After east side restaurant closes, KC Cajun drives back to its food truck roots, cooking up a new market
April 5, 2024 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Esra England is hitting the streets again, he shared.
The head chef and founder of KC Cajun recently closed his fixed location on the east side, and is returning to the food truck and catering strategy that gave him his start.

Diners view the menu at the KC Cajun food truck across from the Jackson County Courthouse in downtown Kansas City; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
“It was a good learning experience,” England explained. “But with the overhead of trying to run the brick and mortar — with the food costs, labor issues [retaining staff], and labor costs — it just became too much.”
KC Cajun — which England started as a catering company in 2016 and grew into a food truck in 2018 — opened its first physical restaurant in May 2022 on East 27th St.
He signed the lease for the restaurant and started renovating it right when the pandemic started, England recalled.
“One big thing I learned — when I was going through the planning process — it took so long with COVID, and by the time I got this running, the plan I had going into it needed to change,” he said. “But I was too far invested in here to try to change it.”
“We’ve had major challenges,” England continued. “I realized it’s a matter of being resilient. It’s kind of in my character. If you don’t have that, it’s not an easy man’s game.”
Unfortunately, he noted, the end of the restaurant also halts his vision for the project serving as the catalyst for greater investment in the east side community. He had plans to start a nonprofit cooking school for high school students.
“It’s sad that I can’t really do as much as I wanted to do in the community,” he added.
But England — who also sells a line of seasonings that can be found online and at The Black Pantry — isn’t letting this setback stop him, he shared. Now that he doesn’t have to juggle concerns at the brick-and-mortar space, he can again focus on the food truck and catering business. Outside of private bookings, he plans to park his truck at First Fridays, plus other spots across the city like around the Jackson County Courthouse and Hospital Hill during the lunch rush.
Click here to find the KC Cajun truck schedule.
With his renewed focus on the food truck, England plans to add a couple new menu options soon, including an alligator corn dog.
“We’re doing an alligator sausage with a spicy corn dog batter and we’ll have a nice dipping sauce with it,” he explained.
He also aims to bring back a few menu items like cajun pizza and nachos, plus add his pasta to the food truck lineup.
“Basically, we took all the top sales we were having (at the restaurant) and combined it with top sales on the truck and fused the menu together,” he explained. “Then we were doing daily specials, as well.”
England has moved his headquarters to the Mid-Continent Public Library Culinary Center at the Green Hills Library Center. There, he teaches classes in the kitchen, including a curriculum around starting a food truck business.
He’s sad to lose his headquarters in the heart of the city, he said, but moving to The Culinary Center will allow the Mississippi native to introduce his Cajun food — with a Midwest twist — to the Northland community.
“It’s an opportunity to find us a new market,” he continued.
In the future, England doesn’t plan on opening another restaurant, he noted, but he could see himself partnering with a bar to provide KC Cajun food from their kitchen. He’d also like to invest in a trailer, so he can travel to communities further outside the KC metro area.
“I’m really hopeful about the future,” England added.

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Switchyards opening ‘work club’ in historic East Crossroads space: ‘It’s an absolute stunner’
Think dive bar with deep focus, said Brandon Hinman, describing the “neighborhood work club” concept that Atlanta-based Switchyards is bringing to the East Crossroads this spring. It’s a third-space workplace with no hot desks, standalone offices, or tiered memberships. “We actually have been more inspired by working out of coffee shops, libraries, boutique hotel lobbies,”…
A night for knock-outs: Pipeline gala adds glitz to the hard-fought battles of entrepreneurship (Photos)
Midwest means resilience, Melissa Vincent told a black-tie crowd of entrepreneurs gathered Friday evening in the Grand Hall at Union Station, ultimately sharing the stage with not one, but two Innovator of the Year honorees. “When they get knocked down, knocked out, they get back up and they stay in the ring,” continued Vincent, CEO…
Topeka startup hub launches diverse entrepreneur community (with fintech help on loan from KC’s Cyphr)
TOPEKA — An initiative aimed at boosting early to mid-stage entrepreneur development in the heart of Kansas launched Friday, said Michael Odupitan, noting the effort by Topeka-based Omni Circle to redefine the startup journey — and who’s allowed to join it — comes with a Kansas City assist. “Omni’s goal is to unite and strengthen…
How an east side community garden gives Ruby Jean’s namesake her storybook ending as juice brand goes national with Whole Foods
While market expansion for Ruby Jean’s harvests the big headlines, Chris Goode’s grassroots health initiatives are staying firmly planted in Kansas City’s east side, the juice brand’s founder said — announcing plans to launch a one-acre community garden this spring on Wabash Avenue. Budding out just blocks from where Goode grew up, the Ruby Jean’s…


