Gourmet Popcorn shop to open at Peachtree Battle

CaJa to celebrate grand opening Friday, Sept. 21.

CaJa to celebrate grand opening Friday, Sept. 21.

CaJa Popcorn, a gourmet popcorn retailer, in a press release Tuesday announced plans to open its doors on Friday, September 21.

Sign up now to get our Daily Breaking News Alerts

Opt out at anytime

The store, located in the Peachtree Battle Shopping Center at 2333 Peachtree Road, will feature chef-inspired, small batch popcorn handmade daily.

Popcorn flavors include Sea Salt Caramel, Spicy BBQ, Pimento Cheese, Kettle Corn, and Butter, according to the release.

This is the first restaurant venture for owner Kevin Peak, who has worked in the financial industry for more than 20 years.

The name “CaJa” was inspired by the names of Peak’s two children, Caroline and Jack.

Photo courtesy of CaJa.

 

Caleb J. Spivak

Caleb J. Spivak

Caleb J. Spivak

Caleb J. Spivak

26 Responses

  1. New low-end trend to commence, and subsequently swallow up Atlanta’s strip mall snack shop scene in approximately 2 days…

  2. It’s a freaking “gourmet” popcorn store. This concept belongs in a mall from 1995 next to Build-A-Bear and a sports collectibles store.

  3. H; whomever you are, your comment was tasteless, rude and unnecessary. You have no idea what this persons business plan is, distribution plans or ultimate measures of success are. You should reserve judgment until you have experienced the store and product yourself. The market will decide if it is a success or failure.

  4. Ha ha, Urbanist. You LIVE at the greatest strip mall of all, Atlantic Station.

    At least you don’t discriminate. You love malls of all kinds.

  5. Oh come on, Brad. They could probably last a few months in one of those fake carts between Auntie Anne’s and the cart making candles for Christmas shoppers.

  6. I love popcorn.
    …but this might work better next to health club or next to any public park.
    …possibly in a food truck or food cart concept.

    Driving to a strip mall for popcorn seems odd.
    But driving to a strip mall for a $3.00 cup of burnt coffee seems odd to…

  7. Nothing wrong with a bit of cynical “reality”…statistics in the industry say that 50-55% of restaurant/bars fail within the first year…tell it like it is!!!

  8. Hmmm….A gourmet popcorn food truck. Relatively low overhead, non-messy product, easy to pop up (no pun intended) at outdoor events, parks, retail areas. Dude might be onto something there.

  9. Assuming that the popcorn being sold is good, a popcorn store has a better chance of success at Peachtree Battle than at almost any other location in metro Atlanta other than at an indoor mall or the airport. It is at an extremely busy shopping center near some established food establishments including Baskin Robbins, Jalisco, and Zoe’s that bring lots of foot traffic. Also, it is in a shopping center that caters to a wealthy clientele who might purchase cans of gourmet popcorn to give as gifts.

  10. A) This shop isn’t going up in a storefront at 1010. It’s across from an elementary school, next to a children’s clothing store and a Baskin Robbins, and in a neighborhood with plenty of disposable income.

    B) If you go from the financial industry for 20 years to opening a popcorn store named after your kids, you obviously don’t need the money. This dude is living his dream, and you people wish you had the balls (and resources) to do the same.

  11. I happen to remember the late 1980s when flavored popcorn stores were the rage and filled empty slots in strip malls across the country. The fad lasted a year, maybe two, before all of the stores were gone.

    Maybe this guy does have a lot of disposable income, is living out his dream, and doesn’t care how money he loses. I just don’t expect this resurrected fad to last any longer than it did any other time.

  12. Maybe everyone has blocked out the terrible Christmas gift tins of popcorn that no one ever wanted but got anyway.

    In the end it’s a store selling popcorn. Dress it up all you want, the end product is a snack that sometimes some people like when they’re not watching a movie.

  13. In the end it’s a store selling [coffee]. Dress it up all you want, the end product is a [drink] that sometimes some people like when [it’s not first thing in the morning]

    Sound familar?

  14. I hope you realize that you tried to put demand for popcorn and coffee on the same level.

    Folks, there’s an untapped vein of white fluffy gold out there! Popcorn I say! Have you seen the corn fields in the midwest? We’ll be rich!

  15. I thought Urbanist would have loved this considering it isn’t a chain and offers something different to what is out there currently….

    Damn this man is hard to please!

  16. I went today to the friends and family soft opening. The spicy bar-b-que was pretty good. I can see this place surviving if not thriving.

  17. Chicago still has a very successful gourmet popcorn company.

    I never thought a place could sell just cup cakes and make it, but they have. In fact one company in particular is killing it.

    At a time when people are looking for fresh and moving toward different flavors, I think this concept has a shot.

  18. A pop corn store also just opened at the Shallowford Exchange shopping center at Shallowford Rd and 85. Haven’t tried it yet.

  19. There are plenty of stores around Atlanta and the country…Tiffany’s Popcorn Cafe, near me, in Decatur is doing great…they started hiring, so you can’t be losing money to do that.

Leave a Reply

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

Related Posts

Search