Brothers behind Session Taco launching ‘destination Mexican spot’ in upscale JoCo dining district
May 8, 2025 | Joyce Smith
Just weeks after closing Session Taco in Leawood’s Park Place, the owners expect to revamp the prominent spot for a new destination Mexican restaurant.
Lapez Mod Mex is scheduled to open this summer at 11563 Ash St.

The former Session Taco space at 11563 Ash St. in Leawood’s Park Place, which is set to become Lapez Mod Mex; photo by Joyce Smith
Brothers Adam and Jason Tilford first opened Mission Taco Joint in the space in June 2023. It rebranded as Session Taco in September after their company was sued for trademark infringement by a tortilla maker that uses the same name.
Then Session Taco closed in mid-March when sales were underperforming.
The Tilfords also closed their South Plaza restaurant in 2024, but they have a Session Taco in the East Crossroads, as well as six in the St. Louis area.
Adam Tilford said Session Taco had more of an urban vibe, but other Park Place venues, such as Bamboo Penny’s and Aqua Penny’s, are more well-appointed and are destination locations.
“What we are creating is a destination Mexican spot,” he said. “More entree-driven. More knife-and-fork-plus, not eating tacos with your hands. Bamboo Penny’s is a great example. Not your typical Thai spot.”
Aqua Penny’s underwent an extensive $1.4 million transformation of the former Gordon Biersch Brewery Restaurant space before opening in Park Plaza a year ago.
Jason Tilford is working on the Lapez menu but it will include such entrees as shrimp al pastor (jumbo prawns, achiote butter, smoked pineapple, coconut rice and grilled chayote), carne asada (wood-grilled prime steak, huitlacoche butter, and chile mashed potatoes), and chile-braised short ribs with mole negro and roasted polenta.
Appetizers will include quesadillas, blue corn sopes with duck confit and chipotle-cherry sauce, and tostaditas with chile-seared tuna, jicama, pineapple, pickled radish and smoked salt. It also will have tacos.
The brothers had a similar upscale restaurant in St. Louis, the award-winning Milagro Modern Mexican, for eight years but they said it was not a convenient location for their customers. When the lease expired, they closed it to expand their popular Mission Taco Joint concept.
They will change the decor at the Leawood location and slightly alter the seating arrangement.
Previous tenants were Ingredient True Eatery and The Ainsworth. The Leawood spot overlooks Barkley Square community space.
“We absolutely love the location,” Adam Tilford said.
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.

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Bodyrite duo cooks meal prep into personal training concept
Don’t just go with the flow at a traditional gym, Jamil Nelson said. Go with Flo. “Treadmills and ellipticals are pretty archaic to us,” said Nelson — or “Mr. Bodyrite” to his wife, Florese. “A jump rope is way better because it’s going to blow up your heart rate.” Modern workouts are all about functional,…
Tech tracks workplace bias: It exists ‘whether you want to face it or not’
During a summer internship with a large Kansas City corporation, college student Louis Byrd was unexpectedly called into the HR office. Although the incident was about 10 years ago today, it has not yet left his mind, Byrd said. “I’ll never forget this,” he said. “HR told me that the people on my team had…
EyeVerify explains why it changed name to Zoloz
More than two months after revealing a curious name change, EyeVerify is offering details behind its evolution to become “Zoloz.” The fast-growing biometrics tech firm announced in August that it was rebranding as Zoloz, but initially offered little information about the reason for or meaning behind the name change. Headquartered in downtown Kansas City, a…
Sandy Kemper-led YEP KC primes teen entrepreneurs for success
If all extraordinary students knew they were exceptional, the world would be a much more entrepreneurial place, said Sandy Kemper. “It’s the future of our city,” said Kemper, co-founder of YEP KC, about young talent. “If we can capture them early, before they go to college, we can create a network that can sustain them…
