BoysGrow bootstrapping on-site culinary center for KC farm

December 19, 2017  |  Tommy Felts

Budding youth entrepreneurs at BoysGrow need more room to cook their farm-to-table meals, John Gordon Jr. said.

“The culinary program has really taken off,” said Gordon, founder of BoysGrow, a nonprofit that teaches inner-city boys entrepreneurial skills through farming. “We were wanting to grow that aspect of BoysGrow, but our farm has a small, residential studio apartment for a kitchen.”

John Gordon Jr., BoysGrow

John Gordon Jr., BoysGrow

“We’re pretty limited on what we can do with boys in that space,” he added. “The refrigerator literally opens up into the stove, so if someone’s cooking and you open up the fridge, you’ll hit them.”

BoysGrow now is in the midst of bootstrapping funds to build a new, 3,200-square-foot culinary center at the southeast Kansas City farm, Gordon said. The building not only would address the need for a certified kitchen and canning center, but also provide additional office and event space, as well as a post-harvest handling area.

Sixty percent of the funds already have been raised, Gordon said, with BoysGrow mounting a final push via crowdsourcing to reach its goal. Chefs Lidia Bastianich, owner of Lidia’s, and Howard Hanna, owner of The Hotel Rieger, appear in an Indiegogo video in support of the effort.

BoysGrow’s two-year program currently peaks during the summers when 35 to 40 boys come to the farm to harvest, clean, process and cook produce grown on site. A professional chef guides those on the culinary team, which provides meals on the farm throughout the summer. Chef John Williams, who recently sold his Kansas City restaurant Pot Pie, was among the most recent to teach classes at BoysGrow, Gordon said.

BoysGrow Culinary Center

“We had multiple meals where every single thing came from the farm,” Gordon said. “That’s a pretty cool experience for the boys.”

Once funded and built, the new center would “muscle up” both the culinary and farming operations of the nonprofit, he said, noting expanded vegetable production for sale to BoysGrow’s list of local stores and restaurants.

“On the farming side it will be a game-changer because we’ll have significant refrigeration and post-harvest handling area,” Gordon said. “It will allow us to pick produce a day or two before, as opposed to having to pick everything that day, and having to get it in the coolers, get in the trucks and get it out to the stores.”

That will help slow down the process enough for the boys to participate more in the business side of the operation, rather than staff members rushing to get everything to market, he said.

“It will be night and day as far as what we can offer the boys,” Gordon said, noting the space also will allow for general public events like canning classes and cooking demonstrations with visiting chefs.

With BoysGrow about 25 minutes from downtown Kansas City, Gordon is eager for the center to help draw more community members to the farm, he said.

“This is obviously built to serve our youths, but it we want it to be an opportunity for the whole city to get engaged with us too. There will be plenty of opportunities for small community events, small dinners,” Gordon said. “The location has a nice country feel to it. We think it’s a pretty cool experience to come out, be in the culinary center and cook with food and learn more about food on the actual farm that the food came from. It’s a unique opportunity.”

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        LISTEN: Ground Truth Ag puts real-time objectivity into grain grading; here’s how it makes your food safer

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we speak with Kyle Folk, CEO and founder of Ground Truth Ag — a next-gen ag-tech company using AI, machine vision and near-infrared spectroscopy to deliver real-time grain-quality data across the farm-to-market workflow. Folk shares how his upbringing on a Canadian farm inspired…

        MidxMidwest teases lineup for three-day investor-innovation event (and the startup party of the year)

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        Building on Kansas City’s ambitious spirit, a new blend of music, startups and community is expected to meet at the crossroads of innovation, said Alexa Heying, pulling back the curtain on plans for the region’s flagship Midwest tech conference. “The goal of MidxMidwest is to create the connective tissue between founders, investors, and corporates so…

        Peek inside: Buffalo State Pizza takes another slice of ownership with fresh-baked downtown OP relocation

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        Three decades of pizza at a popular downtown Overland Park corner might have come to a close this week, as the crew at Buffalo State Pizza Co. picked up the last of what they could carry and walked it a half block down the street to the shop’s new home near another local favorite, The…

        One cabin, one chair, one cut: Barber swaps rushed for rustic at his no-distractions shop in the woods

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        LONE JACK, Mo. — A short drive to visit this barber — his cabin tucked away in the oaks and hickories about 35 minutes from the heart Kansas City — is about more than just the journey to a great hair cut, Micah Holdaway said; it’s about the experience. After running Barberhouse Men’s Hair Studio in…