New culinary center opens in the Northland, offering startup food businesses commercial kitchen space

May 25, 2023  |  Startland News Staff

Xander Winkel, Culinary Center director

Mid-Continent Public Library opened the doors to its much-anticipated Culinary Center — with public-facing food and nutrition-focused classes beginning in June, as well as commercial kitchen access for emerging food entrepreneurs.

“We are thrilled to finally welcome the community into our space and can’t wait to get cooking!” said Xander Winkel, director for MCPL’s Culinary Center. “The mission of the Culinary Center is to enrich the community through food education and to support small businesses, and after many months of gathering all the right ingredients, we’re ready to start serving up these services!”

Winkel, who has a background in nonprofit management and small business development, is joined by Taylor Smith, kitchen manager, a registered dietitian whose expertise includes federal food regulations and one-on-one dietary counseling, and Charles Tibbs, program manager, a former executive chef with experience managing a range of food operations, from small startups to stadiums with more than 100 kitchen staff.

Classes at the Culinary Center — within MCPL’s Green Hills location at 8581 N. Green Hills Rd. — range in topics and cater to foodies of all ages, he said. All programs are free to attend, but registration is required.

Click here to learn more about class offerings.

The other half of the Culinary Center’s service — commercial kitchen space for local startup food businesses — is also now available.

For a minimal rental fee, businesses can use the four commercial kitchen spaces, including two incubator kitchens, a shared equipment kitchen, and a prep kitchen. Each comes equipped with a variety of features — range tops, convection ovens, conventional ovens, freezers, coolers, etc. Scholarships to cover kitchen rental fees are also available to those who qualify.

Charles Tibbs, Xander Winkel, and Taylor Smith, Culinary Center team

“Our commercial kitchen spaces are an ideal resource for any food business without a current brick-and-mortar presence,” said Winkel, who previously served as executive director of the Ennovation Center in Independence. “For folks who have a catering or food truck business, the Library’s Culinary Center can serve as your home base. It’s also great for those who have a home cottage food operation now and who want to grow into a commercial food business. The goal is to provide the space and tools that are often a barrier to entry for many aspiring ‘foodpreneurs.’” 

The MCPL Culinary Center is a unique resource for the Kansas City Northland, which was part of the inspiration for the facility, officials said.

“One of the goals for this project has been to fill a community need that Library leaders recognized a number of years ago,” said Erin Kennedy, strategic projects manager for MCPL. “The Kansas City metro has a few resources for food education and local food business support, but many are costly, and few are located north of the river. The Library’s mission is to enrich its citizens and communities by expanding access to innovation and information, and the Culinary Center is one more way we achieve this.”

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

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Clarence Tan and Edna Martinson, Boddle Learning

        Coming to a student’s iPad near you: Boddle launches in Apple App Store as edtech startup celebrates third birthday

        By Tommy Felts | February 14, 2021

        A Kansas City-generated gamified math education platform is expanding its user base this weekend as Boddle Learning debuts the high-profile startup’s long-awaited iOS app version. The move is expected to most immediately benefit schools that use iPads, as well as parents at home who can now more-easily access the technology on mobile devices, said Edna…

        Hank Breckenridge, NAMA

        Real-time translator: Shawnee Mission East grad uses Reddit to launch language-learning messaging app 

        By Tommy Felts | February 13, 2021

        A family move to Mumbai in his early teens gave Hank Breckenridge an appreciation for unfamiliar surroundings, the young entrepreneur from Leawood said. “While I lived in India, I got super interested in learning about different cultures and little bits of different languages. I had friends from 13 different countries and actually learned how to…

        Colleen Monroe, Floraloom

        Floraloom’s Colleen Monroe put her green thumb on the steering wheel, leaving LA for KC sunshine

        By Tommy Felts | February 12, 2021

        Quarantine changed people — including Colleen Monroe, the serial entrepreneur said, looking back on the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic in Los Angeles and the day she loaded her car with a few personal belongings and as many vases as it could hold. Uprooting her once-busy life, she hoped growth opportunities might bloom in…

        Dr. Shelley Cooper, SureShow; Parker Graham, Finotta; Chris Jones, MatchRite Care; Lauren Lawrence, Stenovate; Nomi Smith, PMI Rate Pro; and Clarence Tan, Boddle

        Meet the new class: KC’s top emerging founders power Pipeline’s latest high-profile fellowship

        By Tommy Felts | February 12, 2021

        Pipeline’s new class of fellows more accurately reflects the real diversity of the Midwest, said startup veteran Dusty Reynolds, introducing a virtual Pipeline audience to 13 entrepreneurs joining the group’s elite ranks. “This is an absolutely stacked class,” said Reynolds, co-founder of Omaha-based RaceNote, founder of HeavyNote, and Pipeline’s 2015 Innovator of the Year. “I…