PEORIA MAGAZINE November 2023
S P O T L I G H T
A LITTLE CAT WITH YOUR CUP OF JOE? The Cat’s Meow Café is the first of its kind in this part of central Illinois
BY PHIL LUCIANO PHOTOS BY RON JOHNSON
T he Cat’s Meow Café in Bloom ington peddles pours and purrs. You can get coffee or tea, with a side order of cats. In addition to dishing up food and drink, the café provides cats to adopt. Or, you can just cuddle and chill. “I just think people like the serotonin of coming in and petting a friendly kitty, and just having someplace to relax,” said owner Lauri Meins, 38. The order counter is separate from the cat space, which guests can visit for $5. Some visitors bring along their drink or snack, as well as other accompaniments. “People do their homework in here,” Meins said. “They meet up with their gal pals for a coffee or a pastry. It’s just a nice place to hang out.” According to Forbes magazine, cat cafés started in Japan about 25 years ago and quickly became a national obsession. They started popping up on the U.S. coasts in 2014 and have been spreading since. Meins encountered her first cat café a few years back in Chattanooga, Tennessee. “They have a cat café there called Naughty Cat Café,” Meins said. “And they have a big sign that said, ‘We’re not a strip club.’ I thought that was so funny.” FROM TOKYO TO McLEAN COUNTY
She also thought it was a good busi ness idea: She could open the first cat café in central Illinois. But there was a snag in her copycat plan: Meins, who owns a hair salon and clothing boutique, had no other business experience. “I have no (commercial) background in coffee shop, restaurant or animal care in any way,” she said. “So, it’s been quite the learning curve.” Along the way, Meins was inspired by her love for animals. She has two fat black cats (Meatball and Noodle) and two tiny dogs (Bella and Izzy). She thought a café could help cats needing homes. She found a partner in Pet Central Helps, a not-for-profit, no-kill pet shel
ter in Bloomington. Then she found a nook in a Bloomington strip mall. She opened in September.
A RENT-A-CAT OPPORTUNITY
The café offers coffees, teas and other beverages, plus breakfast sandwiches, pastries and other treats. It’s walled off from the cat area, which guests can enter only after signing a waiver that states the rules, such as “No roughhousing” and “No waking a sleeping cat.” At any one time, the cat space has hosted from seven to 16 felines. “It just depends on how fast they get adopted,” said Meins.
22 NOVEMBER 2023 PEORIA MAGAZINE
Made with FlippingBook Learn more on our blog