Noelia Olivares had a vision of the sea in KC; her food truck-turned-restaurant serves up the surf

January 9, 2025  |  Joyce Smith

Noelia Olivares, center, with her mother, Maria Ortiz, and stepfather, Eugenio Duran, at Mariscos Mr. Culichi; photo by Joyce Smith

A new brick-and-mortar restaurant docked along one of Kansas City’s popular dining corridors is sailing into the blustery Midwest market this winter — with the young entrepreneur behind the counter offering her family’s fresh take on Mexican seafood cuisine.

Mariscos Mr. Culichi; photo by Joyce Smith

Mariscos Mr. Culichi is now open at 910 Southwest Boulevard (Taqueria Mexico long operated in the space, followed by La Mexico KC). A grand opening scheduled for Jan. 18. 

“It had old Mexico kind of vibes,” Noelia Olivares said of the longtime eatery’s former aesthetics. “So we had to revamp it, bringing the sea to the restaurant to uplift the space.”

On one wall now: the words “En El Mar La Vida Es Más Sabrosa” (“Life is more flavorful at sea”), while the opposite wall has a seascape and the restaurant’s logo.

The menu includes several seafood soups with broth made fresh daily, as well as oysters, tostadas, a variety of ceviches and aguachiles, tostadas, and pasta.

Click here to follow Mariscos Mr. Culichi on Instagram.

Mariscos Mr. Culichi at 910 Southwest Boulevard, the former longtime home of Taqueria Mexico, followed by La Mexico KC; photo by Joyce Smith

Driving toward the waves

Even as a high school student in Roeland Park, Kansas, Olivares knew she wanted to launch a food business; she just had to convince her parents — a tight-knit family originally from coastal Sinaloa, Mexico — a region known for its seafood dishes.

A seafood platter from the Mariscos Mr. Culichi food truck; courtesy photo

During those teenage years, she would often post photos of her stepfather’s home-cooked meals on social media. Olivares not only got a lot of likes; her followers wanted to place orders.

“They were offering insane amounts for our dinner. Like $100,” she said. “That’s when I had an ‘ah ha’ moment.”

But her parents all already had full-time jobs. Her stepfather, Eugenio Duran, has worked at several area restaurants. Her mother, Maria Ortiz, was a receptionist at a clinic. Her father, Jose Olivares, owns an underground utility company.

Graduating in 2020 from Bishop Meige High School — amid the global COVID-19 pandemic — changed things. The family banded together to bring Olivares’ vision to life as Mariscos Mr. Culichi food truck, specializing in Mexican seafood.

(Mariscos Mr. Culichi is not connected to the Mariscos KC Seafood in Olathe and Shawnee.)

They set it up on Winner Road in Independence where it operated until late November when the family operation transitioned to the more permanent space on Southwest Boulevard. They soft opened in late December. 

Olivares now is a junior at University of Kansas City-Missouri — a student in the Henry W. Bloch School of Management and an alum of its E-Scholars program, which helps young entrepreneurs learn how to launch and scale businesses.

Murals of seaside vistas grace the walls of Mariscos Mr. Culichi; photo by Joyce Smith

Prepped with passion

Mariscos Mr. Culichi is already known for its Torre Señorón — a seafood tower with ceviche, aguachile, octopus, calamari and shrimp for $32.99.

“Even at the food truck it was the most-sold dish. It is our staple,” Olivares said. “But at the food truck we couldn’t do the presentation that we do in the restaurant. We had to dismantle it to-go.”

Restaurant customers also have made its Caldo Extremo 7 a top-seller. The soup has shrimp, octopus, calamari, tilapia, crab flakes, mussels and white clams.

Ingredients are prepped daily, and dishes are made-to-order and can be customized. Tortillas also are made in-house. 

One challenge as restaurant owners is finding workers who will keep the same level of quality and customer service that the family did operating their food truck, Olivares said. 

“When you know us, you just automatically know that it is quality,” she explained.

They hope to add breakfast items soon. And their food truck will return for special events in the warmer months. 

“That’s how we really connected with our customers,” Olivares said. “That face-to-face contact, a deeper relationship than customer and business owner.”

Restaurant hours: 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays; and 10 a.m. to midnight Fridays and Saturdays. It is closed Tuesdays.

Startland News contributor Joyce Smith covered local restaurants and retail for nearly 40 years with The Kansas City Star. Click here to follow her on Bluesky, here for X (formerly Twitter), here for Facebook, here for Instagram, and by following #joyceinkc on Threads.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2025 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Ixtapa closes JoCo favorite; owner says he won’t compromise family recipes or up prices as food, rent costs rise

        By Tommy Felts | February 25, 2025

        Ixtapa Fine Mexican Cuisine has closed in Johnson County after five years. Co-owner Victor Esqueda blamed rising costs — rent, ingredients and more — for the closing of the restaurant at 7305 W. 95th St. in Overland Park, near the sprawling Shamrock Trading Company campus. “Everything has increased so much — food, alcohol 20 to…

        Coffee cluster percolating on one Troost block; will business support the buzz of six spaces to sip?

        By Tommy Felts | February 25, 2025

        A new stretch of coffee shops in the 5500 block of Troost will test the caffeine tolerance of folks seeking a fix. Six options soon fill out the menu along this bustling corridor. Blackhole Bakery, High Hopes Ice Cream and The Littlest Bake Shop currently offer coffee along with their core menu items. But Blackhole…

        Rally unifies voices amid attacks on immigrants, LGBT+ rights; now it’s time to make noise, organizers say

        By Tommy Felts | February 25, 2025

        As anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies seeking to dismantle DEI efforts ramp up, Danny Soriano has seen inquiries and communication to his digital media business noticeably slow down, the Latino entrepreneur said. “Clients [suddenly seem] deterred from going with me — as opposed to somebody who’s not of color or white,” explained Soriano, the founder of…

        Rooftop Austin’s Bar & Grill just one step in unlocking Olathe’s ‘downtown renaissance’

        By Tommy Felts | February 24, 2025

        A century-old building in downtown Olathe will get new life as an indoor/outdoor restaurant complex known as County Square Commons — anchored by the popular Austin’s Bar & Grill. LANE4 Property Group and Austin’s are redeveloping the 10,859-square-foot building, which is expected to feature four or five storefronts on the street level at 114 to 126…