Tasty, healthy treats in a microwaveable cup: Omega Power Creamer founders launch Upside Down Bakery 

January 19, 2021  |  Channa Steinmetz

Guilty pleasure treats — like brownies, muffins and pancakes — no longer require “guilt” as an ingredient, Greg Blome said.  

Upside Down Bakery

Upside Down Bakery

“Upside Down Bakery is flipping baking on its head,” said Blome, who co-founded Upside Down Bakery with Nick Wehrle. “As in, we are making traditional high-sugar, high-carb products that taste good, and taking away the sugar and high-carb aspect while maintaining that same taste.”

The duo, who founded Omega Power Creamer keto coffee products in 2014 in St. Louis before relocating to Kansas City, is set to launch their newest keto-friendly venture at the end of January. 

“It’s been about a 13-month process now,” Blome noted. “We were supposed to go to production for Upside Down Bakery in May, but when COVID hit, there was a two-month period where everything just kept getting delayed.” 

Click here to read more about the duo’s beginnings and commitment to health.

Upside Down Bakery

Upside Down Bakery

Along with health and taste, Upside Down Bakery strives for convenience, Blome said — noting the products take only two tablespoons of water and 60 seconds in the microwave to become ready-to-eat. 

Having worked with a professional chef, the microwavable cup’s first set of flavors include: blueberry muffin, buttermilk maple pancakes and double fudge brownie.

“We have new flavors already planned out,” Blome shared, “as well as some other exciting ideas for the future of this.” 

Up next: pitching to major retailers to get their cups and creamers into stores, Blome said. Customers currently can order — or pre-order for Upside Down Bakery — their products on the company’s website or Amazon. 

Upside Down Bakery

Upside Down Bakery

Click here to pre-order Upside Down Bakery.

Omega Power Creamer previously partnered with Walmart in 2019, but that arrangement ended in June 2020, Blome noted. 

“[Walmart] determined that those higher-priced healthy items are just too expensive for their store,” he explained. “So we’re no longer in Walmart, but we’re working on some solutions for Omega Power Creamer to lower costs.” 

Nick Wehrle, Meghan Tomlinson, Greg Blome, and Ryan Blome, Omega health food products

Nick Wehrle, Meghan Tomlinson, Greg Blome, and Ryan Blome, Omega health food products. Photo by Pearl Wilson.

Expanding the team, distances

Transplants to Kansas City before the pandemic, COVID-19 caused the duo to pursue their business ventures from remote locations. 

“We have significant others in the medical field, so I’m in St. Louis and Nick [Wehrle] is in Minnesota,” Blome explained. “We definitely want to get a strong base in the Midwest, between St. Louis and KC and in the surrounding areas.”

“So that’s where we will first be targeting for retail,” he added.

To prepare for the launch of Upside Down Bakery, the founders expanded their Omega health food products team for more hands on deck, Blome said. Blome’s brother, Ryan Blome, was recruited to head of marketing — joining Wehrle’s sister, Meghan Tomlinson, who leads social media.

Since entering the food industry in 2014, Blome has seen the world of keto grow immensely, he shared, but what continues to set their products apart are their flavors.

“It’s honestly one of the best tasting keto products on the market,” Blome said of Upside Down Bakery’s treats. “The people we’ve had try them didn’t even know it was keto, so we’re excited to get more people’s reactions.

“I want to bring healthy options to people,” Blome continued. “For me and my team, we’re just happy that we created something we enjoy and that everyone else can enjoy too.”

[adinserter block="4"]

2021 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    ‘Night Without Borders’ opens coffee house doors to honor heritage through harmony

    By Tommy Felts | October 7, 2025

    Culture transcends borders, said Danny Soriano, surrounded Friday night in a popular Crossroads coffee shop by music, dance, art, food, and drinks that all shared a common link: Latino flavor. “Whether it’s Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Argentina, we all come together as Latinos, as Hispanics, and celebrate our heritage,” said Soriano, who organized a…

    KC GIFT orders a full meal with $100K Wah Gwan grant: Job creation (with a side of inspiration)

    By Tommy Felts | October 7, 2025

    Young people on Kansas City’s east side need to see examples of what can be achieved when someone who looks like them works hard — and wins, said Tanyech Yarbrough, pledging to use her recent grant funding from KC G.I.F.T. to mirror entrepreneurship to her community, as well as expand her Troost eatery. Yarbrough’s Wah…

    GEWKC returning to familiar venue (but its new destinations might surprise ticket holders)

    By Tommy Felts | October 7, 2025

    When Global Entrepreneurship Week pulls into the station later this fall, Kansas City participants can expect a fresh experience inside one of the region’s most iconic landmarks, said Callie England, noting an intentional effort behind the scenes should help reroute the “best of the best” events onto custom agendas. “While you’ll see a few familiar…

    Wichita program drives highway of resources to more KC startups; founders tout who they met along the way

    By Tommy Felts | October 6, 2025

    Opening its doors to Midwest companies outside Kansas for the first time, a Wichita-based program that connects startups with the tools to better engage enterprise partners offered an added benefit to Kansas City entrepreneurs: a new ecosystem of support just a few hours from home. “The program’s Wichita location inspired us to broaden our outreach…