New Westport coffee shop hopes to crown a fresh local favorite in the spot that launched Ruby Jean’s
December 6, 2024 | Joyce Smith
Move over, office coffee pot; Tamara Grubb’s workspace brews its own premium drinks
Tamara Grubb was just looking for a nice office space when she walked into a Westport building — a long-ago gas station with a distinctive double-A frame roof that once launched the popular Ruby Jean’s Juicery brand.
Her first thought: This space wasn’t meant to be an office.
It was destined to become a coffee shop — a vision she brought to reality in October when she opened Triple Crown Coffee + Eats + Events in the building at 4001 Broadway Blvd.
The shop offers espressos, cappuccinos, lattes, matcha, cold brew, tea, Americano, cocoa, milkshakes, smoothies, and other drinks.
“I’ve bought a lot of coffee in my life and I like the vibe of coffee shops so this is a really cool experience,” said Grubb, noting she runs her nonprofit consulting company on a laptop at one of the back tables.
She also likes being around other locally owned businesses in Westport.
“They’ve been so welcoming,” Grubb said.
The Triple Crown name fit with Chiefs Kingdom, the Kansas City Royals, the Biblical number for wholeness (three), and as a sign of excellence, she explained.
Grubb’s food menu includes sandwiches made from New York bagels ($10 with chips and a 20-ounce tea or lemonade), along with sausage and gravy roll-ups (sausage and gravy rolled up in pastry), and other breakfast items.
It features cookies, cake pops, Greek yogurt parfaits, fruit cups and more, as well as gluten-free pastries and snacks. Grubb uses different local bakeries, but makes the cinnamon rolls in-house.
Her daughter, Savannah Vazquez, is often behind the counter and handles social media for the cafe.
Each window pane on the front of the building — more than 50 — reflects such inspirational sayings as “You Matter,” “Be awesome today” and “Life is Brewtiful.” Grubb hopes one or more might lift someone’s day, she said.
Hours are 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays; closed Sundays.
The building has housed a variety of businesses: the first incarnation of Ruby Jean’s, a service station, campaign headquarters, gallery, used car lot, a shop selling goods from Santa Fe, New Mexico, and yes, even offices.
Grubb plans to put tables and chairs on the front patio this spring. The spot also has a walled-in patio with an abstract yellow and lavender mural in back.
Her consulting business, Living Bold, helps other nonprofits with strategic planning and fundraising services.
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.

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…



