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

February 5, 2022  |  Amelia Arvesen

Tyler Shane's artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

‘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 Kansas City chocolatier is venturing out on her own to share those intense feelings with other chocolate lovers in the community.

“I want people to sit down and really have a moment with their chocolate,” Shane said. “Use all of your senses. Feel a little sensual with it. Smell it and let it melt in your mouth.”

Tyler Shane with her artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

Tyler Shane with her artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

Shane decided to branch out after a successful collaboration in November with Café Corazón, a Latin coffee and yerba mate shop in Kansas City that opened in Westport in 2019 and is opening a second location in the Crossroads Arts District later this month.

The cafe celebrates the city’s Latinx and Indigenous culture by honoring coffee and yerba mate’s origins while engaging with local Latinx artisans. The symbolic mural on the building’s exterior, for example, was painted by muralists Isaac Tapia and Rodrigo Alvarez. 

So when co-owner Miel Castagna-Herrera posted on Instagram in search of a chocolatier to give “cacao a voice” through a new collaboration, Shane was a perfect match.

“We work so hard to make all of our coffee drinks reflect parts of the world that the coffee is grown in,” Castagna-Herrera said. “We wanted to do the same with chocolate.”

Shane created two artisanal chocolate bars paying homage to her Spanish and Native American roots. Tapia and Alvarez designed the packaging art for the bars. The Mole Rojo bar has chili spices and nuts, while the Maíz bar was made with corn nuts.

Curtis Herrera, co-owner of Café Corazón, muralist Isaac Tapia, Tyler Shane, muralist Rodrigo Alvarez, and Miel Herrera, co-owner of Café Corazón, outside the Westport business

Curtis Herrera, co-owner of Café Corazón, muralist Isaac Tapia, chocolatier Tyler Shane, muralist Rodrigo Alvarez, and Miel Herrera, co-owner of Café Corazón, outside the Westport business

The collaboration is already on its third batch of chocolates, keeping up with demand at the Westport cafe.

Tyler Shane's artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

Tyler Shane’s artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

“We couldn’t choose a more perfect person and sometimes things are just meant to be,” Castagna-Herrera said. “Now we have all these ideas together.”

Next up, Shane is working on another special collection of bon bons for the cafe that will debut in time for Valentine’s Day. Branded under her own Tyler Shane name, she’s also creating a Latin Collection of nine pieces including Spanish flavors like chipotle apricot and dulce de leche, which will be available for pre-order ahead of the Feb. 14 holiday. 

“I want to push the envelope, but I still want people to feel comfortable buying my product and be able to enjoy it,” Shane said.

Shane attended culinary school at Johnson County Community College before landing a position at Christopher Elbow Chocolates, where she said she learned everything she knows about the delicate dessert, she said. Over the years, chocolate has become second nature for her.

“It’s what I feel most comfortable with,” she said. 

Garrett Heil and Tyler Shane; photo by Kindling

Garrett Heil and Tyler Shane; photo by Kindling

But her culinary experimentation doesn’t end with bon bons. Her husband, Garrett Heil, is a chef, and together they cook all sorts of decadent meals.

“Food is just 90 percent of our lives,” she said. “We’re always cooking together. I’m always buying weird ingredients and seeing what we can do with them.”

Most recently, she found duck eggs at the Overland Park Farmers’ Market and they served them over carbonara. Some of their kitchen adventures are documented on Shane’s blog, The Apprenticeship, which she created as an outlet for food writing.

Click here to follow Tyler Shane on Instagram.

More of Shane’s writing can be found through the Made in Kansas City Explore blog, where she interviews chefs. Her go-to conversation starter is asking each chef what they would choose for their last meal.

“Mine would definitely be my aunt’s tamales,” she said. “They’re just pockets of greasy goodness. I always try to emulate her whenever I make tamales and of course I can never feel like they’re just right like hers are.”

As she develops her business, education of the cacao bean’s Latin and Mesoamerica origins along with mindfulness will be a focal point of the chocolate, she said. She’s also developing a plan to curate yoga and chocolate experiences to pair with her work as a yoga teacher.

“Mesoamericans thought that chocolate could transport them to the other world and connect them to the divine, to god,” she said. “That’s what I want people to experience whenever they try my chocolates.”

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

      2022 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Chris Olsen, Drive Capital, KC Tech Council CEO Retreat

        Elite investors at exclusive CEO retreat: Don’t waste time; sell us on your billion-dollar idea

        By Tommy Felts | May 3, 2019

        Trying to land the backing of a venture capital firm? Throw your pitch deck out the window, Chris Olsen advised a select group of Kansas City CEOs. “A lot of times founders will come and give us their pitch and they’ll start going through it and [they’re telling us] they’re profitable in 18-months. And we’ll…

        Hyped from high school: Blue Valley teens among startup cash winners at K-State challenge

        By Tommy Felts | May 3, 2019

        Four Overland Park high school students have landed cash infusions totaling more than $7,000 for their ongoing startup ventures. Local winners of the Kansas Entrepreneurship Challenge — supported by Network KS, sponsored by the Kansas Masonic Foundation, and hosted by Kansas State University — included: Drone Estate founders Austin Jones and Hunter Vasquez, Blue Valley West…

        TrueAccord Kansas City

        ‘More is better’ TrueAccord CEO says as Silicon Valley startup plans for 150 KC jobs

        By Tommy Felts | May 3, 2019

        TrueAccord is “furiously hiring” to jumpstart the San Francisco-based startup’s intense expansion plan now supplemented by a growing Lenexa office, said Ohad Samet. “We’ve been very successful [in Silicon Valley], but at some point we realized that we really needed to blow up,” said Samet, co-founder and CEO of the debt recovery startup, which recently…

        Blade & Timber at Power & Light

        Blade & Timber opening new axe-throwing experience at Power & Light in late summer

        By Tommy Felts | May 3, 2019

        Blade & Timber hopes to stick its cutting-edge axe-throwing concept in the bullseye of Kansas City entertainment, opening a new 11-lane facility in the Power & Light District by the end of the summer. “We are excited to continue growing our brand nationally, while staying true to our roots,” said Ryan Henrich, co-founder of Blade…