Troost restaurant teases key ingredient to KC’s best chicken and waffles

November 25, 2022  |  Channa Steinmetz

Tameisha Martin, Love is Key

Tameisha Martin was tired of watching dreams go to the grave, she shared. 

“Ever since I could remember, my mother and my grandmother talked about wanting to open their own restaurant. They loved cooking for church and community events. … Unfortunately, my grandmother is gone now, so she didn’t get to see this dream come to life. But my mother is still here, and every day we are grateful that the doors opened for us,” said Martin, who co-founded Love is Key alongside her husband, Cameron.

Love is Key

The Martins’ waffle concept restaurant, Love is Key, celebrated its grand opening in August on the first floor of the Wonder Shops and Flats development on 30th and Troost. Love is Key specializes in waffle sandwiches and cake waffles, a family recipe passed down from Martin’s mother, Tangela Winters, and grandmother, Daisy Henderson. 

“We put a lot of thought into our menu,” Martin noted. “From using my mother and grandmother’s recipes for the dishes and desserts, to using local vendors and local food, our food quality is phenomenal. We are very conscious about the seasoning we use, and we even have our own in-house, caramelized syrup that no one is using. It is our specialized ingredient.”  

Click here to check out the menu at Love is Key.

Humble beginnings

Love is Key originally began as a dessert catering company in 2018. 

Love is Key

“My mother has been a nurse all her life, but she got sick and stopped working,” Martin recalled. “One day I came home, and she had the entire counter lined up with caramel cake. I was like, ‘Who’s going to eat all of this cake?’ and she said that they were orders. That’s when I knew we were going to turn this into a business.” 

The Martins and her mother began booking weddings, community events and grand openings, she said. The business was steadily scaling when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. 

After a short hiatus, a small pop-up space in the parking lot of Ruby Jeans Kitchen and Juicery, catty-corner to Wonder Shops and Flats, became available and Love is Key launched its pilot program in Fall 2020. 

“For about a year, we opened up Tuesday through Saturday to see if we could sustain a physical location,” Martin said. “We broke even, which is really unheard of for restaurants. Most restaurants don’t make a profit for three to five years, so that gave us the confidence to go for it. We are believers in Christ and God, so we prayed about this. And we’ve been blessed.”

Tameisha Martin, Love is Key

Love is Key

When Martin got the call that a storefront right across from her pop-up shop opened up in the Wonder Shops and Flats — the former Soulcentricitea location — she immediately knew that she wanted to be a part of it, she shared.

“We are all for economic development within our own community,” Martin said. “Having more businesses in this area will create more jobs and lower crime. It also gives people an opportunity to work in their own community versus going outside.”

Love is Key has been a self-funded venture, Martin said, adding that she and her husband are in search of additional funds to keep the business growing. 

“We’ve had incredible mentors like David and Samantha Park, who really taught us about financial literacy and business,” Martin said. “They helped us with budgeting so we could self-fund the entire launch. Self-funding the start was a hard journey. We dropped our expenses extremely low, so we could save money — but we believe in entrepreneurship. We know it is the answer to resolve economic issues within our community.”

Tameisha Martin, Love is Key

‘A social worker at heart’

Before her journey with Love is Key, Martin received a master’s degree in social work and worked as a licensed medical social worker. Although she is passionate about entrepreneurship, she carries with her the lessons she learned as a social worker, she shared. 

Tameisha Martin, Love is Key

“I use my people skills every day,” Martin said. “When you’re in the service industry, you’re going to have people from all walks of life come into your space. If they don’t feel welcome, they won’t come back.”

The key to making others feel welcome: listening.

“It’s about listening and understanding what the market wants, and then providing that,” she said. “I needed to listen to my clients to help them get back on track. With both [an entrepreneurial and social worker] mindset, you need to be resilient. When things get hard, you have to know how to persevere and get through it.”

“Cater with love” is one of Martin’s slogans, she said, noting that she partners with organizations that benefit underserved communities.

“I am still a social worker at heart; through Love is Key, I can still help those populations that I was helping when I was a social worker,” Martin said. “We’ve worked with the Ronald McDonald House and various school districts. We partner with Truman Employment Services that brings in employees who are having mental health issues or physical issues, and are wanting to get put back into the workforce. We help get them adjusted.”

Love is Key is also partnering with Amethyst Place down the street to hire mothers who are struggling with substance abuse, mental health or other disabilities.

Cameron and Tameisha Martin, Love is Key

Scaling deep

Making an impact within their community is crucial for Martin, she said. Rather than focusing on expanding her business to multiple locations, she is currently committed to scaling deep.

“We focus on scaling deep, which means we want to make a social and economic impact in our own community,” Martin said. “So we’re focusing on being a staple here in Kansas City, so that we can continue to hire people in our own community and continue with the revitalization of this area. We love the urban core. We live in this area, and it just makes sense to help be here.”

RELATED: Bank partners with Porter House to give out more than hugs; Meet four latest KC grant recipients — including Love is Key

The Martin’s are working to get more foot traffic through the door, as catering is still the bulk of their business, Martin said, pointing to more than 100 box lunches she was preparing for the next day.

Love is Key

To scale deeper and get more of the community involved, Martin enjoys partnering with other local businesses when possible. The coffee served at Love is Key is Black Drip Coffee — a Black-owned coffee company in Kansas City.

Click here to read more about Black Drip Coffee. 

The name “Love is Key” is a direct reflection of Martin’s mother and grandmother, she shared. 

“They used to say that if you do things with love and with the right heart posture, it’ll come back to you,” Martin recalled. “I wanted to highlight that because whether it’s catering or cooking, anything that we do, we always want to operate in excellence.”

Love is Key is open 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

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

        Michael Carmona, KCSourceLink

        KCSourceLink hires new senior director to champion Kansas City entrepreneur ecosystem

        By Tommy Felts | May 2, 2022

        Michael Carmona has ‘led and lived’ the mission of KCSourceLink; now he’ll officially take the resource hub’s helm A longtime advocate for businesses across Kansas City — including some of the metro’s most underserved — Michael S. Carmona understands how entrepreneurship can elevate communities, said Maria Meyers. His new role as the senior director for…

        Jackie Nguyen, founder and owner of Cafe Cà Phê, and her team accept first-place honors in the James and Rae Block Kansas City Startup Awards at the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge

        UMKC pitch contest puts Cafe Cà Phê closer to Jackie Nguyen’s big goal; winners range from students to emerging startups

        By Tommy Felts | April 30, 2022

        The University of Missouri-Kansas City continues to brew innovation — and the return of its Regnier Venture Creation Challenge (RVCC) Friday poured proof, offering more than $88,000 in critical cash prizes to percolating ventures that spill far beyond its classrooms.  “I moved to Kansas City from Washington D.C. over the summer and I started following Cafe…

        David Roberson and Jared Meek at Adelante Thrift

        Why an Evangelical church in KCK opened a thrift store to build leaders in its immigrant-rich neighborhood 

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2022

        The heart and purpose of Mission Adelante is to develop and empower community members — especially its neighbors who come from backgrounds far from Kansas City, said Jared Meek.  “We started Mission Adelante in 2005 to really reach out to the immigrant and refugee community in our neighborhood. We focused a lot on individual transformation,…

        Analysts speak during the HCS Major Kansas City 2022, a bracket-style Halo tournament, at the Kansas City Convention Center

        Halo championship arrives downtown as KC-built esports team ‘pioneers a dynasty’

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2022

        KC Pioneers gain support of Chiefs, Charlie Hustle and other hometown household names for its #MyCity campaign as Kansas City hosts major esports tournament  It’s time to showcase Kansas City’s esports and tech community on a global scale, said Mark Josey — and what better way to do so than with a worldwide tournament hosted…