UConn Student Opens First-Ever Crepes Restaurant in Storrs Center

UConn Student Opens First-Ever Crepes Restaurant in Storrs Center

Farm­house Crepes on 1 Royce Cir. in Storrs, Con­necti­cut. (Pho­to / Dar­d­en Livesay)

STORRS – The Uni­ver­si­ty of Connecticut’s Storrs Cen­ter has been home to more than 50 dif­fer­ent cafés, restau­rants, and stores since it opened in Sep­tem­ber 2013.

How­ev­er, the cen­ter has nev­er had a crepe-only restau­rant. Until now.

Farm­house Crepes offi­cial­ly opened Octo­ber 11 and offers more than a dozen dif­fer­ent crepe options to visitors.

First-time busi­ness own­er and UConn stu­dent Tahj-Antho­ny Jean says his inspi­ra­tion for choos­ing the light French pas­try comes from his childhood.

I love crepes. I’ve been mak­ing [them] for my mom on Mother’s Day since I was 12, so that’s how the crepes came about. At first it was [going to be] a pancakes/waffle place and I was like, ‘You know what? I love crepes. I think every­body else will like crepes too,’” Jean says.

Before start­ing his own busi­ness, Jean played for two years on the UConn foot­ball team. Now a junior, he says he retired from the sport he loves so he could focus on man­ag­ing the store.

Jean says he began think­ing about open­ing the store in April and then planned the project dur­ing the sub­se­quent months.

I always thought there should be a pan­cake or a waf­fle place [in Down­town Storrs], and I saw this spot open as was like, ‘Hey!’ I talked to my fam­i­ly about it and they were like, ‘I got your back if you want to do it,’ and they sup­port­ed me the whole way.”

Farm­house Crepes own­er Tahj-Antho­ny Jean makes a crepe. (Pho­to / Dar­d­en Livesay)

Jean has gone from one full-time duty to the next — from Division‑I stu­dent ath­lete to full-time stu­dent busi­ness-own­er. He hires and trains new staff, over­sees every­day oper­a­tions, and oper­ates the com­pa­ny social media pages.

The for­mer UConn foot­ball play­er is pur­su­ing a major in eco­nom­ics with a minor in com­put­er science.

At the end of the month, Jean turns 20 years old. This is a sur­pris­ing­ly young age for his posi­tion, as only an esti­mat­ed 16% of small busi­ness own­ers in the Unit­ed States are younger than 35 years old, accord­ing to the U.S. Cen­sus Bureau’s 2008 Sur­vey of Income and Participation.

 

Pie chart by Dar­d­en Livesay; source data: Cen­sus Bureau, 2008 SIPP Wave 15

Although Jean is young com­pared to the aver­age Amer­i­can small busi­ness own­er, he says he has a very expe­ri­enced men­tor to help him.

Chef and busi­ness con­sul­tant Frank Lep­ri advis­es Jean about how to open his first restau­rant and also helps train new employ­ees. A grad­u­ate of the Culi­nary Insti­tute of Amer­i­ca in Hyde Park, New York, Lep­ri has decades of culi­nary expe­ri­ence from a vari­ety of places.

I’ve been doing [the restau­rant busi­ness] 30 years. I’ve been an exec­u­tive chef [in places] from New York City, to the French restau­rant down­town in Hart­ford — Pastis — to a coun­try club, to hav­ing my own restau­rants. We actu­al­ly had three of them.”

Lep­ri and his wife Deb­bie cur­rent­ly co-own the Trat­to­ria Da Lep­ri in Elling­ton, Con­necti­cut, where he says they pri­or­i­tize buy­ing local ingredients.

He says Farm­house Crêpes will get fresh pro­duce from the same farm he uses for the trat­to­ria — Hop Top Organ­ic Tillage in Stafford Springs, Con­necti­cut. The store will local­ly buy ingre­di­ents such as mush­rooms, pep­pers, onions, let­tuce, toma­toes, and oth­ers depend­ing on grow­ing seasons.

We try to use all local. As much local as we can pos­si­bly use, we use, only because that’s what our name spec­i­fies — Farm­house,” Lep­ri says. “We want to be the fresh­est, we want to have the fresh­est ingre­di­ents as possible.”

Chef Frank Lep­ri uses an elec­tric blender to pre­pare crepe mix. (Pho­to / Dar­d­en Livesay)

For staff mem­bers, Jean has hired most­ly stu­dents — the major­i­ty from UConn but some from Mansfield’s E.O. Smith High School.

Sopho­more mechan­i­cal engi­neer­ing major Khaled Dul­li is one of the new stu­dent employ­ees; how­ev­er, he says he’s far from new to bak­ing crepes.

Before mov­ing to Con­necti­cut last year, Dul­li lived in Lub­bock, Texas where he worked exten­sive­ly at the La Madeleine French Bak­ery & Café chain store. Dul­li explains how he went from han­dling small­er duties to being one of the top employees.

I start­ed off as just a bus­boy, went up the ranks, and I was doing every­thing at the end. I was mak­ing cakes, I was mak­ing crois­sants, I was mak­ing every­thing,” he says. “I did prep, bak­ery, sauté — every­thing, lit­er­al­ly. I did sal­ads, sand­wich­es, all of that. Any­thing you can think of there, I did it.”

Dul­li is con­sid­er­ing a dou­ble-major in busi­ness and says “you need busi­ness on the side” no mat­ter what, because he believes in always hav­ing a back­up plan “if any­thing else fails.” He says he thinks the Farm­house Crepes busi­ness mod­el is unique not because it has crepes, but rather because it’s crepes-only.

Anoth­er impor­tant aspect of the restaurant’s mod­el is an empha­sis on giv­ing back. Jean says a “big per­cent­age” of the prof­its will go toward feed­ing the poor, although he says he doesn’t know the exact per­cent­age yet.

When I was lit­tle I always want­ed to give back to peo­ple. Grow­ing up in New York, going to the city, see­ing peo­ple home­less on the streets, [I would] always give them a dol­lar,” he says. “I [would] actu­al­ly some­times buy them food so they don’t use my mon­ey for elsewhere.”

The Farm­house Crepes menu has gluten free options and doesn’t include nuts. There’s also a “cre­ate your own crepe” option.

Jean explains that he made up the store name when he was walk­ing his dog near Horse­barn Hill and thought of the “farm­house” theme. He plans to open four more stores over the next 18 months. He says he’s look­ing for­ward to shar­ing his prod­uct with the UConn community.

I’m just excit­ed to see people’s reac­tion on how you make a crepe, and [excit­ed to] intro­duce [the crepe] to Storrs.”


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *