Ice Cream BAE founder turns to Laotian home-cooking, offering up Mama’s egg rolls from new Lenexa noodle spot
December 3, 2024 | Joyce Smith
Lenexa Public Market will soon be home to a new kitchen serving a mix of authentic flavors from Laos and Thailand — an authentic-to-home concept from an entrepreneur known for bringing fresh culinary experiences to diners from North Kansas City to South Johnson County.
Chef and owner Adison Sichampanakhone plans a January opening for Saap Saap Noodles, he said, noting Saap Saap translates to “good good” in Laotian.
“We like the whole atmosphere in [Lenexa Public Market] of like-minded entrepreneurs, and we want to grow with them,” Sichampanakhone said. “We also like the idea of just noodle dishes. The norm stuff you would see and also items that you would only see in our homes or with our families. A lot of these recipes have been handed down.”
Saap Saap Noodles will be open seven days a week for both lunch and dinner.
Menu items featured will include more traditional dishes such as Lao-style pho (which will include customization with meats like oxtail or chicken), pad Thai, khao poon (red curry noodles) and Mama’s egg rolls.
Other menu items will include some specialty items like Laos sausage wonton soup, ribeye ramen and Laos-style garlic noodles.
“A lot of new flavors that people maybe haven’t tried yet,” he said.
It also will serve Thai tea, coffee and beer, as well as an assortment of cocktails. Desserts will include mango ice cream sticky rice, taro ice cream and coconut ice cream.
Sichampanakhone also is a partner with his wife, Jackie, in the Ice Cream BAE shops on the Country Club Plaza and in Leawood’s Park Place. They duo previously opened the Thai-inspired BBQ spot Thaiger at the Iron District in North Kansas City.
The Lenexa Public Market is operated by the City of Lenexa, Kansas. The 11,000-square-foot food hall is located at 87th Street Parkway and Penrose Lane in the Lenexa City Center area, west of I-435. More information is available at LenexaPublicMarket.com.
Startland News contributor Joyce Smith covered local restaurants and retail for nearly 40 years with The Kansas City Star. Click here to follower on X (formerly Twitter), here for Facebook, here for Instagram, and by following #joyceinkc on Threads.
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Can KC build the next billion-dollar company? ‘We have the internet here too’
Ambitious startups need to believe they can become Kansas City’s next billion-dollar company, said John Thomson, urging confidence — and the ability to roll with the punches — in the face of risk. “Accomplished entrepreneurs who I’ve met … they just did it. Of course it was risky, and it might fail, but they went and…
KC’s MixTape Monkey curates 11 million users through hip hop streaming service
Taking a long sigh, an underground mixtape mogul logs off from a live Q&A session with customers. Inside his two-bedroom downtown Kansas City apartment, Mark Serrano stares out a window overlooking the corner of 12th and Walnut streets. “Online I have this huge community, itʼs overwhelming,” said Serrano, referencing his staggering global user base of…
New home for Back2KC: Kansas City Startup Foundation expands talent pipeline efforts
It’s the Kansas City Startup Foundation’s turn to drive the tour bus, said Darcy Howe, announcing Monday the transfer of the Back2KC talent pipeline initiative to KCSF, the nonprofit ecosystem-building organization that also powers Startland News. The move means KCSF will take ownership of the program for its Oct. 3-4 return, adding a full-time team…
UMKC-powered tech could help visually-impaired Kansas Citians see via artificial intelligence
Gharib Gharibi is driven to succeed by a desire to pay it forward, he said, riding a high from his startup’s first-place, $20,000 win at UMKC’s Regnier Institute Venture Creation Challenge. “They helped us transform our technology from the computer lab to the real world,” Gharibi, founder of DeepLens and a UMKC PhD student, said…



