Not too late for the ‘naughty’ list: Roll into 2022 with a year-round Kansas City bourbon ball

December 27, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Bootleg Bourbon Balls

A nip of locally distilled Tom’s Town bourbon mingles with bittersweet chocolate and a bourbon pecan mash with each bite into “guilty pleasure” — one of dozens of “notoriously naughty” bourbon and rum balls made by Lisa Fitch.

“A lot of people associate them with the holidays, like they do with divinity fudge,” explained Fitch, founder of Bootleg Bourbon Balls, detailing reasons she loves the sweet treats and how they paved the way for her second act as an entrepreneur. 

Lisa Fitch, Bootleg Bourbon Balls

Lisa Fitch, Bootleg Bourbon Balls

“I come from a background [in medicine] as a nurse practitioner. I retired several years ago and decided healthcare wasn’t something I wanted to be back in — but I had a passion for making bourbon balls,” she said, referencing a family recipe that never failed to satisfy the sweet tooths of friends and loved ones — no matter the time of year. 

“I went to visit a friend in Kentucky and she said, ‘Lisa, you should think about making these. You’ve got great distilleries in Kansas City and wonderful whiskeys and bourbons,’” Fitch recalled, noting she agreed and quickly got to work, partnering with local distillers to develop recipes that would elevate (and localize) the traditional bourbon and rum balls she’d grown so fond of. 

The result: a lineup of handcrafted, Kansas City-dipped treats, made with the finest local spirits from distilleries that include Tom’s Town, Lifted Spirits, Copper Run, Restless Spirits, Union Horse, and McCormick. 

Recipes range from Dame’s Dish, which features semisweet, Belgian chocolate blended with Stone Breaker Irish and American Blended Whiskey from Restless Spirits and rolled in toasted pecans and center cut bacon pieces; to Rum Runner, which sees Copper Run Small Batch Gold Rum blended into a creamy, dark chocolate and rum-soaked pecan mash, and rolled in coconut.

Click here for a full lineup of Bootleg Bourbon Balls or to place an online order.

Lisa Fitch, Bootleg Bourbon Balls

Lisa Fitch, Bootleg Bourbon Balls

“A gentleman asked me the other day, ‘Why are you notorious?’ Lisa Fitch said, referencing the company’s tagline: “notoriously naughty.”

“Prohibition is a time in history that’s pretty notorious,” she continued, noting Kansas City’s history with the era. “They’re naughty because they have alcohol in them.”

“I always say, ‘If only the bootleggers thought to conceal the liquors so deliciously,’” she laughed, hitting on the inspiration for the Bootleg Bourbon Balls name.  

“We’re resurrecting the bourbon ball out of the holiday tins and bringing it to Kansas City and introducing it as something new and unique and fun.”​​

“It took a couple years of me dropping off samples and communicating with the owners and the distillers,” she said, noting her persistence paid off. 

Then came the COVID-19 pandemic and its bitter hold on small businesses. 

“We were getting ready to talk seriously to three distilleries and COVID hit. We kind of put [expansion] on hold because tours stopped and there really wasn’t much going on in regards to the distilleries.”

Having made it through the pandemic with the business still thriving, thanks in large part to its operation as an online retailer, the 2021 holiday season provided a chance for Bootleg to reemerge, Fitch said.

“We’re able to reintroduce the idea of getting our product out there,” she said.

“[The distilleries] are able to offer bourbon balls that are individually wrapped after their tours and help direct their customers back to our website for purchasing,” Fitch continued, sharing examples of collaboration in the distilling space and ways she’s been welcomed into it as a business owner — and especially as someone new to the world of entrepreneurship. 

“I’m learning something that I had never been trained before. I’m a UMKC graduate with a nursing degree — I [wasn’t] an artisanal chocolate maker,” she laughed, looking back fondly on her five years in business. 

“I’ve been self-taught and learned through family traditions. Learning the retail markets and the business of chocolate and finding a niche in Kansas City — that’s very unique and different — is fun and challenging,” Fitch acknowledged. 

“I spent a lot of time in the very beginning learning about rules and regulations and developing an online retail business — which, recently, having to grapple with [the effects of] COVID I’m blessed with. It kept our business going.”

And there’s no looking back now, Fitch said, excited by what the new year might hold for Bootleg and eager to share her creations with even more customers. 

“We have a passion for what we do. We have a good product, we use high quality chocolate, we support local businesses and it’s a true Kansas City bourbon ball,” she said of why customers should pick up a box and experience the treats for themselves. 

“They’re appealing to the eye and even more appealing to the taste buds.”

Bootleg Bourbon Balls

Bootleg Bourbon Balls

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.

2021 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Pitch locally or look to outsiders? How founder bias toward funding at all costs could leave your distracted startup without a why

    By Tommy Felts | March 19, 2025

    Kansas City’s funding gaps often feel deeper for women entrepreneurs, two top founders said Tuesday, describing a startup ecosystem that pits emerging entrepreneurs against each other — but perhaps more critically, against time — in a highly competitive fight for a limited amount of local capital. “Kansas City is very startup friendly — at least…

    KC-built Buzz acquired by Vegas tech company hoping to solve AI’s ‘last mile’ challenge in property management

    By Tommy Felts | March 18, 2025

    A leading property tech company is placing its bet on the Kansas City-built rent collections platform that Buzz brings to the table, announcing the AI-driven startup’s acquisition Tuesday by Las Vegas-based Pay Ready. The potential for artificial intelligence’s use in an industry historically is limited by the way tech collides with humans, said serial entrepreneur…

    Still in the game: 16 startups advance in Kansas pitch tournament; courting a new style of seed funding

    By Tommy Felts | March 17, 2025

    WICHITA — And then there were 16. Monday’s pitch competition announcement served up sweet news for more than a dozen Kansas startups as local founders learned they’re advancing in the Gamechangers & Champions “Bracket Bash for Innovators and Angels” — a tournament-style event set to end with a $20,000 grand prize. The just-released list of…

    Trio adds Asian fusion to KCK culinary cluster; new BYO ramen, poke spot opens by May

    By Tommy Felts | March 17, 2025

    This little strip in Kansas City, Kansas, boasts some of the metro’s favorite restaurants: Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que, 1889 Pizza Napoletana, and Gus’s World Famous Chicken.  Lulu’s Thai Noodle Shop is just down the street in Westwood. Now an Asian fusion restaurant is joining the mix. Sannin — poke, sushi and ramen — plans to…