PHKC awards $25K to Alchemy Sandbox winners; It’s amazing when someone understands your vision, founder says
June 28, 2023 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Year one challenges can be difficult for entrepreneurs to swallow, James Thomas noted, but he’s raising a cup to the first anniversary of Brain Freeze Mobile Daiquiri Shop with validation and a splash of funding.
Two days after completing The Porter House KC’s fourth small business development cohort and competing in its finale competition, Thomas pitched again — this time pouring a $5,000 grant from Alchemy Sandbox, another PHKC program that provides critical funding, mentoring, and connections to founders in partnership with UMB Bank.
“Your first year is always the hardest,” Thomas explained of starting a business. “You’re trying to figure out what to do, how to market your brand, how to sell your product, figure out how to make people understand and realize your vision, and do the best you can with the resources.”
“Luckily Porter House and UMB Bank were there and they understood my vision; they saw my potential,” he continued. “When I heard I’d won, it was just an amazing feeling that people are seeing and understanding what I have to offer and what I can do for the city.”
Brain Freeze is a pop up daiquiri shop with 28 flavors — including Frose, King Cake, and Feelin’ No Pain — that caters corporate events, weddings, birthday parties, and more.
Additional winners from Alchemy Sandbox’s Quarter 2 cohort — each winning as much as $5,000 — include paraMi, The Duffle Brand, Magnolia Beauty Academy, and MJ Fitness.

paraMi team: Erika Reza, Silvia Marin, Veronica Alvidrez, and Nayelly Serrano-Dantzler; photo by Martin Martinez
Click here to learn more about paraMi’s new storefront.
According to The Porter House KC, four out of five of the winners have participated in past Alchemy Sandox cohorts, which is a process that includes an online application, a pitch workshop led by the Missouri Small Business Development Center, and a five-minute pitch and three-minute Q&A period with judges.
“To be able to see each of these business owners progress each quarter in their comfort of pitching, their comfort of discussing their business, and ultimately, their comfort in discussing their work is phenomenal to see,” said Miranda Schultz, director of operations at The Porter House KC.
Click here to apply for the Alchemy Sandbox program.
Thomas — who plans to use the $5,000 to purchase another daiquiri machine and truck — started Brain Freeze in June 2022 after coming up with the idea during the pandemic.
“I’ve traveled to New Orleans and to downtown and they have daiquiri shops,” the KC native explained. “And I wanted to bring something like that that’s fun with an atmosphere of joy to Kansas City. So during COVID — when it was sad, depressing, and lonely — I wanted something to bring people together.”
He said he decided to put his own twist on the daiquiri shop concept by going mobile.
“I wanted to do something where you don’t have to leave your house or you don’t have to go down to a restaurant,” he added. “You can go down the street to your neighbor’s house or go to an anniversary party or wedding and have the same feel of New Orleans at your event.”
Click here to see events where you can find Brain Freeze.
In his first year in business, Thomas noted that he’s thankful to have the support of The Porter House KC and fellow cohort members.
“It’s a community of entrepreneurs that are going through the same struggles that we are going through,” he said, “but look to each other to figure out how to overcome the struggle that we have.”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Supporters-turned critics: Sales tax for east side projects ‘went off the rails’; KCMO mayor defends effort’s progress
Editor’s note: This in-depth reporting project was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the KC Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert. Click here to read the original story. Revenue flows in faster than it gets disbursed for projects If you…
Film to promote Walt Disney’s historic Kansas City animation studio gets $10K boost
Efforts to restore the original Laugh-O-gram Studio building along Troost Avenue are getting a bump from a Missouri Humanities grant and a matching donation from a longtime local supporter of the arts in Kansas City. Thank You Walt Disney — a not-for-profit dedicated to the preservation and restoration of Walt Disney’s first animation studio, the…
Feds award $500K for Goodwill, LaunchCode jobs training effort through STEM Tech Challenge
Nearly a half-million dollars in federal funds are expected to help two local programs forge a new STEM-based job training initiative to help Kansas City-region job seekers find permanent high-wage careers in tech. U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kansas, on Wednesday announced a $499,196 award from the U.S. Department of Commerce to Goodwill MoKan (Goodwill of…
JQ Sirls is the king of his own universe; his new book puts a distinctly Black hero at the center of it
JQ Sirls started popping through the multiverse as a child; escaping through various worlds and alternate realities via stories like “Where the Wild Things Are,” “Peter Pan,” and “The Wizard of Oz” — as well as magical realms he created himself. “Those are my DNA,” said Sirls, a Kansas City-based author, artist and the entrepreneur behind…




