task awaits ahead of the Classic Cookie & Cafe’s relaunch in December: crafting the best breakfast sandwich in Kansas City, he said. 

“Every detail of every dish is being analyzed, constructed, and gone over by many sets of eyes,” the founder of the pandemic-launched, chef-driven Beloved-On the Go meal preparation and catering company said, referencing ways he’s been able to tap into his 12 years of experience in the kitchen — a veteran of The Jacobsen, Jax, and Broadway Bistro, to help guide him. 

Classic Cookie sweets

Classic Cookie sweets

Countless mentors have helped too, Sparks added, quick to point out no one has turned down the chance to help him conduct research on the project, which is expected to round out a Classic Cookie menu that includes a crab cake eggs benedict and a lineup of (classic) cookies and pastries.  

“I know it sounds horrible having to eat breakfast sandwiches all over the city,” he laughed. “Our goal is to just be the best at what we do. We’re not going to put anything on the menu just to have it on the menu.”

Click here to place a holiday pre-order ahead of the formal relaunch of the Classic Cookie. 

Sparks and his partner, Hailee Allen, plan to open the revitalized Classic Cookie & Cafe space at 409 W. Gregory Boulevard next month. There they’ll double down on the fast-growing Beloved — vacating kitchen space within Kansas City, Kansas-based Food Truck Central — and work to recapture (and enhance) the nostalgia of Classic Cookie. 

Beloved meals and sides such as fajita bowls and corn and black bean salad will be sold through a grab-and-go case at the restaurant’s counter. And the meal preparation and catering operation already is well-known for its hearty plates and popular breakfast tacos.

“Our main goal — excuse my french — is to [make] great food and not fuck it up. We aren’t reinventing the wheel,” Sparks said. “We aren’t getting overly complicated — which, through arrogance, is a mistake I’ve made when creating menus before.”

“We just want to make good biscuits and gravy.”

An unexpected sign

Taking over the Classic Cookie operation was an unforeseen, but exciting opportunity that Sparks and Allen couldn’t turn down once they were in the mix, he said.

Bryan Sparks, Hailey Allen, and Esme, Beloved On-the-Go

Bryan Sparks, Hailey Allen, and Esme, Beloved On-the-Go

“When you’re not looking for a relationship, that’s typically when you find your next partner,” Sparks told Startland News. 

“My mom happened to go to The Classic Cookie to get a brunch table for us one day and they said they were closed,” he recalled, noting the eatery has been a mainstay in the metro since 1988. It expanded a decade later into the Waldo space from its original storefront on the Country Club Plaza.  

“They had a for sale sign on the door. I called them about 10 minutes after she sent me that message and two-and-a-half weeks later we got the keys.”

It’s important for Sparks and Allen to maintain what it’s meant to the neighborhood, while giving it revitalized flavor, he said, emphasizing changing demographics in Waldo and acknowledging the effort presents a tremendous opportunity for a modernization of the restaurant’s brand and product. 

“There are a lot of young people, young families buying houses in that area now. They want a place that represents them.”

The first significant change the pair has ordered up includes the launch of a coffee program in partnership with Parisi Coffee, Sparks said. 

A healthy, chef-driven workplace

Sparks also wants to continue creating change, he said, referencing his decision to leave the restaurant industry in pursuit of a better, more balanced life, earlier this year. 

Click here to read more about the launch of Beloved-On the Go and Sparks path toward entrepreneurship and how he hopes it creates a legacy for his daughter, Esme. 

Beloved-On the Go

Beloved-On the Go is a meal delivery system — not a service, Hailee Allen noted — designed to nourish equally-busy customers with chef-driven, health-conscious, ready-to-eat meals without a subscription or other long-term commitments. 

The company grew to six employees within its first quarter of operation. 

“There’s a lot of talk going around about how nobody wants to work in the restaurant industry anymore — and while I think that might, on some level, be true … I think it’s because people don’t want to work in unhealthy environments anymore,” he said candidly, committing Classic Cookie to baking change in a long-fractured industry, further broken down by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“Our goal is to create a healthy, constructive, well balanced culture from the get go.”

Such a commitment means Classic Cookie will offer livable wages, pay for 75-percent of a full-time employees healthcare, and follow a strict scheduling regimen that lets staff know when they’re expected to work at least a month in advance — not days or hours before a shift; as has become ustom in restaurant work, Sparks said. 

“Things like that are going to make us a place where somebody wants to work. Employees want to feel like they’re being taken care of — that their needs are being met. [At Classic Cookie] you can actually plan a life.”

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

        Questioning 1:1 initiatives: Tech devices don’t equal innovation, disillusioned parents argue

        By Tommy Felts | February 19, 2019

        [Editor’s note: The following is part of a limited Startland series, exploring parent advocates’ objections to 1:1 technology initiatives, which typically put a tablet device in the hands of each student and are popularly used as classroom innovation models across Kansas City and the nation.] A $20 million investment in tech-forward learning environments for the…

        Erika Klotz and Scott Hansen, Recruit PopBookings

        New Recruit self-service event staffing platform puts KC’s PopBookings in the big game

        By Tommy Felts | February 18, 2019

        While the Kansas City Chiefs might have narrowly missed their shot at the 2019 Super Bowl, the city was well represented as a source for event staffing at the game, revealed Erika Klotz, noting the power of Recruit, a new product from KC-based PopBookings. A client used the self-service platform to book 288 shifts for…

        Nia Richardson, KC Bizcare

        KCultivator Q&A: Nia Richardson an architect of startup support ‘born, made and raised on Prospect’

        By Tommy Felts | February 15, 2019

        Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. Experience the world, engage with community, and execute ideas to get ahead — not only in life, but in building a legacy that stands the test of time, said Nia Richardson. A product of Kansas City Public…

        RUMBLE

        IoT panel to startups: Demystify emerging tech and take risks, but prepare to fail fast

        By Tommy Felts | February 15, 2019

        Entrepreneurs often get lost in the hype of emerging technologies like the Internet of Things, failing to effectively integrate new tech into their startups, said Don Sharp. “Whether it’s the latest, greatest thing or not — it’s no different than any other tool,” said Sharp, CEO of St. Louis-based Coolfire Solutions and panelist at RUMBLE’s…