Bean around the block: How this Westport coffee shop is cherry picking roasts from its own farm in the Andes

August 21, 2025  |  Joyce Smith

Brett Janssen on his coffee farm in the Andes Mountains of Huila, in southwestern Colombia; courtesy photo

A hemisphere away from Brett Janssen’s former job at General Motors in Kansas City’s Northland, the now-budding Westport coffee shop owner found a fresh batch of opportunities: his wife, business partner and a transcontinental farm-to-cup Columbian coffee operation.

Janssen’s House Coffee; photo by Joyce Smith

Janssen’s House Coffee — the fruit of Janssen and his fiancée Genisis Mejia’s passion for coffee — is set to open in October at 4041 Broadway Blvd. The shop notably sources its beans directly from the couple’s own coffee farm in Mejia’s native Colombia.

“We try to keep as short of a chain supply as possible, mostly a three month supply sent out,” he Janssen, noting the coffee is currently available online and at the Overland Park Farmers’ Market. “Most of the time we are already sold out.”

His 2,000-square-foot Westport space has 16-foot ceilings, and exposed brick walls. It’s set to feature lounge seating in the back, and the couple hopes to eventually replace a large front window with a garage door to open in nicer weather.

Brett Janssen and Genisis Mejia in Colombia; courtesy photo

Mejia is a lawyer and still lives in Colombia, with Janssen living in the U.S. part time, making the roughly 2,700-mile trek back to Kansas City to run the brick-and-mortar operation. He emphasized the coffee shop is an accessory to the farm.

“We’re farmers. It’s our first priority because that’s where the quality starts,” he said. “It costs a fortune trying to open a store these days and I’m stuck up here trying to build a brand while she is stuck down there with the farm.

 “But I feel like people who come here are going to be tasting real coffee for the first time — farm-fresh quality coffee.”

In keeping with that focus on quality, the couple purchased a Dalla Corte espresso machine, retailing in the five figures. They plan to offer tastings, as well as cupping classes.

Janssen’s House Coffee will be competing with several coffee shops just in the Westport area, such as mainstay Broadway Cafe, as well as newcomers such as Chambre Coffee and Le Champion. Triple Crown Coffee closed in March after a short stint in a building just north of Janssen’s.

Brett Janssen and Genisis Mejia in Colombia; courtesy photo

Rerouting from wholesale

Janssen has visited Colombia for 15 years, and met Mejia, who he calls his wife, in 2018. Three years later they bought a 50-acre farm — in the Andes Mountains of Huila, in southwestern Colombia, a vibrant spot for high-quality coffee and cotton production. They later expanded to 60 acres.

Because Janssen grew up in Kansas City and maintains a home locally, the farm expansion seemed like a good opportunity to wholesale beans back to coffee shops in the City of Fountains. So after the couple perfected its processes, he took packages of beans around to Kansas City shops looking for partnership opportunities among businesses eager for a direct farm-to-shop bean.

“They weren’t interested at all,” Janssen said. “It was shocking to us. A lot of places try to spell out that they are as close to the farm as possible, but at the end of the day that doesn’t seem to be the case.”

Janssen and Mejia are no longer interested in wholesaling. At least for now. Instead, they’re putting the product to work for their own consumer-facing venture.

Click here to follow Janssen’s House Coffee on Instagram.

Mapping ever-changing tones

The farm-to-shop method is labor-intensive, Janssen acknowledges, but notes the process contributes to the unique appeal and quality of Janssen’s House Coffee.

After harvesting, the cherries (the fruit of the coffee plant) are dumped into a vat of natural spring water from the farm. In a process called “floating” the bad cherries float to the top, are skimmed off and sold to a less discriminating buyer, Janssen said.

Brett Janssen with beans from his coffee farm in the Andes Mountains of Huila, in southwestern Colombia; courtesy photo

The good cherries are then processed three ways:

  • Washed coffee: The mucus-like substance surrounding the bean is washed off with more  spring water. The beans are then solar-dried before selection.
  • Honey coffee: Yellow, red or black. The mucus-like substance is left on the bean, giving it a different flavor profile. Black honey has the most.
  • Natural coffee: The cherry is left on the coffee bean during the drying process, providing a fermented, fruitier bean. 

Then the green coffee beans are dried and stored in fika bags to rest. About two weeks later, the couple — and any seasonal help — sift through the beans, searching for defects. The beans are then shipped to a facility in Bogotá, Colombia, to thresh the “parchment” off the bean. They are screened again, this time according to size. 

“It’s not to say one is better than the other. It is more for uniformity in the roasting process,” Janssen said. “A bigger bean might take longer to roast. We can’t afford to have a bad batch.”

The beans are roasted at another facility, packed in 5-pound bags, and shipped to Kansas City.

Flavor profiles are determined by professional Q Graders in Colombia, who also evaluate the beans for any defects, acidity, body and overall quality.

Once a batch sells out, a customer probably won’t be able to get that particular flavor again.

A recent Colombia dark roast was described as having flavor notes of toasted almonds, dark chocolate, cocoa and caramel with a cupping score of 84.25. Scores of 80 points or higher indicate a specialty coffee of high quality.

A castillo washed had flavor notes of cocoa, cherry, sugar cane, candy, orange and honey with a light body and a cupping score of 80.

“With every batch it’s different,” Janssen said. “We roast just 20 kilos at a time, and the tones are forever changing.”

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

        Matt Watson, Stackify

        KC angels pile in with $2.74M funding raise for Matt Watson’s Stackify

        By Tommy Felts | January 23, 2019

        A team of six local angel investors has pushed Kansas City-sourced Stackify past the $2 million mark in the company’s latest funding raise, Matt Watson announced Wednesday. “We are using the funds to continue our aggressive growth plans,” Watson, founder and CEO, said of the raise. Uploaded onto the startup scene in 2012, Stackify has…

        Photo courtesy of Evergy Ventures/Getty Images

        Smart strategy generates wins for Evergy Ventures — KC’s quiet investment powerhouse

        By Tommy Felts | January 22, 2019

        Editor’s note: The following content is sponsored by Evergy Ventures but independently produced by Startland News. As two long-standing utility companies merge, they’re creating a new kind of energy for GXP Investments — now known as Evergy Ventures — said Dennis Odell, announcing a rebrand of the investment firm. “GXP Investments — GXP — it…

        Cough Detection

        Predicting sick days: Sickweather showers HR with data on illness mapping, trends

        By Tommy Felts | January 22, 2019

        It’s a partnership more than a year in the making, said Graham Dodge, announcing Sickweather’s deal to help a leading employee benefits company predict workers’ sick days. The Kansas City-based startup is piloting a program among the more than 10,000 employees at Unum Group to give managers more data and insights to plan for absenteeism.…

        Rick Kloog, Vintage WiFi

        Vintage WiFi mashup: Designer converts old items into bluetooth speakers at Troost T-shirt shop

        By Tommy Felts | January 22, 2019

        Rick Kloog’s T-shirt shop on Troost resonates with the sound of side hustles — combining the former music producer’s previously untapped talents for a Vintage WiFi effect. The “funky little vintage store” blends original Kansas City-designed shirts, and miscellaneous items — most of which Kloog converts into bluetooth speakers — as well as other original…