Friday, June 30, 2017

Gilmore Girls Actor To Start Coffee Company

Luke Danes is starting a coffee company. Well, not Luke–the coffee-dispensing curmudgeonly owner of Luke’s Diner on Gilmore Girls–but Scott Patterson, the actor who portrays him.

According to NME, the new brand will be called (woof) Scotty P’s Big Mug Coffee, which is probably the least Luke thing he could have named it. But given that atrocious unbent black hat, it is the most Scotty P. thing he could have named it, presumably so it wouldn’t be confused with coffee companies opened by his bros Scotty G. and Scotty R.

On the topic of Scotty P’s Big Mug Coffee, we are all this barista:

In an interview with Wealth Management, Scotty Pats had this to say:

“Quality coffee is something that I am obsessed with,” he added. “It’s the thing I look forward to every morning and throughout the day and throughout the evening and now throughout the middle of the night.”

So maybe it’ll be good? I dunno. The details about the big-mugged company are scant. But stay tuned, I’m sure more details will start to trickle out conveniently around the same time talks of a new season of Gilmore Girls hit the rumor mill.

I would also like to personally apologize for hat shaming Scott Patterson earlier in this article. Everyone should be allowed to put atop their heads whatever they see fit without fear of ridicule, no matter how stupid and not age-appropriate I think it is.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network.

*top image via NME

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Speed Rack: What Can Coffee Learn From The Best Cocktail Competition?

Imagine the best version of a competition. Imagine the greatest talents in the world brimming with support for one another, even after they have been knocked out. Imagine the attendees are raucous and enthralled, chanting, cheering, and wincing with each success and misstep. Imagine dozens of eager sponsors donating their time, money, and a deluge of adult beverages. Oh, and all proceeds go to breast cancer research.

Now stop imagining, because this competition is already real. Itʼs called Speed Rack, a self-described “national cocktail competition featuring top female bartenders in key markets.” No, itʼs not a coffee event—there’s no event quite like this in the coffee world. At least not yet. But amidst some recent stirrings of discontent concerning the state of coffee competitions, I thought it might be instructive to take a peek at another industry. And so, in search of this magical mixture of aid and accolades, I set out to New York City to attend the National Speed Rack Finals.

Speed Rack which was founded in 2011 by bar luminaries Ivy Mix (co-owner of Brooklyn’s Leyenda and 2015 American Bartender of the Year) and Lynnette Marrero (cocktail consultant and founder of New York’s Ladies United for the Preservation of Endangered Cocktails). Their explicit goal is to “shine a spotlight on female mixologists” in a largely male-dominated industry, while at the same time raising money towards the cause of breast cancer research, prevention, and education. The competition does so by pitting top female bartenders from across the United States against each other in a variety of challenges, some timed, some judged. These events are a growing phenomenon in the cocktail world, a globally lauded showcase that sells out on tickets and sponsorships, moving into increasingly larger venues and attracting partnerships from global brands like Jameson and Campari.

This year’s event took place in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, at a majestic converted bank turned into an event space called The Weylin. I arrived hours before the event but the place was already abuzz. Competitors were on stage, sponsors were frantically setting up booths and everything was pink. For guidance, I turned to the nearest intelligent looking person who was, it turns out, Stephanie Blair, portfolio manager for Fratelli Branca (makers of your favorite Fernet). I asked her what was happening and she informed me that the competition was underway as the “regional winners were in prelims.” Speed Rack, like the US Coffee Championships, begins each season with a series of regional events. But unlike coffee championships in the United States and elsewhere, Speed Rack hopefuls must also first pass through a selective application process, which Stephanie explained as “basically a series of essays.” From this pool of applicants, the top 20 or so competitors are selected to compete in each market, including Denver, Boston, Houston, Atlanta, San Francisco, Seattle, New York, and Chicago.

The competition involves two rounds. Before the preliminary round, Blair tells me, competitors are granted a list of cocktails from which the judges choose four. The trick is that competitors are then asked to make all four cocktails on stage, as fast as they possibly can.  Competitors are only given one minute to set up their station, a detail that demands flexibility and adaptability for competitors. “You prep yourself for every combination of four,” Blair tells me, “because you donʼt know which ones youʼre going to have to make.” The cocktails are judged not only on time but on technique and taste with seconds tacked on for each mistake. Astoundingly, and despite fastidious scrutiny, times in this portion of the competition commonly clock in at under two minutes.

The eight bartenders with the fastest times compete in a head-to-head bracket-style showdown, judged by “some of the top cocktail writers, bartenders, bar owners, and brand people in the world,” as per Stephanie Blair. In each battle, four judges individually select a drink from a predetermined list of 100 cocktails. Each bartender makes their best versions of the four drinks as fast as they can and the judges compare each set, adding points for missed ingredients, wrong garnishes, sloppy technique or lack of balance.

As prelims ended, the competitors huddled in a room to discover who had the fastest times and would be competing on stage during the event. As the bracket was announced, the competitors emerged with a fury of feeling, at once congratulating the winners and consoling the eliminated with a tangled embrace of hugs and hurrahs. I actually couldnʼt tell who had made it through because everyone seemed elated for each other. I asked Stephanie Blair about this phenomenon, and she confirmed it. “Everybody is here to support each other,” she told me. “Thatʼs one of the cool things about this competition, [it is] more about camaraderie, teamwork, and coming together and lifting everybody up.”

At this point, the doors were open and hundreds of pink-clad people were pouring through them, mingling and enjoying drinks from sponsorsʼ booths. I went out to the courtyard where I found Aaron Owens, Director of Coffee for Tobyʼs Estate Brooklyn, US Brewerʼs Cup competitor and first time Speed Rack attendee. When I asked what drew him to the event, he explained, “I want to support breast cancer awareness, support female inclusion in an industry that is male-dominated, and also have drinks and have a good time. That is the most win-win.” I wondered if he thought other coffee professionals could get something out of Speed Rack and he was unequivocal. “The more involved coffee professionals can be in events like this, the more we can grow,” Owens told me. “This format gives a platform to fight against biases…and basically, we need this in coffee.”

I asked him why and he thought about it for a second. “I have had a lot of advantages,” he reflected, “because of the color of my skin and my gender. That is the uncomfortable reality but it is the reality of the industry. A lot of exceptional people donʼt have the opportunities because of biases that exists.” I agree, and can certainly relate, so I asked Owens if, in his opinion, there was something the coffee world could do about it.

His suggestion? “What if we have a competition that is promoted in the same way as barista competition and exclusive to people who donʼt typically get represented in competition? That could help.”

I reflected on this for a minute. Why donʼt we have a competition like this in coffee? Coffee pros are so good at uplifting guests on a daily basis, but why are we underserving some of our own? In an industry where social capital is everything, the visibility that competition affords can lead to real career benefits. Aaron Owens noted that in barista competitions, most of the people look like me and him (i.e. white, male) despite the industry as a whole being more diverse. Competitions like Speed Rack provide visibility to an extremely talented, previously underrepresented population of the industry. It raises money for laudable charities and serves as a rallying point for community engagement, promotional opportunities, networking and solid hangs.

What would it take to make this happen for coffee? Who funds it? Who organizes it?

I had so many questions. I was, indeed, starting to get stoked at the possibility of what something like this could be for coffee. But here in Brooklyn, the finals were about to begin, so I broke away from the conversation and headed to the stage. When I arrived the room was knotted in anticipation. Speed Rack’s founders took the stage to hype the room, introduce the judges (including noted cocktail historian David Wondrich and Roxanne Spruance, chef/owner at Kingsley) and congratulate everyone—not just the finalists, but each of the bartenders who had competed that day. As the room exploded in adulation, the emcee took the stage. The judges informed the competitors of their cocktail choices and the first head-to-head battle commenced with a countdown. 3…2…1…

Friends: As a certified sports nerd, I can say, without hesitation, that Speed Rack is one of the most engaging spectator sports I have ever watched. I can only attempt to describe the maelstrom of mixing that formed the next two minutes. Bottles were flipping, ice was flying, used tools were cast asunder. I think one bartender grew an extra set of arms. And all this with the utmost precision and nary a spill. Straws inserted, garnishes expertly placed, the first bartender finished and slammed down the timer button, raising her hands to the sky. The crowd lost its collective mind. In the next moment, the second bartender hit the button and the two joyously congratulated each other as their drinks were evaluated. The judges took to the mic to deliver the verdict, agreeing that the cocktails were world class. With 10 seconds added to one unbalanced drink and five more for sloppy technique, the winner was only decided by a four-second difference. Once again, the crowd flew into a frenzy.

I stumbled back, mesmerized and questioning how my heart could take six more rounds of this. I walked back outside for a breather. This time I bumped into Felicia Chin-Braxton, floor manager at the newly-opened charity bar, Coup. Chin-Braxton has volunteered or attended the last five seasons of Speed Rack for a simple, if devastating reason. “I have a lot of people close to me that have suffered from breast cancer, so itʼs an important cause to me,” she shared. “Iʼm also African-American and itʼs the number one cause of death for us.” When I asked if the party did a good job raising support, she corrected me: “Itʼs not just a party, this is a cause. The competition part of it is just the fun part of it; thatʼs what keeps it interesting. You come out to support your person or your bar or your brand but theyʼre all doing something good.”

I found out later that this “good” isnʼt just congratulatory lip-service: to date, Speed Rack has raised over $600,000 for breast cancer research. In addition to the competition and fundraiser, Chin-Braxton shared more with me about how Speed Rack stands for support and inclusion. “Weʼre looking out for humans in general,” she insisted. “It does not matter if you are black, white, male, female, transgender, transexual, we support you. This entity embodies that.” Even the social gatherings at the event work toward inclusivity, something that’s incredibly important at this moment right now in the cocktail world. “The bartending world has always been male-dominated,” Chin-Braxton said, “and to feel supported by all people in our community, I mean thereʼs probably just as many men attending as women, that’s huge for us, I feel supported and Iʼm not even competing.”

The rest of the night was a blur of brackets and beverages. I felt like Eric J. Grimm feeling like Liz Clayton. As the judges evaluated the final drinks, Lynnette Marrero and Ivy Mix invited all the eliminated competitors to join the two finalists on stage. Instead of a somber moment full of tension, interactions were all love and levity. The DJ blasted “Despacito” as former foes beamed ear to ear and danced together. At the end of it all, Chicagoʼs Mony Bunni (of Boleo in the Kimpton Gray Hotel) emerged as the winner, in a moment that felt more like a collective achievement. We had come together, elevated people who deserved it, raised money, and had a damn good time doing it. Comparing this to the world of coffee competition where there is one winner and a lot of disappointed people, it feels like we could use a little of this magic. We just have to aim for it.

Brandon Paul Weaver is a cocktail and coffee professional based in Seattle, Washington. This is Brandon Paul Weaver’s first feature for Sprudge Media Network. 

Photos courtesy of Shannon Sturgis.

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Coffee Beer: Barista Brew By Blackstone Brewing

Barista Brew (8.1% ABV)
Blackstone Brewing. Nashville, TN
Black Coffee Stout
Bottles with limited SE distribution.

Blackstone Brewing was the first craft brewery in Nashville, established in 1994. Their most recent beer launches, the Barista Brew and Mocha Brew are coffee stouts made in collaboration with local roaster Frothy Monkey Coffee. Frothy Monkey Coffee itself was a business collaboration between local coffee shop Frothy Monkey and Midwest coffee roaster Kaldi’s Coffee. Their coffee roasting collaboration with Kaldi’s has already made waves in the Southeast, and will continue to do so for years to come, and this coffee beer collaboration is a result of its fruitfulness.

I asked Jeff Gibbs of Frothy Monkey what coffee they used and why they chose it and was told, “We used our Brunch Blend, which includes our Colombia San Fermin and Ethiopia Lima Gera, which gives the beer a nice bit of citrus pop.” Upon pouring this beer, you get a good burst of fresh coffee aroma. The beer pours little to no head, which makes sense given how hard it is to retain a head, as the coffee oils mostly dissipate them quickly. It pours a nice solid black, with a very medium body.

The first taste of the Barista Brew gives you a nice coffee flavor, with again, a medium body that closer resembled a porter, but still had a nice mouthfeel. Not oily, rather sweet, and the aftertaste is that citrus punch from the Frothy Monkey Brunch Blend. I’d say this is one of the better straight coffee stouts I’ve had, not too thick, not too light, coffee flavor isn’t too roasty and the beer highlights the coffee, instead of letting it play in the background. I would like to note that they also have a Mocha Stout, which surprisingly comes in at a lower ABV. Either way, check this out if you find one around you, or find yourself in Nashville.

Jason Dominy (@jasondominy) covers beer for the Sprudge Media Network, and is a co-host of The Last Beer Show podcast. Read more Jason Dominy on Sprudge.

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Week on the Farm

Fun with daddy
The seductive scent of wild milkweed

Working on a new duck pen

Getting hay for the bull

Walk on the wild side

A new cow....




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Thursday, June 29, 2017

Build-Outs Of Summer: Indi Chocolate In Seattle, Washington

Coffee and chocolate, chocolate and coffee: they go together in more than just a mocha. At the new Indi Chocolate location in Seattle’s Pike Place Market, that means sourcing cacao from cooperatives in Peru, Nicaragua, and Ecuador, and pairing them with coffee from Philadelphia’s La Colombe. Let’s check out their new spot in the market (and probably stop for a pork bun at Mee Sum Pastry while we’re there, let’s be real).

As told to Sprudge by Becca Roebber.

For those who aren’t familiar, will you tell us about your company?

We make bean to bar, single origin, dark chocolate in Pike Place Market.

Can you tell us a bit about the new space?

We are building a cafe, factory and gathering space in the Pike Place Market $74 million dollar expansion. We will be serving La Colombe coffee, they are very excited by working with us and will be sending one of their founders for our launch.

What’s your approach to coffee?

We roast our own cacao beans and make chocolate from the bean, just like coffee, we will be serving our 50/50 cold brew cacao coffee as well as have drinks with freshly made chocolate (mochas, drinking chocolate, etc). Sourcing practices are very important to us as well as innovation and customer experience.

Any machines, coffees, special equipment lined up?

We will have a faucet of running dark chocolate built into our bar.

What’s your hopeful target opening date/month?

June 29 is the city wide celebration and opening of the new MarketFront in Pike Place Market.

Thank you!

Indi Chocolate is located at  the Pike Place Market in Seattle, WA 98101. Check out their official website and find them on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

The Build-Outs Of Summer is an annual series on Sprudge. Live the thrill of the build all summer long in our Build-Outs feature hub. Got a Build-Out of your own? Get in touch.

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Wonder And Warmth: Two Year Of Calgary’s Monogram Coffee

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge

Monogram Coffee’s flagship shop is an unassuming cafe, nestled between a convenience store and a Greek restaurant in Altadore, a quiet community about 10 minutes outside of downtown Calgary. Although the street may be quiet, the scene inside is a constant stream of locals and coffee fans who travel out of their way to enjoy Monogram’s offerings and welcoming vibes. In many ways, Monogram reminds me most of some of my favorite cafes worldwide: a little DIY, bright yet cozy, and with lots of personal character. Despite the marquee Canadian coffee names behind the enterprise, the space still feels like its humble beginning as a dream of three friends who came together to open a cafe full of—as they invoke repeatedly—wonder and warmth.

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge

Ben Put, Jeremy Ho, and Justin Eyford

In the two-plus years since Monogram first opened its doors to Calgary, co-owners Ben Put, Justin Eyford, and Jeremy Ho have opened a second location (and expanded their first cafe), popped up in venues across the city of Calgary, supported Put competing in the 2015 and 2016 World Barista Championships (there’s even a short documentary about his journey to Dublin in 2016), and gained an impressive 15,000 Instagram followers. But for the three friends-turned-business-partners, relationships and balance are at the heart of their growth.

I sat down with Eyford and Put to discuss these last two years and their hopes for Monogram’s future. The two made it instantly clear that maintaining balance is the company’s key focus. Balance between having a local and international brand. Balance between business lives and personal lives (both Eyford and Put welcomed new babies to their families this past year). Balance between quality and growth. To maintain this balance, the team puts a big emphasis on relationships with their customers, their staff, and their roaster.

Monogram has a somewhat unique relationship with roaster Transcend Coffee and one that Put and Eyford feel has been successful. “There are other formats like this,” Put says, “but we entered a relationship with Transcend in a little bit of uncharted waters. They trusted us to take their coffee and use our own branding. It’s known for Transcend that that’s a bit of a departure from the typical roaster-cafe relationship but I think it’s been successful.”

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge
They tell me that the reason this particular model has worked so well for Monogram is that they have a very transparent relationship with the Edmonton-based roaster. Put talks weekly with Transcend about how the coffee tastes and gives feedback. Each side has an understanding that coffee can taste different in different situations, and Put emphasizes that this is an important part of the way cafes should talk to roasters.

“It’s the one part of the chain where there is more subjectivity, and we need to acknowledge that we have different environments right now and just because this doesn’t taste good here doesn’t mean that you messed up. I think that could be a really healthy aspect to the industry. All the other chains it’s really hard to give that feedback, but my hope is that eventually giving feedback to a roaster could be a very positive thing and not even something that people worry about.”

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge

A roaster himself, it’s something Put thinks about a lot: the ways that baristas, cafes, and roasters could have more open communication. And roasting is something Monogram hopes to be doing very soon—though there’s no set timeline for this next step. “Since we started we’ve always tried to be very transparent with Transcend about what it is that we want and what we’re doing,” Eyford tells me. “We’ve told them from the beginning that eventually we want to be roasting for ourselves.”

Beyond moving into roasting, Put says the company would love to have more cafes, while constantly improving operations within all of their current shops as well. “I would like to continue to explore how to keep staff engaged and long-term, both in terms of roles and monetarily, and I would like to try new service models and new experiential things,” he says. Monogram has already had success challenging service norms with an Honour Bar at its downtown location and has also started to gain an international following for the company branding and aesthetic.

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge

What makes Monogram so appealing to both local—their Altadore cafe is always busy when I go in, no matter the time of day—and international audiences may be in their guiding principle of “wonder and warmth,” a phrase that Put says, in the beginning, was “just a nice alliteration but [has] actually worked really well as a guiding principle.” It’s this guiding principle that Eyford says “helps keep us focused on something. Having those [words] in the back of our minds always really helps us when we’re trying to make a decision. When we’re trying to decide to do something we always ask ourselves: ‘Is it promoting these two principles? Are we making our cafe more into what we wanted it to be, or are we losing our direction?’”

On a recent visit to the Monogram location in downtown Calgary, I ran into Eyford’s father, and we struck up a brief conversation. He told me about a recent trip he took to Amsterdam and, while wearing a Monogram shirt at a local cafe there, the baristas got very excited and exclaimed great admiration for the Monogram brand and coffee. Eyford’s father was surprised by, and extremely proud of this, but to me it spoke of the enduring smallness of the specialty coffee community and the affection that anyone in the coffee world has for a brand that seems to be doing something a bit differently.

monogram coffee calgary canada cafe transcend coffee sprudge

But while the international recognition has been appreciated, Eyford says you can’t rely on being a destination cafe alone. “Recognition is helpful to be a destination but really what we’ve learned in the last two years is that you can’t survive on that,” he says. “It’s not a consistent flow of people—you really need to become a part of your community. And those people don’t necessarily care if you’re the best baristas in the world, they care that their daily experience is good.”

And while the coffee at their cafes is indeed warm and tasty, it’s those staff interactions that make Monogram shine and who carry the “wonder and warmth” mantra every day. “I think the unique thing about Calgary,” Put tells me, “is that there are more and more independent cafes and there’s still lots of room to grow. I think specialty coffee is still fresh enough in Canada that there’s a unique opportunity for people to make names for themselves.” And Monogram has done exactly that.

Monogram Coffee has multiple locations in Calgary. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Elyse Bouvier is a Sprudge.com contributor based in Calgary. Read more Elyse Bouvier on Sprudge.

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Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Jason Mraz Is Growing Coffee Now

Coffee: it grows in California. We’ve been writing about it since 2010 (and again in 2011!), but a couple of weeks ago the New York Times got all worked up on the topic. Tucked away in this interesting-ish feature that you might as well click on—it’s worth one of your 10 free NYT articles this month, probably—is the following progression of paragraphs:

Jason Mraz, a Grammy-winning singer and songwriter known for his hit “The Remedy,” expects to produce his first significant coffee crop in about two years. “I started my career in a coffee house, and I love the coffee culture,” Mr. Mraz said. “I knew right away that California coffee could be special.”

So two years ago, he and his farm crew planted some 2,500 coffee bushes among the avocado groves on the 1,700 acres he farms near San Diego. Each plant’s roots had to be caged to protect them from gophers. The bushes were caged above ground, too, and then wrapped to insulate and protect their leaves — just planting them took three months.

Today, Mr. Mraz said, the bushes are waist high and producing a few coffee berries. Only a handful were lost, mostly to gophers, coyotes and wind.

He gets a variety of reactions when he tells people about his coffee venture, he said.

“In the 1960s, people didn’t think you could grow wine grapes in California, either,” Mr. Mraz said. “I like to let the coffee deniers I meet here know that not only is coffee growing well in California, it also has its own flavor profile — and right now, it’s one of the rarest coffees in the world.”

Jason Mraz, whose music has serenaded countless Starbucks entry scenes worldwide, may someday be the one growing your coffee. The frequently be-hatted troubadour’s biggest hits include “I’m Yours”, “Lucky”,  and “The Remedy” (aforementioned), which remain soft pop mainstays on your mom’s car radio a decade plus after their original release.

On the topic of Jason Mraz growing coffee, I won’t worry my life away. (Hay, oh.) Jason Mraz can grow as much coffee as he wants, and our official take on the situation here at Sprudge is beefless, much like the plant-based diet Mraz enjoys and not dissimilar to the southern California vegetarian restaurant Cafe Gratitude, in which Mraz is an investor. 

I only wish Mraz’s sonic contemporary John Mayer had found a similar post-Bush era agricultural hobby—growing activated charcoal or something, I don’t know—instead of ruining the Grateful Dead.

Jordan Michelman is a co-founder and editor at Sprudge Media Network. Read more Jordan Michelman on Sprudge Wire.

Top image courtesy of San Diego Magazine. (Mraz is the one in the hat.)

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Build-Outs Of Summer: Brewpoint Coffee In Elmhurst, Illinois

Mankind surfs Craigslist for all sorts of things. From the benign to the unspeakable, it’s all there: a cornucopia of heavy equipment and musical instruments, sublets and missed connections, rants, raves, the rare and the mundane. There’s even coffee! Coffee tables, sure, but also coffee brewers, frappe makers, lil’ coffee roasters, and sometimes, even whole coffee shops.

This is the story of one such Craigslist coffee shop. What started as a casual encounter in search of an espresso machine has become something much more in Elmhurst, Illinois. This is the story of Brewpoint Coffee, now preparing to open their second location and roastery in the Chicago suburbs.

As told to Sprudge by Melissa Villanueva.

For those who aren’t familiar, will you tell us about your company?

Have you ever looked on Craigslist for an espresso machine, but ended up buying a coffee shop instead? That is the story of Brewpoint Coffee. It is a hodgepodge of serendipitous opportunities that brewed together to build a booming coffee shop in Elmhurst, IL. I started this business with my boyfriend Angelo and in the midst of under three years, we got married, hired 15 dynamic staff members, and started our next steps of roasting and our second retail operation.

Can you tell us a bit about the new space?

Our mission at Brewpoint Coffee is to create and empower authentic community spaces. Everything we do is an excuse for community. So naturally, when we decided to build out our roastery, it needed to be something that the whole Chicago western suburbs could enjoy. This would be our second location. The build out is starting just after Memorial Day and our opening will be in September.

We are renovating a 4,500 square foot loading dock on the north side of our town (Elmhurst) to create a coffee and community destination location. We are receiving help from our city and our new landlord for a total of over 50% of our total build out and project costs.

What’s your approach to coffee?

Coffee is our conduit to build up and empower communities. Whether that is through the authentic spaces we build, empowerment to our wholesale cafes to be agents of kindness in their area, or being intentional with partnering with farmers that build up their communities.

The more we can be inventive, creative, and transparent with our coffee the better.

Any machines, coffees, special equipment lined up?

For our main operation we plan on working with a La Marazoco Linea PB two-group manual espresso machine, a Mahlkönig PEAK grinder, and a FETCO CBS-2152XTS. For our roaster we have purchased one of the first USA manufactured Probat 12-2 roasters.

What’s your hopeful target opening date/month?

September 2017.

Are you working with craftspeople, architects, and/or creatives that you’d like to mention?

Our architect Bill Rock has been a rockstar. Our design company Spoon Inc. (Michael Gold) has helped our company astronomically since we opened. Roz Long who hosts all the big artist events in the western suburbs is a big part of our success. Of course, without our staff we wouldn’t be able to dream this big. And lastly our family, with their unwavering support is our foundation.

Thank you!

Brewpoint Coffee is located at 617 N York Rd, Elmhurst, IL USA. Check out their official website and find them on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

The Build-Outs Of Summer is an annual series on Sprudge. Live the thrill of the build all summer long in our Build-Outs feature hub. Got a Build-Out of your own? Get in touch.

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Not Quite Panic

After I hollered

A strange bird called this morning at nobody-else-up-yet-thirty.  The light lay golden like a mantle over the heifer pasture hill, the sky was plumed with pretty peach and purple fog, and the air was cool and clean.... I just had to go out with camera and binoculars.....

Up on the hillside, under the boss's leaning tree, I saw a great, big, black-and-white, cow belly, but no head showing in the grass.

Oh, no! We had several intense thunderstorms yesterday and the cows are on a steep hillside. Sometimes cattle roll the wrong way up on hills and die before they can be righted. It is very rare to see one lying flat out on her side unless something is wrong. (Horses on the other hand do it all the time and can scare the heck out of you.)

I thought it was old Neon Moon. What could have happened? Lightning? Bloat from being upside down? Bad thoughts raced through my head.

I hurried up where Mack was whipping around his circle barking and hollered, "Hey, you!"

A big horned head popped up out of the grass. It wasn't Moon at all, but her big daughter, Moonshine, who was just fine, and seemingly a bit irritated at being awakened after the restless night.

I was plumb relieved! I never did find that mystery bird. 

Mack


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Purple Reigns At Purple Llama, Chicago’s New Coffee Shop Record Store

This summer, Chicagoans will be found drinking coffee on patios, and one of those patios has distinct purple chairs—and some surprises beyond its doorway. Purple Llama opened recently on Division Street in Wicker Park, owned by Joel and Shannon Petrick with Kevin Lardner at the helm of the coffee program. Purple Llama combines the pleasures of coffee and records, for those who appreciate either—or both.

Kevin Lardner began his journey in coffee at Store Street Espresso, a London shop down the road from the British Museum, while earning his undergraduate degree. Joel Petrick, a friend of Lardner’s brother, had been thinking of opening a record shop for new and reissued prints. Over a late night drink in Shoreditch during a visit from Joel Petrick, the two decided to open a shop in Chicago that combined the two ideas.

A purple La Marzocco Linea PB and Nuova Simonelli Mythos One grace Purple Llama’s steel bar, which is surrounded by pale walls angling any viewer’s gaze to one end of the room filled with records framed with wood panelling. The space was designed by Danny Wicke, and the bar by Manny Garcia, both of Wheeler Kearns. “The great thing about Danny and Manny was they understood the needs of a coffee bar,” Lardner said. “The back of the bar is intended to be undulating, flowing with the space. The bar is opposite, inviting attention to it as a central focus.”

Bar design is influenced by Lardner’s experiences in London, where table service is common in coffee culture. Lardner also names Heart Coffee of Portland and G&B of Los Angeles as influences in the areas of quality control and consistency—which convinced Lardner that filter coffee is best made with an automatic brewer, on which Purple Llama serves its single-origin coffees.

Beyond the coffee space, Purple Llama’s record nook features records from the likes of Townes Van Zandt and Fugazi, which are spun on the shop’s player for customers to sample while enjoying coffee. Petrick, when first choosing a round of selections, wanted a clean and reframed viewpoint on record buying for those with a stack under their turntable. With a focus on new pressings, their hope is for customers to exchange sifting through boxes from antique shops for a more accessible experience. “The same way we rotate coffee on bar to keep things exciting, we keep records on a constant rotation,” says Petrick. “You see new things every couple days.”

“We want to present our music and coffee while not shoving them down people’s throats,” adds Lardner. Accessibility is the name of the game for Purple Llama, with evidence of the principle at play in the no-nonsense bar layout, record selection, and menu. Find Counter Culture Coffee offerings, along with a regular rotation of guest roasters, joined by Song Tea & Ceramics of San Francisco for black, green, and oolong teas. Pastries from nearby Floriole Bakery finish any visit to the shop.

Joel Petrick sees his shop’s specialties as both particularly well-suited to the neighborhood. “I’d like to participate in the excitement that is a very musically oriented community,” he says, “where most of the residents have an intrinsic excitement for music. I think that translates into the coffee we serve. Because of their taste, they’ve sought out music unique to them. The same is with specialty coffee—if someone is into this, they’ve chosen to dive deep into what their interests are.”

“For our customers, it leads to becoming an audiophile or enjoying the ritual of coffee,” continues Petrick. “That ceremony is the same from what you get from a record. You’re sitting down for that extra time to enjoy it. That tactile participation in your interests and what makes you happy.”

Settled into Wicker Park with their ritual of coffees and records, Petrick, Lardner, and the Purple Llama team are reframing the way people see their drinks and music. Lovers of either may find the best of both worlds in a unique space, with its sincere, passionate staff—and no sparing of purple.

Purple Llama is located at 2140 W. Division Street, Chicago. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Matt Scheffer is a writer and photographer based in Chicago. This is Matt Scheffer’s first feature for Sprudge.

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