She wanted to bring her favorite foodie magazine to KC; her mother’s sudden death put this publisher’s plans on the back burner
July 7, 2023 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Lauren Cook’s passion for Edible Communities magazine drove her appetite to revive it in Kansas City, she shared, but an unexpected life change has her hoping to hand the publisher’s apron to someone else.
Cook purchased the license to publish the city-specific food magazine — each independently run by publishers in metros across the country — in KC in January 2022 with her mother as her business partner. Her mom’s sudden passing just five months later shifted her priorities, she said, and she’s no longer the right person to take on the project. However, that doesn’t mean she’s giving up on its revival in her hometown.
“I have so much confidence in the success that’s possible with Edible Kansas City,” she explained. “Me leaving before publishing is not because I wasn’t confident. It was just because I had this tremendous life change that I could have never expected. And because I have such a passion for Edible, I want it to be done well. I don’t want to half do it. That’s not fair to anyone who’s going to read it. It’s not fair to me. It’s not fair to anybody.”
“So I’m just so excited,” she continued. “If we could find the next right person, it could be a life-changing experience for this person, but also an amazing value add for Kansas City — being able to tell people stories and create connection through so many positive relationships in a world that really needs it.”
Cook — who is a teacher with a passion for writing — first encountered an Edible Communities magazine while living in Oklahoma City.
“I’m a total foodie — just personality-wise,” she shared. “We love trying things. I love cooking and was immediately attracted to the magazine. Anytime we travel, we look for an Edible. We have a whole wall of covers in our kitchen because we just love the photography and the quality of every city’s publication. It’s just incredible. We just really love (the magazine).”
Click here to learn more about the Edible Communities publications.
About a year after starting to pick up the magazine, she said, she decided to see if they needed writers. She ended up joining the Edible OKC team to write and do ad sales and did that for a year before they moved back to KC in 2018. The national organization asked her if she liked to restart the publication in KC — which last published in 2016 — but with the impending birth of her daughter, she decided to hold off for the right time.
In early 2022, Cook noted, she decided to take the leap with her mom beside her to tackle the business aspects, so she could handle the creative side.
“We were going in on this together,” she explained. “While it was my dream, it was also hers because she wanted to support me. She was an accountant, so she was able to do those things. And so I bought it in January, got started, redid the website, did a lot of background work and had planned to launch the actual print magazine for the holiday season 2022.”
With the loss of her mom and the new responsibilities that have come with it — plus life with a 5 year old — Cook feels like the publication is too much to take on by herself right now, she said, noting she’d still like to be involved as a writer.
“It’s hard to let go of a dream,” Cook added. “But at the same time, when you know that it could be done better with someone else, that’s OK.”
Now she’s determined to find the right person to take over Edible KC, someone who has an entrepreneurial spirit, is creative, loves KC, and is a foodie.
“You have to want to tell the stories of the people here,” Cook continued. “You have to want to share why we can create a local food culture that can support the people in Kansas City, but also the people doing it.”
She’d like to find someone as passionate as she is about the impact of food, she shared.
“I just see the power and how it can bring us together,” Cook said. “It bridges so many gaps.”
The future owner can buy the contract outright from Cook or she’s willing to be flexible on the front end with a possible payment plan. She also is willing to hand over all of the progress she has made so far with the website, recipes, newsletter, and social media channels. The Edible Communities national organization — which requires the publications to at least publish quarterly, although it can also publish monthly or bi-monthly — also provides designers, photo databases, support with the website, as well as connections to other publishers.
“They would not be starting from scratch,” she added. “They would at least have a lot of structures built.”
Cook knows it’s a huge ask and a big investment, she said, but it’ll be worth it in the right hands.
“I just hope we can get it back because the food scene here is just getting bigger and bigger,” she explained. “We’re the perfect city for it. Just got to find the right person.”
Interested in taking over Edible KC? Email lauren@ediblekansascity.com.

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Just funded: First wave of Alchemy Sandbox grants aim for ‘snowball effect’ in KC
A new grant program has selected its first five awardees — with 15 more to come in 2022 — aiming to create rolling momentum for Kansas City’s main street businesses, said Miranda Schultz. The Alchemy Sandbox Program on Friday announced its first quarter grantees with entrepreneurs selected to receive as much as $5,000 for their…
SnapIT scores lucrative government contract with $50B ceiling in emerging tech space
An Overland Park IT firm’s selection to deliver technology solutions to federal agencies is the latest evolution of the Johnson County business, which has seen rapid growth over the past three years as it expanded its focus. SnapIT Solutions, a high-tech services and tech training firm headquartered in Johnson County, was tapped for the second…
Just another day in Paradise (EDU): Urban nursery turns soil to nurture STEAM students
When learners dig into the Paradise Garden Club STEAM program, they unearth non-traditional learning opportunities in a classroom cased in chlorophyll. “It starts on a very base level — using your hands to work with raw soil,” said Jessica Teliczan, owner and operator of Crossroads-planted Paradise Garden Club, teasing the newly launched effort — formally branded…
Tech meets Amish craftsmanship for a ‘matchless’ DIY home experience dealt by this KC engineer
From Kansas City-coded Stackify to his dream job at Microsoft, working in tech is a labor of love for Jason Taylor. But it couldn’t keep him from hanging a side hustle. “I’ve always been a do-it-yourself project type of person,” Taylor said, noting numerous remodeling projects he and his wife, Lindsay, have taken on over…


