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Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Despite COVID-19, business is booming for Yummee cookies, now getting its own shop - Madison.com

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Yeng Yang

Yeng Yang is opening a shop at 5510 University Ave., next to the Original Pancake House on Madison’s Far West Side.

Yeng Yang's had tremendous success recently with the Yummee cookies he began selling at the Dane County Farmers' Market, and now he's opening a storefront on Madison's Far West Side.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Yeng sold most of his baked goods at farmers' markets, but sales suffered when the Capitol Square market couldn't operate in its usual location this year.

Through Facebook, Yeng's been able to sell and deliver thousands of cookies throughout the state and as far as St. Paul, Minnesota.

Yeng is keeping his membership at FEED Kitchens on Madison's North Side, but is opening a shop at 5510 University Ave., next to the Original Pancake House, in what last housed the Mexican restaurant Lalo's.

At the shop he'll have his Ooey Gooey chocolate chip cookies and three other varieties -- chocolate chip walnut, oatmeal raisin and double chocolate -- available at all times. He'll also offer weekly specials like peanut butter chip, sea salt macadamia and caramel pecan, "to keep things interesting."

Plenty of patios to dine on with 'Streatery'

He intends to add "funfetti" cookies, covered with a strawberry cream cheese frosting and sprinkles, and Christmas cookies. He'll sell milk and coffee with the cookies, and plans to add hot food, sandwiches and bubble tea. He said he's working with friends in the restaurant industry to develop his menu.

Yummee's grand opening will be Sept 26. Yeng said he gutted the former restaurant and made the interior welcoming. "People love the vibe," he said. "We're the only people in the state doing cookies like we do."

He describes his 6-ounce cookies as "crispy on the outside and gooey on the inside." They're huge, he said. "Tall, not flat."

As his website says: "Yum" is "used to express pleasure at eating, or at the prospect of eating, a particular food," and Mee is Yeng's mother's maiden name.

Yummee

Yummee cookies will soon be available on University Avenue.

For 17 years, Yeng, 35, sold vegetables with his mother at the Dane County Farmers' Market on the Square under Yang's Fresh Produce. He broke off from his mother and was able to get his own market membership two years ago to sell cookies and cinnamon rolls.

On a typical summer Saturday at the market in 2019, Yeng said he'd sell as many as 1,000 of his chocolate chip cookies. After COVID-19 hit and the market moved to drive-thru service at Garver Feed Mill and then drive-through -- now with walk-up service -- at the Alliant Energy Center, sales suffered. He sells at Alliant every Wednesday. He doesn't do Saturdays because he's busy delivering cookies out of town. He said he intends to sell at the market on Saturdays in the future.

He also sells at the Fitchburg farmers' market, and the Middleton and Monroe Street markets.

Vin Santo restaurant suspending operations for 'foreseeable future'

Yeng changed his business model in the past six months and has largely turned Yummee into a cookie delivery business, promoting it through Facebook.

He's been focused on e-commerce, taking orders online and shipping cookies across the country. "When COVID hit, we had so many customers reach out to us and say they wanted to ship cookies to a friend," Yeng said, noting he often includes messages in the orders.

Yeng also drives a truckload of cookie orders to a pick-up location in a different city each week, promoting it on Facebook: Milwaukee, Wausau, Appleton, Green Bay, Sheboygan, La Crosse, and St. Paul, Minnesota. He may include Minneapolis in the future. Pickups are done mainly in stores.

Yeng said he's been averaging about 550 cookies just for Minnesota. For Milwaukee, he's had record days of 3,000.

He wanted his own place, he said, because it's not easy sharing kitchen space, especially when he has online orders that needed to be baked, packaged and shipped. With his own shop, he can have stations designed for shipping. "We will no longer have to constantly work around other people's schedules and work odd hours," he said.

Quivey's Grove is temporarily closing due to COVID-19 spike

On average, Yeng has five employees who bake with him and one employee who helps with deliveries. He has as many as eight employees some days, he said, based on the amount of orders he receives.

Online, cookies are $27 for eight. At the market, they're $4 each, with a price break for six to a dozen cookies.

Facebook has been "a game changer," Yeng said. "It's completely changed my business. When COVID hit, we were like, 'Oh my God, this is it. Our business is gone.' Because we relied on the farmers' market."

Yeng said the market accounted for about 95% of his income. Then, one day he made a funfetti cookie, posted it online, and got dozens of orders and people telling him he had to come to their town. "And we're like, 'Okay, let's try it.' And all of a sudden we're selling out everywhere."

Now the script has flipped and the markets account for 5% of his income, he said.

10 Madison restaurants with enhanced outdoor seating thanks to city's Streatery program

Outdoor seating has been a lifeline this summer for some restaurants lucky enough to have it, but it comes with challenges, and worse, an approaching end date with colder weather on the way.

About 87 restaurant and bar owners are taking advantage of the city's "Streatery" program, modeled after efforts around the world to help restaurants during COVID-19 restrictions by helping them increase their outdoor dining areas by extending into streets, parking spaces, parking lots and alleys. Twenty-six other applications are pending in Madison.

The efforts are in response to public heath data that suggests that al fresco dining is a safer option than eating indoors in restaurants. Or as Chicago Tribune columnist Mary Schmich put it, "a restaurant patio is a calculated risk."

Here are 10 Madison restaurants and bars taking part in Streatery.

The Ohio Tavern has seating for 22 outside the bar at 224 Ohio Ave. Under the city's Streatery program, it was able to extend its outdoor seat…

Brasserie V, 1923 Monroe St., has had its outdoor seating since late July with four tables on the sidewalk in front, and six tables in back. T…

On the 1900 block of Atwood Avenue a Streatery cafe zone uses beer barrels and lattice to create patio seating extending into parking spots wi…

Ogden's North Street Diner, 560 North St., has six tables seating as many as 16 people behind the restaurant, which serves breakfast and lunch…

Canteen, 111 S. Hamilton St., has 23 tables which can seat 54 people. Customers order at a pick-up window on the Carroll Street side. Canteen …

"Madison's Official Birthday Place," the Nitty Gritty, 223 N. Frances St., has added six tables on the Frances Street side of the building tha…

Original Pancake House, 5518 University Ave., is using six of its parking spaces for outdoor seating. Its 13 outdoor tables are now covered wi…

The owners of Daisy Cafe & Cupcakery, 2827 Atwood Ave., spent $17,000 repaving their parking lot, and $3,000 on outdoor furniture, and can…

Bierock, 2911 N. Sherman Ave., has been using sidewalk space in the Northside TownCenter for outdoor dining under the Streatery program. The p…

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107 State is on the top block of State Street in what was formerly Capital Tap Haus, Wisconsin Brewing Tap Haus, and briefly Freiburg Tap Haus…

Read more restaurant news at: go.madison.com/restaurants

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September 16, 2020 at 10:15PM
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Despite COVID-19, business is booming for Yummee cookies, now getting its own shop - Madison.com

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