That sassy bacon jam is made in KCK

Our Sassy Pantry makes its bacon jam and other products in Kansas City, Kan.

by William Crum

Kansas City, Kan., is known not just for barbecue, but also for bacon.

Our Sassy Pantry, based in Wyandotte County, has put this area on the bacon map with its bacon jam.

At the Bacon Fest held annually, Our Sassy Pantry competed and won first place. It was its first year in the competition.

They entered their bacon jam on such items as macaroni and cheese, and they also used the bacon jam on a bacon and tomato sandwich.

There were more than 100 vendors who competed for this honor, and Our Sassy Pantry received high national recognition for its efforts.  It has resulted in invitations to be on some local television and radio stations.

Our Sassy Pantry is owned by Marisa Roberts and Kay Findlay. Marisa Roberts moved to Wyandotte County in 1999 where she opened a catering company. Eventually she teamed up with her business partner, Kay Findlay, where they developed bacon jams giving them national acclaim. Marisa is the daughter-in-law of the late Clay (Bud) Roberts, who was well known in Kansas City, Kan.

Our Sassy Pantry bacon jams are now in various grocery stores in the Greater Kansas City metropolitan area.

”I really love being from Wyandotte County. It is truly a culinary experience and both my husband and I really enjoy living here. We really look forward to being part of the Wyandotte County experience, it is amazing,” Marissa Roberts said.

Our Sassy Pantry offers four types of jams. Their products include a bacon jam which is known nationally, their Ancho cherry jam, their wicked tomato jam and their balsamic blueberry jam. Even though the bacon jam is known nationally, the other jams are also getting national and world recognition as well. Culinary experts agree that these jams are a unique discovery.

For more information on where to get the jams, go to the website www.oursassypantry.com.

KCK student receives scholarship to study overseas

A University of Kansas student from Kansas City, Kan., has received the Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship.

The scholarship, awarded to 13 KU students in all, will allow students to study overseas.

Lynne Yang, a KU junior from Kansas City, Kan., will study in China.

The Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

Gilman Scholars receive up to $5,000 to apply towards their study abroad program costs. The Gilman program aims to diversify the kinds of students who study abroad and the countries and regions where they go by supporting undergraduates who might otherwise not study abroad due to financial constraints.

KCKCC debate national champions once again

The KCKCC Debate Team recently won its 11th consecutive National Title in Debate at the Phi Rho Pi Community College National Tournament. The team also won its 9th national title at the CEDA National Tournament. (KCKCC photo)

by Kelly Rogge
The Kansas City Kansas Community College Debate Team has had a busy few weeks. And as the group celebrates the end of their season, they celebrate once again as national champions.
KCKCC won its 11th consecutive National Title in Debate at the Phi Rho Pi Community College National Tournament in Denver, Colo. There were 100 teams that competed in the Parliamentary Debate Division at the tournament, and when all competition was completed, KCKCC was on top. In addition, the team of Matt Casas and Anthony Joseph won gold in the same division, and assistant coach John Bretthauer, a KCKCC alum, received a coaching fellowship award.
“I am not surprised at how well our debaters did at the tournament because they have perfected the ability to adapt,” said Darren Elliott, KCKCC debate coach. “I know we have talented people, and they used their own creativity to be successful.”
Parliamentary Debate is a different style of debate than KCKCC is used to at tournaments. Instead of preparing for a single argument in advance of the tournament, debaters are given 15 minutes to prepare for the round and the topics continually change.
What makes the win even more surprising is that this is the first time Casas and Joseph have debated as a team. Casas has been successful throughout the 2013-14 season with partner Brian Gonzaba. The pair even qualified to the National Debate Tournament, tying with Harvard University for fifth overall in the national rankings. KCKCC is the first community college in NDT history to qualify for three consecutive years and KCKCC was the top community college in overall final standings. The tournament was March 28-31.
“We were shocked. We went in expecting to do well, but never expected to get to the elimination rounds, let alone with the whole thing. It felt really good,” said Casas, a graduate of Milliard South High School in Omaha. “I think we really had to be prepared to compromise with each other and learn as partners. With Brian, we had a routine down. We were comfortable. With Anthony, we both had to be more open to trying new things.”
Joseph said the biggest challenge of the tournament was learning how to adapt to the judges and make adjustments in each round.
“I thought it was fun, but adapting to the judges was our biggest concern,” said Joseph, a graduate of Little Rock Central High School. “I think communication was super important. We had to keep talking after each round to make those adjustments. That really helped us.”
In addition to Casas and Joseph, Ashley Shockley, Homeschool and Chris Miles and Michael Smith, both graduates of Fort Osage High School in Independence, competed at Phi Rho Pi. What made Shockley’s experience a little different is that she was paired with another debater from El Camino College in California for the Parliamentary Debate rounds.
“We had some very quick practice rounds and tried to spend as much time together before the rounds began,” she said. “We talked about things we could improve on, but right from the start, I didn’t know her style, and she didn’t know mine. Not only did we have to adapt to a new style of debate, but adapt to each other very quickly. It was an interesting, but fun experience.”
Before Phi Rho Pi, KCKCC competed in the CEDA Nationals, which is open to any two or four year school. Katie Ford, Fremont High School in Fremont, Neb. and Alex Glanzman, Lawrence High School, made it to the top 32 before being eliminated by the University of Oklahoma. Casas and Gonzaba were eliminated in the top 16, also by OU. Overall, KCKCC won the National Title in the community college division, the ninth time in the last 11 years.
Additional awards were given to Ford, 9th speaker and Casas, CEDA All American. This is the first time that KCKCC has had anyone in the top 20 speakers at the CEDA Nationals.