Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Parc East – by Trillium Development

Coming soon to Port Coquitlam is Park East by Trillium Developments. Park East will be centrally located on the corner of Atkins and Shaughnessy, a short walk to the Main Village with its all it shops and services, as well as the West Coast Express.

Park East will be consist of 57 condos consisting of one bedroom, one bedroom plus den, two bedroom, or two bedroom plus den, with size ranging from 446 square feet to 1077 square feet. Each suite at Parc East will be designed with quartz counters, stainless steel appliances, and large islands in the Kitchen, with laminate flooring throughout.

Amenities include a gym, furnished amenity room that includes a lounge area with kitchenette, and an outdoor entertaining space, as well as outdoor play area for the kids (little kids, not the big kids, thats what the lounge is for 🙂

Sales expected to start in the late winter of 2017 or early Spring with price to starting the mid 200’s. Register with us to be kept up to date with floor plans, and vip sales.

 

 

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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The Arden

 

The Arden is coming soon to Port Coquitlam  The Arden will be a boutique building with just 22 executive size suites with Quartz countertop, stainless steel appliances and laminate flooring.  The Arden will sure be a great spot for first timers or down-sizers.

Pricing is expected to be:

1 bedroom from high $200’s

1 bedroom + dens from Low $300’s

2 bedroom 1 bathrooms from Mid to high $300’s

2 bedroom 2 bathroom over $400,000

Completion anticipated to be Fall of 2017.  Previews start soon, register with us today to get access to this development and many others

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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This Is How You Pronounce “SCA”

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The dust is settled, the merger is final: the Specialty Coffee Association of America and the Specialty Coffee Association of Europe have joined forces into a single entity, dubbed simply the Specialty Coffee Association, or SCA. This new coffee Borg will be tasked with putting on the largest coffee trade shows and competitions on earth from now until Trump nukes the planet from space (much to the delight of most of the merger’s opposition).

Just one question remains: how do you pronounce SCA? Under the old regime, SCAA was simply “Ess-See-Eh-Eh”—or was it? In Europe, it was common practice to hear SCAA pronounced as “Ska“. So too was there some confusion on how to pronounce SCAE—in America we spelled it out phonetically, as “Ess-See-Eh-Eeee”, but over in Europe they’d call it “Skye“.

Skye and Ska, phonetics and colloquialisms. It’s confusing for sure, but thankfully that’s all over now. There’s just one global coffee organization running the show, and we must learn to pronounce its name correctly.

You pronounce it “Schwa”.

schwa-murphy

Yes, that’s correct—SCA is pronounced “Schwa“.

schwa-2

“SCHWAAAAAAAAH.”

schwaaaaa

Here’s a handy pronunciation video in case you’re still confused.

Thanks for reading and we’ll see you at the Schwa Global Specialty Coffee Expo this April in Seattle!

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Going Somewhere Solo: Esther Shaw of Coptic Light Coffee

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Welcome back to a new feature series on Sprudge, Going Somewhere Solo, in which we profile the people behind the new wave of so-called “nano-roasters”, the tiniest of new coffee concerns pushing quality and entrepreneurship in a big way. These are seasoned coffee pros who’ve struck out on their own (often in unexpected places) to launch roasting enterprises outside of the traditional coffee shop format, instead growing their businesses within collaborative spaces, home offices, garages, and of course, online. Know of a gutsy coffee startup? Email us!

This week’s spotlight is on Esther Shaw, a longtime Chicago-based coffee professional who recently relocated to Astoria, Oregon to pursue a roasting dream.

Hi! Tell us what your roasting business is called and where you’re located.

Coptic Light, located in Astoria, Oregon.

What equipment are you currently roasting on?

A seven-kilo Diedrich for production roasting, and a Quest M3 for sample roasting

Who else is involved in the business right now?

David D’Andrea of Samaritan Press designs all of our beautiful packaging. He creates all of the art for our company and presses each box himself on this amazing 100-year-old letterpress machine. JR Robinson is an essential creative force who plays a major role in generating the aesthetic of our company and is in production and sales. And I am in charge of anything coffee-related—logistics, roasting, green coffee buying, etc. We each bring something different to the table and collaborate wonderfully together—I love working with JR and David!

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What’s your background in the coffee industry?

My first coffee job ever was as a Quality Control lab assistant at Intelligentsia Coffee in Chicago—my dream job for starting out in coffee. From there, my position expanded fairly quickly. I started managing the lab, building QC data systems, coordinating green coffee inventory, and contributing to coffee buying decisions. After that, I was offered a very appealing position working with the amazing Dark Matter Coffee crew, heading up and building their quality control systems. They were always hugely supportive of my decisions yet always challenged me to view coffee and quality from a different perspective. Then, I did a short stint over at Quasar Coffee as well which was such an immense learning experience.

And drawing from all those valuable experiences, I am now able to run Coptic Light alongside David and JR. I also have a few side projects. I began working with cooperatives in Pu’er, Yunnan, China a few years ago and actually imported my first partial container last year. I also work as an SCA specialized instructor teaching cupping and roasting classes with a focus on China and Taiwan and help translate curriculum and testing materials from English to Chinese for the SCA.

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How are you currently sourcing your coffees? What do you look for?

Being a new business, I knew we would be moving through a smaller quantity of coffee at a slower pace. I focused on sourcing delicious coffees which would be super sturdy and cup well over time. So I started off safe, solely sourcing washed Ethiopian coffees and then gradually some natural Ethiopian coffees. I get them through my friend Sean Capistrant over at Trabocca who is wonderful to work with.

However, as mentioned earlier, I have another passion which is working with coffee cooperatives in Pu’er to elevate specialty coffee standards. It was a personal venture I started exploring a few years ago. Last year, I started making a conscious effort to connect specialty coffee roasters to quality coffee from Pu’er. I was actually successful enough in 2016 to import my first partial container. I chose to purchase one of their experimental coffees in order to closely track its quality from start to finish, seeing it all the way through. This will be the next new offering on the Coptic Light menu.

What—or who—inspired you to go out on your own with roasting? Is there a coffee (or other) company you admire and would love to grow up to be like

I was at a point where I needed a bit of solitude in my life and was also realizing that life is fleeting. I felt an urgency to make a huge change in order to pursue all of my dreams and passions. So I chose to move away from my lovely friends and life in Chicago to the small town of Astoria, Oregon. And with that came Coptic Light, which represents this inspiration of starting something new, beautiful, and independent.

Other companies I currently admire or would like to grow up to be like—I have a lot of respect for what Steve Mierisch has done at Pulley Collective. He pursued a concept fairly outside of the box and the resulting collaborative model is so exciting to be around every time I visit them over in Brooklyn. I also really admire coffee roaster guru Chris Schooley and his company Troubador Maltings. He is one of the most giving, intelligent coffee people I know. He works hard, creates wonderful quality products, and naturally draws people to want to be around him.

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What kind of risks have you taken in striking out on your own to launch an independent roasting business? Did you make any unusual decisions?

Nothing really out of the ordinary. I knew that starting off it would be difficult to distinguish ourselves from other coffee roasting businesses. I knew it would take time to gain some recognition and grow, so I would need to be patient and smart with the money I had saved up to start this business. I wanted to keep true to a few principles—simplicity, quality, and beauty. I aimed to keep the logistics and initial investment simple. I didn’t want to purchase a roaster and rent out a store space right off the bat, so instead we rent roasting time from a local roaster and focus on alternative outlets for sales. By simplifying the logistics, we are able to focus our time and money towards the important stuff, towards pursuing high quality coffee and beautiful packaging. The simplicity allowed us more freedom to execute things the way we wanted to do them.

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How are you reaching customers without a retail cafe? Do you plan to have one someday? Where can people buy your coffee?

David D’Andrea has a huge following as a talented artist and printmaker. JR Robinson is a wonderfully talented musician with a following of his own as the leader of the band Wrekmeister Harmonies. And me–I know some people I guess! We just reach out to the following we currently have via social media by posting photos of our lives, our work and our beautiful product. We sell our coffee on our website copticlight.org, at a few cafes, grocery stores, and interestingly most of our sales happen when we are on tour with Wrekmeister, which I also play in, at the merch table. It’s actually my most favorite place to sell. People love seeing our coffee being sold as merch, and it naturally leads to many questions and conversation. I also love seeing when the music world and coffee world collide and chatting with people who are passionate about both.

Yes, we would love to have a retail café someday—it’s the dream. I have a plan for that maybe a few years down the road after we get our current online retail sales and wholesale accounts more steady.

It strikes us as a measurement of where the specialty industry is now that many small roasters are now cropping up across the landscape without a physical location to hang a shingle on. How will you stand out from others competing for shelf space in the world’s decreasing multi-roaster cafes?

Haha, I don’t know! I just know I love doing what we do. I love putting out delicious coffees in beautiful packaging and scheming with David and JR about the possibility of future Coptic Light events and pop-up shops. I am happy to keep this company at a small scale but would be happy if it does grow—like I said before the simplicity of our business model allows for this freedom.

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Lastly, how would you describe your vibe in general? Is there a kind of music you like to listen to when you roast, do you wear lucky shoes, etc.?

Check out the song Coptic Light by Morton Feldman—it is actually what we named our company after and definitely representative of our general vibe. The piece is classical yet experimental. It is quiet and soothing, a bit noisy, mystical and beautiful.

Thanks, Esther!

Find Coptic Light coffees through their website at copticlight.org, follow them on Instagram, and like them on Facebook.

Liz Clayton is the associate editor at Sprudge Media Network. Read more Liz Clayton on Sprudge.

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Your Bird


Just as all Eastern Bluebirds will always belong to my dad, the Tufted Titmouse is your bird. Ever since that day when we stood in the driveway listening to a whistle off in the horse pasture and debating, Northern Cardinal or Tufted Titmouse, it has been your bird.

We had a fine time talking and waiting and wishing it would show itself. I would know today which bird it was. Practice, practice, practice. However, that day neither of us was sure until the little grey ghost came out of hiding and sang right at us. Titmouse, sure as sunrise.

I have always since then associated the bird with our friendship. Spring is hard upon us now with all the little birds thinking about matching up and making more little birds. I hear titmice all day long. At least a half a dozen of them are hanging around the house and more up in the fields.

Thus there are many reminders every day and I shall treasure all of them. I will think of you whenever I hear your bird.

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All Apologies: Toronto’s Sorry Coffee Company Inside Kit And Ace

sorry coffee company canada kit and act toronto cafe retail shop sprudge

The view into Sorry Coffee Co. from the Kit and Ace showroom.

Kit and Ace, a clothing-and-luxury lifestyle brand known for its proprietary blend of machine-washable cashmere, has seamlessly merged lattes and athleisure in Toronto’s upscale Yorkville neighborhood with the introduction of Sorry Coffee Co.

Founded in Vancouver by Shannon Wilson, a former lead designer at Lululemon Athletica, and her stepson JJ Wilson, Kit and Ace now has more than 60 stores worldwide. But the Yorkville shop is one of only two that also houses a Sorry Coffee Co. (the other being in London, England).

sorry coffee company canada kit and act toronto cafe retail shop sprudge

The view from Sorry into Kit and Ace.

Dylan Wu, once at De Mello Palheta Coffee Roasters and Voodoo Child Espresso & Cocktail Bar, is the coffee director at Toronto’s Sorry outpost. Of the cafe’s repentant name, he says, “To Kit and Ace, ‘Sorry’ is a distinctly Canadian phrase and our way of poking fun at ourselves. Around the world, Canadians are known for their boundless civility and for apologizing for things we didn’t do. By pairing Sorry Coffee with Kit and Ace, it can act as a gentle reminder to the rest of the world that we are a Canadian company.”

sorry coffee company canada kit and act toronto cafe retail shop sprudge

“We’re so Sorry”: Dylan Wu (right) with barista Kait Winter.

Sorry’s Toronto location sources beans from in-town roaster De Mello Palheta. “Though Kit and Ace is a global company,” Wu explains, “each of our showrooms features hyper-local elements based on the neighborhood, community, or city it is in.” An ongoing series of custom designs for Sorry’s takeaway cups features the work of local artists; this quarter’s designs were created by Toronto artist Andrew Kidder, also known as Rcade.

sorry coffee company canada kit and act toronto cafe retail shop sprudge

Rcade-designed cups at Sorry Coffee Co.

Sorry pulls shots of espresso on a two-group La Marzocco GB5 using a pair of Mazzer Robur grinders, all of which have been custom-coated with copper by the folks at Espresso Parts. Sorry doesn’t serve drip, but the shop does prepare seasonal single-origin pour-overs on Hario V60s using a Mahlkönig EK 43 grinder, a Marco Ecoboiler hot water tower, and Acaia scales. This cafe uses conflicting “sorry” and “not sorry” custom cups and dishes from notNeutral.

sorry coffee company canada kit and act toronto cafe retail shop sprudge

If visiting Sorry Coffee Co., know that the shop only accepts cards, and doesn’t include tipping in its service model. “Kit and Ace is a cashless company, so it follows suit that Sorry would be as well,” says Wu. “The main idea is that we seek to save our guests time in both the products we sell and how we sell them. By being cashless, there is no more fumbling around for change or the mental arithmetic that comes with dealing in cash, so you get your coffee that much quicker.”

Sorry Coffee Co. is located at 102 Bloor Street West, Toronto. Visit their official website and follow them Facebook and Instagram.

Ashley Tomlinson is the founder of The Little Black Coffee Cup, a digital coffee publication based in Toronto. Read more Ashley Tomlinson on Sprudge.

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Monday, February 27, 2017

Brooklynn

Much like Maplewood Village and Lions Gate Village, Lynn Creek/Seylynn is undergoing a transformation into a walkable, transit oriented hub.  Brooklynn by Wanson Developments will be the next development to come up in the Lynn Creek/Seymour Village centre. Brooklynn will be a mixed use building consisting of ground floor retail and 63 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom condos.

More information and sales are expected to be released in March of 2017, register with us today to be kept up to date on this development and may others like it coming to the North Shore.

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Cedar Reach at Maplewood

After the very successful development of Loden Green by Guildford Developments and Maplewood Place by Anthem, as well as the Northwood Estates Rental suite and shopping centre,  Maplewood Villages is rapidly becoming a hot spot in North Vancouver. Cedar Reach is the newest development coming soon to the area.  Cedar Reach will be modern collection of homes featuring 163 One, Two, and Three bedroom homes in the heart of Maplewood Village.  Within a short stroll to Northwood Shopping centre, including Strong’s Market, Deep Cove Brewing. banking and liquor store, Cedar Reach will be designed with West Coast architecture and storage space for all your gear to fully enjoy the outdoors its surrounded by.

If you’d like to receive more information on this development or any other coming to the North Shore, register with us today to be kept up to date.

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Belle Isle by Citimark Developments

Lions Gate Village was approved under the new OCP a couple years ago, we are now seeing the changes coming with Park West slated to begin sales in the coming months, as well as Larco’s rental community, but Belle Isle will be the first ground oriented townhome development, when all phases are completed will include 164, 1, 2

, and 3 bedroom townhomes and garden flats.

Belle Isle will be centrally located in a new community within walking distance of Park Royal, a 15 minute drive to downtown and quick access to bus routes directly downtown, or anywhere on the North Shore

To be kept up to date on this development or any on the North Shore register with us today.

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Limitless Scrutiny Over Claims Of “Clean Coffee”

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Some people will say anything to hawk their wares. Case in point: Limitless Coffee in Chicago, who claims to provide the “cleanest coffees” in the world. What’s the source of this belief? Is it that the flavor profiles are exacting and pronounced? Nope. According to the Chicago Tribune, it’s that they don’t use naturally processed coffees.

It all started when Limitless co-founder Matt Matros went on a yoga retreat in Bali. During that trip, Matros stopped by a coffee farm where he was “horrified” by how dirty naturally processing coffee was:

“They’re fermenting and decomposing and dying and attracting bugs, birds and wild animals,” he says. “I saw this with my own eyes. And then it might rain, and then the sun comes out, and you get mold.”

After returning to the States, Matros learned about washed processed coffees, which I guess are supposed to have fewer mycotoxins or something? I dunno. They sure sounds scary, though. Anyway, washed coffees equal clean, naturals equal dirty. Got it? Good.

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He’s sold washed coffee in Brockway, Ogdenville, and North Haverbrook.

And you can’t just jam that super clean coffee into any ole roaster. That’ll get you the cancer. At Limitless, they use an air roaster. Because of the chaff and the smoke and the carcinogens and the cancer. OH GOD THE CANCER! From their website, without a single word or bit of punctuation changed:

“The significance of [air roasting] is that any and all loose chaff is immediately swept away from the beans. The chaff is unsinged. Whereas, in a drum roaster, most of the chaff rides on the tumbling beans and burns and smokes. This smoke, fumigates all other beans, giving them a harsh bitey taste. The smoke also deposits on the surface of all other beans, resulting in darker bean surfaces than interiors, and oil surfaces. This carbonization of the drum roasted chaff creates volatile products similar to those found in cigarette smoke and charcoal preparation from wood. These are classified as carcinogenic chemicals.

Fuckin’ chaff collectors, how do they work?

If none of this has convinced you to switch to Limitless Coffee for the rest of your life, don’t worry, Matros has an appeal to emotion (that emotion being fear) that’ll definitely do the trick.

“At the end of the day, if you had two cups of coffee in front of you, would you want the one with toxins in it or not?” he asks. “Maybe some people don’t care. I know some people who eat at McDonald’s, but I don’t want to.”

Unsurprisingly, some folks in the coffee industry are calling bullshit on this whole clean coffee thing. Terms like “offensive”, “hyperbole”, and “confused about science” get tossed around in the Tribune’s article, with one person stating, “I don’t think he knows what the (heck) he’s talking about.” I don’t think he said heck.

But if there’s a silver lining to this cloud, it’s that you can get a 12 ounce bag of “Geisha Super Premium Blend Roast” variety for only $19.99, so that’s pretty cool, right?

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network.

*all images via Frinkiac

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5 Summertime Coffee Drinks From Brazil

brazil coffee summer drinks recipe cafe secreto um coffee company birita casa de cocktail colab noete cafe clube guide sprudge

Brazil has hot summers, and, depending on where you live in the country, summer lasts pretty much the whole year. The country is also the world’s largest coffee producer and a heavy consumer of cafezinho, as we call it here (hot filter coffee served in a china demitasse). It would be logical that we venture into the art of preparing cold drinks made with coffee as well, since we love coffee so much. But sometimes it’s just too hot outside to even imagine sipping a quick espresso. However, we are a little behind—Brazilians are rather traditional in the way they drink their coffee, and are still somewhat reluctant to try alternatives like iced coffee or even cold brew.

In the big cities, though, things are starting to change. Thanks to climate change—record-high temperatures this summer felt like 122ºF in Rio, for instance—or to the younger coffee consumer crowd, we now have some creative coffee shops and bar owners willing to challenge Brazilians’ taste buds with coffee-based cold drinks. To our delight, these drinks have come to stay, and we selected five of them for you to try when you come for a visit, or even to prepare in the comfort of your air-conditioned home in whatever season you like.

 

brazil coffee summer drinks recipe cafe secreto um coffee company birita casa de cocktail colab noete cafe clube guide sprudge

“Tropicália” at Café Secreto

One of the good things about living in Rio de Janeiro—or any other beach city, really—is relying on an endless supply of fresh coconut water. Gabriela Ribeiro and the Café Secreto crew always wanted to work on a coffee drink that used that ingredient, she tells me. First they started with filtered coffee (actually brewing the coffee with coconut water) but they realized the flavors didn’t come out right. Then they tried it with espresso—pulling a shot regularly and then mixing it with coconut water—and it was an instant hit. I tried it and it is indeed delicious—and I’m not much of a fan of cold espresso drinks. Ribeiro was kind enough to share the recipe with us, but when in Rio, don’t forget to try this refreshing concoction at Café Secreto.

One shot of espresso, around 30 milliliters

150 milliliters of fresh coconut water

Ice

Mix all ingredients in a cocktail mixer. Strain to serve. Enjoy.

Café Secreto is located at Casa 8, Rua Gago Coutinho, 6, Rio de Janeiro. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

 

brazil coffee summer drinks recipe cafe secreto um coffee company birita casa de cocktail colab noete cafe clube guide sprudge

“Caipicoffee” at Noete Café Clube

Caipirinha is Brazil’s national drink, and the original one is made with cachaça, Brazil’s national liquor. Guilherme Costa and Gabriel Cabral, founders of Noete Café Clube in Belo Horizante, thought they ought to come up with a way to incorporate coffee and cachaça together. After all, Minas Gerais, the state where they are located, is world famous for its highly rated specialty coffee and award-winning aged cachaças.

The result is a sweet and delicious drink that could perfectly fit as an appetizer for a late summer afternoon. If you have a good cachaça—or vodka, as Cabral suggests—at home, it is also easy to reproduce. Here is Noete’s caffeinated take on caipirinha:

75 milliliters of aged cachaça

1 tablespoon of honey (Noete uses honey extracted from coffee tree flowers)

Ice

25 milliliters sparkling water

75 milliliters cold brew

Half a lemon, squeezed

3 slices of lemon

Mix the honey, cachaça, sparkling water, and squeezed lemon together. Pour it in a glass with ice cubes. Add the lemon slices. To finish, top off with cold brew. Stir and enjoy.

Noete Café Clube is located at Rua São Domingos do Prata, 475. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

 

brazil coffee summer drinks recipe cafe secreto um coffee company birita casa de cocktail colab noete cafe clube guide sprudge

“White Brew” at Um Coffee Company

A few months ago, Midori Martins, one of the baristas at Um Coffee Company, was challenged by the coffee shop owners Garam and Boram Um to come up with coffee-based cold drinks for their summer menu. After a few iterations, the White Brew was created. Martins tells me she always wanted to do something with coconut and coffee, so she started by adding coconut milk and then changing the proportion of the other ingredients until she found the ideal recipe.

When I asked for the exact measurement of each ingredients, Martins and Garam Um laughed and just tipped me off about the proportions. I did it at home using the proportions below and got a very dessert-y, liquor-y type of drink. Now, in order to try the original White Brew, you need to go to their beautiful shop located in the Bom Retiro neighborhood in downtown São Paulo.

Sweetened condensed milk

Frothed milk

Coconut milk

Cold brew (at Um Coffee Company they use their natural Yellow Bourbon cold brew)

1 large ice cube

* The proportion suggested is that the cold brew amount is nearly half the amount of the three milk ingredients together. Experiment with it until you find your sweet spot (pun intended).

Mix the 3 milk ingredients with a wire whip.

Place the ice cube in a large glass—the ice helps keep the three parts of the drink separate. Add the milk mix. Add the cold brew very carefully, so that it doesn’t mix with the rest. Martins tops it off with milk froth.

Pro tip: serve it with a straw so that the drinker can stir the three parts together before drinking.

Um Coffee Company is located at Rua Júlio Conceição, 553—Bom Retiro, São Paulo. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

brazil coffee summer drinks recipe cafe secreto um coffee company birita casa de cocktail colab noete cafe clube guide sprudge

“Coffee Mojito” at CoLAB

Judging by the name, you were probably thinking this drink involved rum. Wrong. At CoLab in Rio de Janeiro, the coffee replaces the rum in their version of a caffeinated mojito. The taste reminds me, of course, of a mojito, and it indeed feels like an alcohol drink—perhaps from the concentration of the espresso joined with the lime zest. A very good drink for a hot summer afternoon (or morning, why not?).

Approximately 10 mint leaves

30 milliliters sugar cane syrup

1 shot of espresso, around 30 milliliters

15 milliliters lime juice

Sparkling water

Lime zest (to taste)

Crushed ice

Gently crush the mint leaves so that they release their oils and aroma. Combine mint, lime juice, sugar cane syrup, and espresso into a glass. Stir. Add the crushed ice and top it off with sparkling water. Garnish with mint leaf, and enjoy.

CoLAB is located at Rua Fernandes Guimarães, 66—Botafogo, Rio de Janeiro. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

brazil coffee summer drinks recipe cafe secreto um coffee company birita casa de cocktail colab noete cafe clube guide sprudge

“Café Spritz” at Birita Casa de Cocktail

Diogo Cypriano is a mixologist who happens to love coffee. He is now working with a good range of specialty coffee drinks and beans at Birita Casa de Cocktail, a cocktail bar in Vitória, Espírito Santo. One of his inventive drinks is the Café Spritz, which uses pitanga, a very acidic and energizing fruit native to Brazil. Again, cachaça is brought together with coffee in this drink, but in a more elaborate manner. This feels like a real cocktail, one that demands time to make—and to drink. Extremely aromatic, citrusy. Perfect for closing a hard workday.

50 milliliters French press coffee (Cypriano suggests preparing it with 10 grams of coffee to 100 milliliters of water, 2 minutes infusion time)

6 ripe pitangas

40 milliliters of lemon syrup

40 milliliters of cachaça

6 ice cubes

120 milliliters sparkling Muscatel

1 slice of orange

1 slice of lime

Macerate the pitangas about 5 times and then shake them together with the other ingredients in a cocktail mixer. Put the ice cubes in a wine glass. Top it with the Muscatel and the coffee. Add the pitanga mix and then the orange and lime slices. Enjoy.

Birita Casa de Cocktail is located at Avenida Anísio Fernandes Coelho, 1741—Loja 01 /02—Jardim da Penha, Vitória. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Juliana Ganan is a Brazilian coffee professional and journalist. Read more Juliana Ganan on Sprudge.

Photos courtesy of Cicero Rodrigues, Servulo Coutinho, and Andrea Son.

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Highlight Coffee Does It Right In Glendale—Yes, Glendale

highlight coffee glendale california los angeles cafe sprudgeHighlight Coffee is a new shop brightening the heart of Glendale, northeast of Los Angeles proper. If you’ve been to Glendale, you may be familiar with the malls and shopping that many Angelenos venture there for. Surprisingly, though, despite its many stores and dining options, Glendale’s coffee scene has lagged behind.

highlight coffee glendale california los angeles cafe sprudgeThe spot was opened by Demitasse alum Frank Kim, who’d been in the coffee business for three years before deciding to launch Highlight. “Glendale really was almost perfect, as there seems to be a huge amount of newer, younger professional residents moving in,” he says. “Also, it literally borders so many parts of LA.” Highlight sits on the ground floor of a historic, former hotel dating to 1925; now it’s an apartment building that sits on the corner of bustling East Broadway and Glendale Avenue, a few minutes’ walk from the popular Americana outdoor shopping center (as well as Glendale’s police house, a post office, and a mix of corporate and independent businesses). Aware of the area’s growing popularity, Kim says he sought to retain some of the small town charm of the building, calling it a “diamond in the rough.”

highlight coffee glendale california los angeles cafe sprudge

Frank Kim

Sitting on an angled corner makes Highlight an even more interesting—and challenging—space. Most of the design was done by Kim himself, with the help of architect Alan Lu. “The design was mostly dictated by the shape of the space, which is a hexagonal corner unit,” says Kim. “It’s tiny—a touch over 680 square feet. I really had to squeeze everything into every inch of the space.” Kim describes the design as “classic modern,” with solid colors and neutral, light-toned wood furniture to complement both the interior and the 1920s aspects of the building itself. Large windows add a sense of depth and openness, as well as allowing curious passersby to peer in to see the action.

highlight coffee glendale california los angeles cafe sprudge

highlight coffee glendale california los angeles cafe sprudgeDespite the tight fit, Highlight’s coffee bar is well-equipped. For espresso, it has a two-group La Marzocco Linea PB teamed with a Nuova Simonelli Mythos One Clima-Pro and Mahlkönig PEAK grinders. The rest of the setup includes a Mahlkönig Kenia/Guatemala brew grinder and a Curtis Gemini G4 batch brewer and hot water tower. Options for manual brews include Kalita Wave and Hario Syphon. The multi-roaster supply currently consists of Demitasse, Turning Point Coffee from San Francisco, and Sweet Bloom Coffee from Colorado; tea is sourced from San Diego’s Mad Monk Tea. Pastries come from Downtown’s Bread Lounge, with additional sweets like cookies and pies made by a small cottage baker, Emily Broadbent of Sweet & Divine by Emmaline.

highlight coffee glendale california los angeles cafe sprudge

Highlighting Demitasse, Turning Point, and Sweet Bloom coffees.

Since Kim is just getting used to running his own shop, it’s all about taking things slow and doing them right. Being a new spot in an area not used to specialty coffee “keeps me on my toes to keep my standards as high as possible,” he says. He hopes to start a lunch program offering grilled cheese and soup, and develop more coffee specials like the house-made butterscotch latte that’s available now. Small-batch ice cream is also a possibility, which would allow the addition of affogato to the menu. But one of the more exciting ways Highlight is setting itself up to succeed is simply by staying open till 9 p.m., in an area where most other businesses close earlier. Glendale is not only finally getting good coffee, but also a place to meet up and hang out.

Highlight Coffee is located at 701 East Broadway, Glendale, California. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Tatiana Ernst (@TatianaErnst) is a Sprudge staff writer based in Los Angeles. Read more Tatiana Ernst on Sprudge.

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So What’s Next?

So here’s where we stand in the 101 Books project. Before my hiatus, I started At Swim Two Birds, so I’ve made good headway into that and will hopefully finish it up soon. From there, here’s what’s left: The Adventures of Augie March (1953) by Saul Bellow The Berlin Stories (1946) by Christopher Isherwood Gravity’s […]

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Sunday, February 26, 2017

Vicarious

Photo by Linda Brown. Used with permission

I will probably never see a Sandhill Crane from home, unless I get really lucky on a flyover. I certainly spend enough time looking up....

However, I have lovely friends who live in other areas, who generously let me partake vicariously.

You too can enjoy these magnificent birds.

Here

And Here

And here

And here is a cool video

There you have it. Cranes from Colorado and cranes from Pure Florida. Cranes from all over. It doesn't get any better than that. 

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Saturday, February 25, 2017

Weather

Before

We drove all over half the state today looking at this and looking at that. It was nice almost the whole time. However, Otsego Lake was white capping up a froth and every stream and river was snarling brown and bank full. Returned home to evidence of recent rain and lots of wind. The Christmas tree, which was tied to a bird feeder post for the convenience of the ground birds, had blown over to the swing set and tipped over the chair that is there, which was wedged in the grass, upside down.




Yowsa.




However, it was sunny when we drove in and just a little gusty, so I put the pups out for a bit. Suddenly it turned downright black and the wind got up so bad that the boss moved the car away from the trees. When I went out to bring the puppers in out of the wind I was pelted by pods and branches off the Honey Locust and plumb pummeled by the wind.

Wild, wild, weather. I hope all the family that is up west at the farm show is okay....be nice if they would fire me a text and all....just sayin'....




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Clandestino Café e Música: Um Café com Inspiração Nórdica em Brasília

Sprudge-CafeClandestino-JulianaGanan-BSB_Coffee_Shops_Guide_clandestino_Tatiana-Medeiros_03 Rodrigo Balduino, Liana David, e Carolina Balduino abriram o Clandestino Café e Música em agosto de 2014, mas o plano do negócio já estava na ativa há anos. Liana e Carolina eram sócias em um restaurante na capital, mas já haviam começado a fazer cursos sobre café no Coffee Lab, em São Paulo, com a intenção de futuramente abrir um café. Rodrigo, irmão de Carolina, estava morando em Barcelona na época, e lá já tinha em mente fazer um evento de música recorrente e clandestino. Quando Rodrigo se mudou de volta ao Brasil, os três perceberam que podiam unir seus planos – daí nasceu a ideia do Clandestino Café e Música. A inspiração do nome do café, e do sentimento por trás do negócio, veio do conto de Clarice Lispector “Felicidade Clandestina”. O estilo lembra os distantes cafés nordicos: design limpo, sóbrio e ao mesmo tempo elegante. O trio optou por colocar a bancada do café contra uma das paredes, de maneira que todos os clientes que entram tenham acesso a ela. Liana e Rodrigo contam que quando eles abriram, Brasilienses ainda não eram muito próximos do conceito de café especial, e o balcão aberto foi uma maneira de aproximá-los desse mundo. clandestino cafe e musica brasilia brazil coffee shop multi roaster sprudge A localização do café é perfeita – na Asa Norte, ao lado do tranquilo Parque Olhos D’Água. A vegetação típica do Cerrado é preservada no parque, e ainda se encontram árvores da época que o parque era cultivado, como bananeiras, mangueiras e figueiras. Liana e Rodrigo ressaltam que a 413 Norte (o quarteirão onde o Clandestino se encontra) está se tornando um polo gastrônomico informal, com muitas opções pra comer ao redor. Muitos dos clientes param no Clandestino para um espresso depois de ter almoçado em algum desses lugares. Estudantes da UnB também são assíduos – o campus fica a minutos dali. clandestino cafe e musica brasilia brazil coffee shop multi roaster sprudge A música tem papel central no Clandestino – Rodrigo faz a curadoria da playlist do local, e produz vários eventos musicais, semanais e mensais, no café. Liana e Rodrigo contam que nos finais de semana eles têm picos de movimento, e é também o período onde acontecem os eventos de música ao vivo. Carolina traz sua experiência culinária ao menu do Clandestino, que tem opções salgadas e doces, sempre sasonais – de acordo com a disponibilidade de ingredientes da época. Um dos itens mais pedidos é a tapioca com queijo coalho e melaço de cana. Tapioca vai muito bem um café filtrado, uma boa opção para um café da manhã farto e sem gluten. Uma opção mais doce, que também sai muito, é o Nougat Glacé, um doce francês feito de frutas secas que vem servido com um pequenino shot de espresso ao lado. clandestino cafe e musica brasilia brazil coffee shop multi roaster sprudge clandestino cafe e musica brasilia brazil coffee shop multi roaster sprudge O Clandestino trabalha com várias torrefações. Quando eu visitei, havia café da 4 Beans Coffee CompanyIsso é Café, e do Pereira Villela disponíveis como filtrado (Hario V60), AeroPress e prensa francesa. Todas estas opções são preparadas na mesa pelo barista, na frente do cliente. O espresso, que vem em um xícara sobre uma bonita peça de ardósia, varia de acordo com o torrefador do momento. Os baristas são bem treinados e podem chegar a treinar até por 4 meses antes de tocar na La Marzocco FB80. Para os coffee geeks, o Clandestino também tem à venda diversos equipamentos para café, e Liana e Rodrigo sempre estão disponíveis pra conversar com os clientes sobre como fazer café em casa. Eles me contaram, felizes, que a demanda por café em grãos cresce a cada dia, e alguns clientes até ligam e pedem pra reservar quando o café preferido deles chega na loja. Os sócios acreditam que em breve o público de Brasília vai ficar ainda mais especializado em café, como o de Curitiba, por exemplo. Eles reconhecem a importância de outros cafés abrindo na capital, e dizem que todos são parte de uma rede amiga – muitas vezes, quando um deles fica sem café, liga pra outro deles pedindo pacotes de grãos “emprestados”. A prática é corriqueira e sempre dá certo entre eles. clandestino cafe e musica brasilia brazil coffee shop multi roaster sprudge O Clandestino é o lugar para se ter uma trégua dos ares políticos de Brasília, e tomar um espresso olhando pro parque – tudo isso ao som de boa música.

O Clandestino Café e Música fica na CLN 413, Bloco D, em Brasília. Siga o Clandestino no Facebook e no Instagram.

Juliana Ganan trabalha com cafés especiais e escreve sobre café. Leia mais artigos de Juliana Ganan na Sprudge.

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