Arnyce Foster-Hernandez, 50, and her husband, Danny Hernandez, 49, are devoted to standing up for the Harlem neighborhood by their enterprise, That includes the Café on one hundred and thirty fifth Road. However their journey to securing the area and opening in June 2024 was not with out hurdles — challenges they now hope to share as a way to encourage and information different bold entrepreneurs.
A number of of their merchandise are sourced from small companies, a lot of that are Black and LGBTQ owned. They embody espresso, tea, pastry, pure fruit juice, and spices. A number of the meals made by Danny of their small kitchen are sandwiches and desserts. The banana pudding and in a single day oats are two fashionable objects. The couple are additionally happy with the seasonal and natural meals and drinks, a large improve from the processed sugars and components on the native bodegas.
Each Arnyce and Danny are lifelong New Yorkers, and have backgrounds working with the New York Metropolis Parks Division for many years. The 2 met at an occasion in 2011. Arnyce says she was enthusiastic about creating this group after seeing the methods during which Black males have been being disproportionately harm by “cease and frisk” insurance policies and unable to search out jobs.
Arnyce discovered the artwork of cooking and utilizing recent natural objects early on from household, specifically her nice grandparents in Henderson, N.C., on their farm the place they’d eat every part organically grown. She says she knew early that needed to be within the culinary subject, as she was drawn to TV cooks like Jacques Pépin and Julia Youngster.
Arnyce holds a number of levels: an affiliate’s in nursing training from the Borough of Manhattan Group School, a culinary diploma from The French Culinary Institute, a Bachelor of Enterprise Administration from Ashford College, and an MBA from Louisiana State College.
She says the struggles of being Black within the Parks Division adopted her all through her tenure, pointing to how segregated it turned underneath Mayor Rudy Giuliani and noting that Black girls have been persistently handed over for promotion.
“I’ve 4 levels, not as a result of I’m an overachiever, however as a result of I needed to maintain being aggressive to get promoted in an area the place white individuals didn’t must do something. They didn’t must be educated, certified or competent in any respect,” Arnyce mentioned. After her tenure in NYC Parks, she had served as Parks and Recreation commissioner for North Hempstead in Lengthy Island, however knew that she was bored with utilizing her abilities there when she may put that effort into her personal enterprise.
“I used to be battling that shallow-minded ignorance of people that didn’t have publicity to Black individuals in management. And it was exhausting,” Arnyce mentioned. “I advised my husband, ‘I can’t maintain availing my abilities and my expertise that I’ve acquired over all of those years for the federal government once we can do it for ourselves for our enterprise.’”
Regardless of all of the training, the method of acquiring loans, sponsors, and grants has been one problem after one other for the couple.
“It’s turning into more and more increasingly troublesome to proceed the sustainment due to the small issues nickel and diming small companies, due to the insurance policies and pointers and we really feel like that’s actually pushing us out, versus actually endearing us,” Danny mentioned.
After the two-year technique of making an attempt to lock down a location and never receiving assist from mortgage companies, on the day earlier than their son DJ’s birthday, Arnyce was delighted to find a location on one hundred and thirty fifth Road open for leasing. It has not been with out infrastructure points.
“This little, tiny place introduced me right down to my knees the quantity of stuff that landlords are allowed to get away with violating constructing codes and well being division violations and electrical rewind. It was a multitude in right here,” Arnyce mentioned. Whereas Danny nonetheless works as a supervisor with the Parks Division, Arnyce works full time on the store 10-12 hours a day, six days every week. The couple can not afford to rent any workers, however are nonetheless intent on opening a bigger area with a full kitchen to have the ability to fulfill all of the ambitions of their enterprise.
The cafe is simply a part of their mission to assist Arnyce’s nonprofit, That includes the Heart for Culinary Arts, a 501(c)(3) based in 2021 to supply culinary training, with a selected deal with neighborhood members in want of financial alternative. Individuals in this system could be paid for the total two years, with the primary spent coaching within the arts and the second, being positioned with humanitarian aid organizations. Arnyce says they’d proceed paying the members till they discover a full-time place, even when it goes past the 2 years. They’ve but to have the ability to launch as they’re hoping to lift as much as an annual endowment of $250,000 to start out with in protecting two contributors.
The couple says they’re dedicated to constructing neighborhood with their clients and purpose to turn out to be worthwhile by early 2026. On the cafe, they’ve hosted a spread of occasions — together with a girls’s empowerment assembly, a neighborhood meet-and-greet, an NYPD Construct the Block session, and numerous sip-and-chat gatherings — and so they proceed to supply the area as a platform for neighborhood members to share useful data with others.
Danny is proud each time children within the neighborhood can are available after college and take a look at their objects and share with their households.
“It’s gonna take a village to have this turn out to be sustainable, and we wish it to be that approach, as a result of it’s gonna take individuals’s curiosity to maintain us going,” Danny mentioned.


















