Why a globally-trained Spanish chef is building his new homebase from City Market

July 18, 2025  |  Joyce Smith

The future Paella Mix, 25 E. Third St., at right, in Kansas City's historic City Market; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

It’s all about the pan for Carlos Saura, a Spanish chef whose new paella and tapas spot in Kansas City’s bustling and diverse City Market is set to arrive in late summer or early fall — helping bring the historic marketplace district to 100-percent-leased capacity.

The Paella Mix, at 25 E. Third St., is expected to specialize in paellas, and classic sangrias. Saura wants to share the soul of Spain, he said — emphasizing its culture, flavors and the way people come together around a table. 

Carlos Saura, The Paella Mix; photo by Joyce Smith

Saura grew up in Seville in southwestern Spain, where his family and friends either dined out on paella, or lugged their paella pan with them so they could quickly set up a meal just about anywhere.

Later, he worked as a chef in Hong Kong for a decade, mostly serving Italian and French dishes. It is where he met his wife, who still works there but is from the Kansas City area. They want to relocate the family to Kansas City and this is a first step.

City Market gives Saura a more permanent spot to rest his pan, he explained. 

While he’s still finalizing the menu, paella options could include Paella Valenciana with chicken, pork, red pepper and rosemary; Paella de Mariscos with shrimp, clam and calamari; and Paella Negra with squid ink, shrimp, clam, calamari and white wine. 

Cooking paella typically leaves a layer of crispy, caramelized toasted rice at the bottom of the pan called socarrat, Saura said, noting that element is considered a delicacy and will be essential to dishes from The Paella Mix.

The restaurant’s tapas menu could include Croquetas Caseras (béchamel and jamon); Patatas Bravas (crispy potatoes topped with brava sauce and aioli); and Calamares Fritos (lightly fried calamari with aioli sauce). He’ll have two desserts: Tarta de Queso (a Basque burnt cheesecake), and Crema Catalana.

The future Paella Mix, 25 E. Third St., in Kansas City’s historic City Market; photo by Joyce Smith

Along with red and white sangria, The Paella Mix is expected to serve beer, Poppi and soda.

Saura hopes to create a private event space in an upstairs room overlooking the dining area, and he will have a catering operation, taking his paella pan on the road to set up at events.

“People want to watch, to see it in the moment,” he said. 

Sushi Nami rolls expansion into vacant kitchen 

Sushi Nami, 108 E. Fifth St., in Kansas City’s historic City Market; photo by Joyce Smith

City Market’s success also includes news from a space that went dark in summer 2024. The Northland’s Sushi Nami at Wok N Roll — known for its sushi and Japanese specialties — is expanding into the former Bo’s Kitchen, 108 E. Fifth St.

The new location — operating simply as Sushi Nami — is set to open in September, focusing exclusively on Japanese cuisine, with a menu by owner Stanley Ting that highlights fresh sashimi, inventive rolls, and traditional appetizers.

Signature rolls are expected to include the Burning Man (shrimp tempura, spicy tuna, Thai chili pepper topped with tuna, avocado, spicy mayo, and sriracha sauce); the Flower Roll (cooked shrimp, marinated carrot, and avocado topped with tuna, white tuna, red snapper, and yellowtail with ponzu sauce); and the Godzilla Roll (shrimp tempura, crab meat, cream cheese, and avocado topped with eel sauce, spicy mayo, seaweed salad, and furikake). 

The menu is set to feature such appetizers as edamame, crispy gyoza, shrimp and vegetable tempura, and veggie spring rolls, along with mango ice cream and green tea ice cream for dessert.

Sushi Nami at Wok N Roll’s Northland restaurant is at 200 N.E. Barry Road.

Richard Ng, Bo’s Kitchen, Bo Lings; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

Bo’s Kitchen — a fast-casual pivot by the owners of Bo Lings, who relocated their City Market operation  a half a block to the east in late 2023 — closed in late spring 2024, with management posting signage indicating renovations within the space and a planned mid-summer reopening.

It instead sold to Sushi Nami in a deal that closed in early June 2025. 

After decades in the restaurant business in Kansas City, Richard Ng, co-owner and co-founder with his wife, Theresa, said the family is trying to slow down a bit. They also sold the majority of their stake in their Bo Lings on the Plaza, which is now known as Heritage by Bo Lings.

From the archives: New owners for Bo Lings’ Plaza location; here’s what the beloved restaurant is adding to its menu

Minsky’s Pizza Cafe & Bar at City Market; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

Tender move to dial back aging favorite

Owners of a popular local pizza chain are de-emphasizing a sister brand with Kansas City roots that go back nearly 100 years at their shared City Market location.

Tenderloin Grill was a Southwest Boulevard mainstay starting in 1932, from its humble beginnings as a pushcart to a restaurant. While other menu items were added through the years, its house-made tenderloin — hand-battered and deep-fried, then topped with mustard, horseradish, onion, tomato and its secret hot sauce — became part of its moniker and its tagline: “Home of Kansas City’s Best Tender.” 

Four years ago, three men connected to Minsky’s Pizza Cafe & Bar, acquired the restaurant (which had been closed for a year), along with its name and the recipes.

“We tried it out on the Boulevard and parking always made it tough,” said Ken Kantner, a partner in Tenderloin Grill and Minsky’s.

Kansas City’s City Market, July 2025; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

Tenderloin Grill menu items at Minsky’s Pizza Cafe & Bar in City Market; photo by Joyce Smith

A couple years later, the City Market approached them about relocating or expanding. The owners chose to relocate to the district for the parking, foot traffic and hope of expanding their dinner business. (They leased the building at 900 Southwest Boulevard to Lilly’s Cantina). 

“It was great. Take an old brand to the City Market; one of the oldest restaurants and one of the oldest places in the city,” Kanter said. “It was doing OK but not as good as we would have liked. It was tough being the only restaurant open later on that east side of City Market. There wasn’t much foot traffic in the inner square of the market in the evenings.”

Owners are dialing back Tenderloin Grill in lieu of more consistent pizza offerings.

But its tenderloin and Tenderger (tenderloin and cheeseburger on the same bun) are still available for dine-in, delivery and pickup at the Minsky’s in the City Market, Liberty, and Zona Rosa, and seem to be especially popular in the Northland.

“The City Market is a little more ‘foods from around the world,’” Kanter said. “But we own the Tenderloin Grill brand and see the value in honoring a brand that has been around that long.”

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.

2025 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Black & Veatch delivers first consumer product ever: Solarhood

    By Tommy Felts | July 18, 2018

    After more than 100 years in business, engineering giant Black & Veatch has launched its first consumer product: Solarhood. Built through the B&V Growth Accelerator program, the company created Solarhood to streamline the process for homeowners to tap solar power. The Solarhood mobile and web-based app allow homeowners to access the feasibility of going solar,…

    Katie Boody, LEANLAB

    Two KC EdTech startups earn spots in latest LEANLAB cohort; launch set for August

    By Tommy Felts | July 17, 2018

    It’s a highly selective process to join the fifth LEANLAB K-12 fellowship, said Katie Boody, but two Kansas City startups made the cut.   K12 Perform and Base Academy of Music will join four other cohort members — hailing from the Midwest to Washington D.C. — in the August-to-November EdTech accelerator program. LEANLAB is partnering…

    Hecho KC, Luis Garcia

    HechoKC cast in hand-made image of Chicano artist’s culture, family, community

    By Tommy Felts | July 17, 2018

    Witnessing — and participating in — Kansas City’s renaissance has been amazing, said Luis Garcia, the longtime artist behind HechoKC. The Crossroads used to be a ghost town, said Garcia, who has been part of the KC scene since his years at the Kansas City Art Institute. He developed SPYN Studio, a branding and design…

    Quartet of startups hop into the Digital Sandbox KC

    By Tommy Felts | July 16, 2018

    Four early-stage businesses recently entered the Digital Sandbox KC program. The new startups demonstrate the ingenuity Digital Sandbox aims to attract for its grant-funding efforts, said Jeff Shackelford, director of Digital Sandbox KC. “From helping students prepare for college to analyzing voting records to predict legislative outcomes, the startups in the Sandbox are a great…