Why a City Market favorite is jumping the state line — to the food court at Oak Park Mall
August 29, 2025 | Joyce Smith
Its Brazilian dishes — using recipes the owners grew up eating in São Paulo — have been a City Market draw for more than a decade. Now Taste of Brazil restaurant is expanding to Johnson County, but as a quick-serve kiosk with a limited menu.
Taste of Brazil Express plans a late September opening in the food court of Oak Park Mall, 11149 W. 95th St., near Macy’s.
Owners Marco Rabello and Cristian Maciel, who signed a five-year lease, liked the mall’s year-round foot traffic, the visitability it would give their brand, and an opportunity to try out their offerings on the Kansas side of the metro.
“That’s a busy, busy location and we believe we have products that the clientele that goes there will love — the most popular Brazilian street snacks,” Rabello said. “We are really happy about introducing Brazilian cuisine to customers.”
Taste of Brazil Express will serve fan favorite snacks and desserts such as coxinhas (marinated shredded chicken and cream cheese croquettes with chimichurri sauce), açaí bowls, and pão de queijo (gluten-free cheese bread), along with Brazilian sodas and tropical juices. It will have four employees.
“We’re thrilled to welcome Taste of Brazil to our Oak Park Mall food court,” said Christine Poehling, Oak Park Mall marketing director, in a statement. “Their vibrant flavors and authentic Brazilian cuisine bring a fresh and exciting addition to our dining lineup, and we look forward to the unique culinary experience they’ll offer our guests.”
Rabello earned a full scholarship to play volleyball at Park University in 2002. Two years later, his coach recruited his best friend Maciel.
The friends always planned to return to their homeland. But they met and married local women and started raising their families here, while also working at area hotels and Brazilian restaurants.
In 2013, they started sharing their family recipes at their Taste of Brazil restaurant in the City Market. They later moved next door to 21 E. Third St. so they would have a basement for a prep kitchen.
The restaurant offers sandwiches such as porção (grilled Brazilian pork sausage on a baguette with cheese and chimichurri), risole (fried dough filled with ham, provolone, mozzarella and chimichurri sauce), and Brazilian-style lasagna. It also serves Brazilian beer, sangria, wine and cocktails.
A small retail area offers Taste of Brazil’s frozen cheese bread, which also is sold at some area grocery stores.
They rolled out a food truck in 2017 for festivals and private events including weddings.
Oak Park Mall’s food court has mostly national chains as Chipotle, Panda Express, and Mrs. Fields Cookies.
But Taste of Brazil will join such local tenants as Acapulco Paradise, and another City Market neighbor, Dragonfly Tea Zone, which just opened a shop by the food court.
Dragonfly Tea Zone founder Duc Phung said he had longed for a Kansas location, but waited until he had a trusted manager in place to keep standards high.
“Definitely a lot of folks at Oak Park Mall already know us from the City Market,” said Phung, who has four locations. “And I can reach out to more people faster that don’t know us.”
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
‘The people demand mustard’: This stained glass artist dipped into corn dogs (and hungry shoppers ate it up)
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. LAWRENCE — Selling holiday shoppers on stained glass corn dogs was unexpectedly easy, said Darleen Schillaci; adding mustard and keeping up with buyers’ appetite, however, proved the meatiest challenge. The…
Skip shopping and shipping: Your guide to last-minute, KC-made gifts you can still get in stores
Forget naughty and nice: one Kansas City-pieced business has a puzzling present for each person on Santa’s “weird and mellow” list. Locals can still find them on KC-area store shelves — while they last. Birdie — a sister company to Stefanie and Tim Ekeren’s popular Kansas City Puzzle Company — packs each eye-catching box with…
One issue cuts across all political lines: How it could be the antidote to a divided America
Entrepreneurship is a way to unify the United States at a time with great political division, said Victor Hwang. “It’s an issue that cuts across party lines,” explained the founder and CEO of Right to Start. “And it’s something Americans really care about.” Hwang, previously an executive at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, recently published…
Small biz makers worry Trump tariffs could be ‘recipe for recession’; Economists, farmers share concerns about trade war
An enthusiastic smile spreads across Katie Mabry Van Dieren’s face as three small groups of new customers flow into her Brookside Plaza shop — a space filled as high as the Shop Local KC owner can reach with colorful, off-beat, and functional goods and gifts from Kansas City makers. “We smelled something wonderful from outside…






