He dreams of a pickle truck driving through your neighborhood; How word of mouth fuels Ritchie Cherry’s Good Ass Pickles
December 9, 2023 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Ritchie Cherry has good friends to thank for his latest business venture, Good Ass Pickles, he shared.
After trying his sweet and spicy garlic pickles during the pandemic, he said, they encouraged him to sell them — with one friend even buying him a case of jars to fill.
“They all just started me off, like, ‘Hey, you have to make these; people in Kansas City love pickles,’” he recalled. “I’m from Illinois, by the way, so I know we grew up loving pickles; we grew up with candied pickles and stuff like that. But I just wasn’t privy to that coming in here.”
Cherry — who moved to the area to be closer to his son and for a job with Kansas City Public Schools where he is a recruitment and retention coordinator — started by making about one case (12 jars) of pickles per week and quickly expanded to five cases, he noted.
“Eventually it just became a thing,” he added. “The community started to gravitate to Good Ass Pickles.”
He sells the jars for $10 and $15 in gourmet flavors: regular, hot, hot and garlic, spicy and garlic, sweet and garlic, sweet and spicy garlic, sweet and hot garlic, plus Kool-Aid flavors.
“The flavors are different and they’re enriched with love,” he said.
Cherry sells his pickles (also known as Grade A Pickles) via social media — for delivery or pickup in Independence — at barber shops, and local pop ups, including Black Drip Coffee’s Octoberfest.
“But it’s word of mouth with my pickles,” he continued. “I get a different customer every day saying, ‘Hey, man, I found your pickles at this place. I found your pickles at this place.’ And that’s gratifying.”
Click here to follow Good Ass Pickles on Facebook.
For the future of Good Ass Pickles, Cherry shared, he has a grand vision in the next few years for a pickle truck and is hoping to apply for grants to make that vision a reality.
“I just want to take your mind back to when you were a child, right?” he explained. “You would go outside and you would hear the bomb pop man coming down the street in his bomb pop truck. Well, I envision that same thing by having this pickle truck that will go into the neighborhoods and tantalize people’s taste buds with a variety of pickles.”
But Cherry — who has a master’s degree in rehabilitation counseling — isn’t just in the pickle business. On top of making Good Ass Pickles and recruiting and retaining educators, he also founded Boxout Stress, where he provides counseling and boxing classes.
“I do a lot of team building throughout the community,” he said. “I just wrapped one up with Synergy. I did one with the KC Current. Boxout is all things stress management and we want to focus on six areas of anybody’s life to help them overcome the adversities that they face.”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
NBA hires Alight Analytics to collect, analyze data from fans’ social engagement
The volume of data created within a professional sports team’s fan base is enormous, said Matt Hertig, chief executive officer of Alight Analytics. “Being able to see all of that data together across all of the popular social channels — from Facebook, Youtube, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat — in one place and really understand the correlation…
Photos: LaunchCode christens KC’s newest techies with graduation celebration
An Afghan immigrant. A mother of six. An English grad turned techie. A man now able to provide for his family. They’re all among the graduates and inspirational stories highlighted during LaunchCode’s graduation ceremony that recognized the newest members of Kansas City’s tech community. LaunchCode on Wednesday graduated 60 students from its rigorous LC101 coding…
Christian entrepreneur hopes to convert believers to veganism
Kris Taylor’s inspiration for a vegan, Christian lifestyle traces back to the first book of the Bible, she said. Modern people eat meat because of original sin and the fall of man, as described in Genesis, Taylor said. “But if you go back to the creation story in Genesis, every seed-bearing plant was given to…
Caffeine tours give ‘pub crawl’ experience for lovers of coffee, tea and chocolate
Escaping corporate life in New York, Jason Burton moved to Kansas City in 2004 and began pouring his work into a new passion. As a marketer for Kansas City’s Roasterie, Burton soon recognized coffee and tea lacked the social component of events and festivals that are more associated with specialty beverages like beer and wine.…




