Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Mont Bleu by Newgen at Coquitlam

Located at the corner of Lougheed and Blue Mountain in the historical French Canadian neighbourhood of Maillardville, comes Mont Bleu. This will be Maillardville’s first high rise in the neighbourhood with easy access to Skytrain and a bundle of local amenities. Commercial units will be on the ground floor facing a public art piece as well as exposure from Lougheed. Mont Bleu will be featuring a 21-storey, 147 units with a mixture of studios, 1, 2 and 3 bedroom homes. The 19th floor of the tower will have a large, south-facing rooftop amenity space for residents. On the 3rd floor, a developer is planning on having a lounge, kitchen and fitness centre.

Mont Bleu will be revealing the gift of Une Belle Vie, ʻA Beautiful Lifeʼ soon.

The post Mont Bleu by Newgen at Coquitlam appeared first on Vancouver New Condos.



from Buildings – Vancouver New Condos http://ift.tt/2gPX1Jn

Flavelle Mill – Port Moody

Flavelle OceanFront Development

 

The city of Port Moody is planning a major upscaling of its livability with the creation of an oceanfront community that supports a mix of uses, including a range of housing options, along with commercial, light industrial and recreational uses for the benefit of local residents and visitors. As currently envisioned by city planners and developers, the 34-acre Flavelle Lumber Mill will be transformed into a modern urban village that supports a population of about 7,000 residents and adds a wealth of economic, recreational, social, natural and entertainment benefits to Port Moody.

A variety of housing options are being considered for the development, with condominium buildings, street-oriented townhouses, rental housing, and the potential for house boats estimated to lead to the creation of almost 3,400 residential units. The expansive waterfront area will be revitalized and enhanced by the building of about 1.3 kilometres of new recreational trails, a boardwalk along the water’s edge connecting to Rocky Point Park, and the development of four park areas totalling 4.9 acres, and a 1.9-acre public plaza.

The Flavelle Oceanfront Development could lead to the creation of more than 1,000 on-site jobs upon completion, which could generate up to $57 million in annual employment income. Plans call for 99,000 square-feet of office space; 72,000 square feet of retail space, including a grocery store, restaurants and cafes; 103,000 square feet of light-industrial space; a 106,000 square-foot campus of care facility; and 75,000 square feet of live/work space designed for artistry and other creative ventures.

Developers and planners plan to utilize a sustainable approach in the development to ensure energy efficiency and environmental health. By using LEED Principles of design and construction, planners aim to make the development a model for sustainable communities. The site’s location will help in this regard, as it is in walking distance of both the nearby Sky Train Evergreen Line and West Coast Express, which provide easy connections to the rest of Metro Vancouver.

Public consultation has been an integral part of the planning process thus far, and is expected to continue as the planning stage moves through the ongoing permitting process. I will be keeping a close watch on this project going forward, and will provide updates when appropriate. If you have any questions about the Flavelle OceanFront Development project, or any other questions about real estate in Metro Vancouver, 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

The post Flavelle Mill – Port Moody appeared first on Vancouver New Condos.



from Buildings – Vancouver New Condos http://ift.tt/2z1rXOY

Edgestone by Bold Developments – Port Moody

Edgestone is a new townhouse development by Bold Properties located at 2131 Spring Street in Port Moody.   Once Completed in 2019, Edgestone will consist of 38  2, 3 and 4 Bedroom townhomes ranging in size from 1308 to 1658 square feet.

The expected breakdown of the homes is:

  • 2 Two bedroom + Den residences ranging between 1318 to 1327 square feet
  • 13 Three bedroom residences ranging from 1319 to 1381 square feet
  • 23 Three bedroom + Den residences ranging from 1540 to 1706 square feet

 

Each of the townhomes will be built Certified Green Gold, with Smart living solution including Ring Video Doorbells, Bluetooth enabled Schlage Deadbolt, and USB charging ports throughout the home, plus some more traditional family convenience such as laundry on the upper floor, private garages with overhead storage,  and family sized outdoor patios,  and a great children’s playground.

Located at 2131 Spring Street, Edgestone is centrally located with an easy access to Vancouver via the Barnett and Hastings by car, or if Skytrain is your choice, the Port Moody Centre station is a short walk away.  Other amenities in the neighbourhood include Suterbrook Village with all the shop and services it provides. For nature lovers and dog walkers, Edgestone is convenient located right off the Shoreline trail , which leads to Rocky Point and  Pajos!

Edgestone pricing is expected to start in low 900s with sales to begin by Mid November. If you’re looking for more information on Edgestone and would like to receive additional information such as floor plans, pricing, features and finishes when they are available,  please 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

The post Edgestone by Bold Developments – Port Moody appeared first on Vancouver New Condos.



from Buildings – Vancouver New Condos http://ift.tt/2ihnlME

The Tale Of The Mindful Manager

It starts slowly, these things, first with strict limits—I’ll only check it when I open my laptop, I’ll only look once an hour—until there you are, in your perfectly appointed city apartment, with a closet full of inoffensively expensive casual wear, and like 25 pairs of shoes, but you haven’t left in days—It has been two days now—because the thought of looking away from that screen is just…well it’s just hard. Being in the position of authority, everybody thinks they want it, you know, they think that’s how you mark success in this life, but it’s hard, believe me. A mindful manager has to watch over his shop, his keep, his flock, and they know it’s going on, they know to expect my calls and texts and for the cameras to zoom their little whirrrrr along the tracking mount as they move to drop off a cappuccino, or clean up after the kiddies, or get the mop and bucket out of the store closet which, it bears repeating, I’ve told them twenty flippin’ times—Twenty flippin’ times Josh—to make sure that you’re bleaching (two capfuls should do it) the bucket and mop and letting it sit in cold water at least twice a week, because I’m keeping track. I haven’t actually been into the shop in a few weeks, oh cockadoodie, what has it been, a week a month a year have I ever actually been into the shop? Of course I have, I am the owner and mindful manager of this establishment and I last visited the shop on the evening of October 15th, to install the latest QUAD VISION ALERT CAMERA system upgrade, because I was an early backer on Kickstarter, and they were really, really overdue for an upgrade, the lag in the last version made it basically unusable after 36 hours of consecutive view time, tops, and it’s normal, after all, to want to keep an eye on your shop, expected, really, part of the job description, dang it all to heck, and part of what it means to be an owner and a mindful manager.

You have to log a certain amount of hours to qualify for the OctoView Media Interface, and sir, you have passed the threshold.” The news came by phone, which crashed my dang app, which meant I lost three whole transactions across the bar—cappuccino, hot chocolate, chai latte—three whole transactions without my watchful eye to make sure my staff starts every order with a smile, none of this surly freaking attitude crap you get at other cafes sometimes, and then you input the order into the digital register (which tracks back all transactions to my control center), then you make a little smalltalk with the guest, how’s your day, any plans for later? Then hand back any change, or twist the little terminal thingy around and let them decide if they want to tip you or not, and let them know we’ll call out their drinks when it’s ready. When the shop’s closed and the action slows down I isolate the audio of every name called out, and store these in daily select files for future reference.

The OctoView Media Interface allowed me eight screens, which was pretty good, but the company’s Augmented Viewer interface really represents a step forward in small business monitoring technology. The shop opens, I wake up, cram on the Viewer, and in pixel-perfect 360 degrees across 32 discretely placed cameras I’m given complete control over every aspect of my cafe. I can see all the tiny flaws, the golldang bathrooms need cleaning again, and you need to bus the dishes. You need to run the bus tub. I’m calling you now—David, you need to run the bus tub. I can track every last rag and cruller. I’m there, and when I do have to set it down (I sleep with it on most nights) I can enjoy a near-stereoscopic viewing experience from the updated tracking app on my phone, which is pretty good but not as good as using the Viewer.

Monitoring your staff is important. Watching over employees makes the difference between a sloppy boss-pal and a mindful manager. If you don’t let your charges know who is in charge, if there’s no clear division between staff and ownership, if people don’t know their roles, don’t listen to authority, don’t understand that you are the owner of this establishment, the mindful manager, and not some charitable good-time giving groovy son of a gun running a chill place to kick it, they will run roughshod over you, make a monkey out of you, steal from you, rob you blind, eat all the pastries, give out free coffee to their idiot friends, and generally try and destroy you. The only way to meet this offensive is head-on, with a gosh darn clenched fist if need be, and constant monitoring, because that’s the way the world works, that’s capitalism, that’s how it is, I didn’t make the rules, I just know this world will drive you crazy if you let it. I haven’t slept in a week but I have to stay in control of this cafe and so I’m going to call again. I’m calling again.

David—you have to run the bus tub. My new interface, it’s a contact lens and cochlea implant actually with full digital read-out across the user-best 8 panel interface, controlled by voice, and so I could see it when David entered the walk in and I could hear it when the lock went click and I could even see inside the cooler because I did opt for cameras there, I did select the full coverage even though I know that’s an additional $49.95 for install and another $10 per month, but I watched him for hours as the screaming turned into crying, and crying turned into begging, and then he went silent and cold at around 4am, and two hours later Kevin found him with his heart stopped, because I can watch it again and again but I can’t be there all the time to help and of course I still have the file, of course, I keep all of it for reference, it’s about mindful management, I’m a mindful manager, I couldn’t delete it if I wanted to, but I won’t, because being a good manager is hard, it’s something most people will never understand, the burden, the burden, the burden, because sometimes good management is about letting your employees make their own mistakes.

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

The post The Tale Of The Mindful Manager appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2gZybuh

Guess Who’s Coming To Coffee? Populace’s Flight Of Fancy Is Back!

And so we meet again, my dear arch-frenemy. You may have got the better of me last year, no doubt through some sort of underhanded dealings the likes of which I have yet to figure out, but this year, this year is gonna be my year.

I’m of course talking about Flight of Fancy, Populace Coffee’s box set coffee/origin matching game, and it is now on pre-order.

Back for a fourth year, Flight of Fancy is the ultimate home cupping competition. Like with previous years, each box set comes with four bags of coffee from unknown origins that tasters must figure out in order to be declared the winner. But this year, Populace has included a Guess Who?-style game to help aid in deciphering the origins. Each bag of coffee corresponds to a row on the game board, each row containing six potential origins for the coffee in question.

All you have to do is pick the right origins (and be the first to submit the correct answers on December 15th and post a photo of your game board to Instagram using the hashtag #FOF2017) and you could be the owner of a brand new La Marzocco Linea Mini!

Other prizes include a Baratza Sette 270 grinder for the second fastest entry to get all four correct, two tickets to Disney World or Disneyland for Best Dopplegänger (best photo of someone who looks like one of the people on the game board), and “golden ticket” prizes that include a six-moth subscription to Angels’ Cup, an Acaia scale, or a Fellow Stagg EKG electric kettle.

The coffees will ship some time between the fourth and eighth of December. For more information or to order a Flight of Fancy box set, visit Populace Coffee’s official website. Or just sit this one out. This year is my year I can just feel it. I will not be denied.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

Populace Coffee is an advertising partner on the Sprudge Media Network.

*all media via Populace Coffee

The post Guess Who’s Coming To Coffee? Populace’s Flight Of Fancy Is Back! appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2z7XOzS

Tax Time



Nuff said

from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/2xGuywB

The Tale Of The Cold Brew Place

“Justin, barista camp? You’re going to a fucking barista camp?!”

I rolled my eyes and chuckled as I continued to pack my weekend bag. This was the type of reaction I was used to receiving from friends and family who weren’t into coffee. Especially my Black friends and family.

“Yes, I’m going to a barista camp,” I replied mockingly. “And not just any one, either. It’s for the BGA Level 3. You have to be recommended and invited to attend. This shit’s exclusive. I’m going to leave as one of the highest qualified baristas in the world!”

My best friend, Damien, laid back further into my couch and shook his head.

“Look, I’m all about encouraging Black excellence—even in coffee—but why you gotta do all that out in the middle of the woods? Bro, we’re in the South. I don’t care if you can draw Kehinde Wiley portraits on a latte. The Chattahoochee National Forest is out there, and let’s be real—white coffee people scare me.”

I threw my head back in laughter, tossing in the last of my clean, customized coffee wares and zipped up the bag.

“Why, because they’re ‘too nice’?”

“EXACTLY! And they like cold brew way too damn much!”

Damien stood, straightened up, and smiled creepily at me. He started to reenact a barista behind a bar. “‘Would you like a cold brew flight today? They’re the same coffee processed in different ways! This one tastes like juniper berries, this one has more notes of elderflower and black currant, and this one right here…”—he stopped to throw in a condescending chuckle—“this one is extra special. It was grown so high up, the beans were touched by the light of God up in Heaven and they say you see the Golden Gates when you drink it.’”

We both burst into a fit of laughter. Damien was a trip, but he wasn’t wrong either. He spent many hours hanging out at the coffee shop I worked at in Atlanta, always watching and poking fun at the culture that came with it. But Damien was my biggest supporter, and in an industry where I was usually the only Black face in a sea of white, I appreciated him hyping me up and keeping me grounded.

A car horn honked a couple of times outside of my window.

“Alright, bro. That’s Karen, so I gotta go.” Damien and I dapped each other up and I started to leave.

“Be safe out there!! Don’t trust nobody. Especially people who drink cold brew.”

————

“Are you excited for Barista Camp?” Karen was the Director of Education at my coffee shop. She took a sip of her cold brew and smiled over at me in the passenger seat.

We were about halfway through the three-hour drive to the northern part of Georgia from Atlanta. We spent most of the time talking about our shop dynamics and things we’d like to see improve. Karen had been working at our shop for ten years, having trained many baristas who went on to do great things in coffee.

I was shocked when she told me she recommended me for this Barista Camp that was exclusively for those seeking to be Level 3-certified. The BGA had been working on the Level 3 certification for years, but most of us thought it would never end up happening. I worked multiple jobs to pay to get my Level 1 and 2’s before I landed this job. When I got the official invitation and our boss offered to cover the costs, I felt like all my hard work had finally paid off.

“Yeah, it’s cool,” I shrugged, trying to mask my actual excitement. “Since you know the organizers, anything I should expect? You know… besides probably being the only Black guy there?”

“Oh, come on,” Karen shot me one of those looks.

“I’m just saying! We don’t have to act like it’s not true!” I threw my hands up in the air and my hand knocked the cold brew out of hers, spilling it everywhere. “I’m so sorr- OH SHIT!”

The car veered off into the opposite lane as she let go of the steering wheel to grab the cup. In an instant I grabbed the wheel and swerved as hard as I could, lurching the car back into our lane, just as an oncoming truck went roaring past. Karen slammed brakes slammed and we sat silently, breathing heavily in a state of shock.

“You good?” I asked. She unfastened her seatbelt and stepped out of the car to examine her pants. A few seconds passed before she started laughing. I guess the adrenaline and caffeine was starting to settle.

I hopped out too and chuckled a little with her. I looked both ways down the empty two-lane highway. Tall, lush trees lined the road for miles and the sun was starting to descend.

“That was wild!” Karen exclaimed.

“Yeah, I guess…” I started to say, and then I noticed the lights flashing red and blue. My voice trailed as a cop pulled up behind our car.

“Is everything alright here, folks?” A tall, white sheriff stepped out of his vehicle and walked over to us suspiciously. He gave Karen a glance but turned most of his attention towards me. Middle of nowhere Georgia? Of course.

“Yeah, everything’s fine, officer. Just spilled coffee on myself while driving and needed to stop, is all,” Karen replied with a calm laugh. I just stood silently. The sheriff’s eyes did not move from me.

“Where you two headed?” He pointed at the road ahead of us.

“Oh, we’re going to a barista camp,” Karen told the officer. I was fine with her taking the lead on this one.

“Barista camp, huh?” The sheriff’s eyes narrowed a bit. “You like coffee, son?”

I nodded, still quiet, but felt uncomfortable with the amount of attention I was receiving.

“Yup! We’re huge coffee nerds, and we kind of have to get going if there’s nothing else…?” Karen stepped slightly within the sheriff’s line of sight to garner his attention. He tipped his hat to her before giving me one last look, then left. I sighed in relief.

That was awkward,” I said.

“Oh, whatever,” said Karen. She tossed me the keys. “You drive the rest of the way.”

————

After what seemed like forever, driving deeper and deeper into the woods, we pulled up to a massive house tucked away along the edge of the forest. It was freshly painted pale grey and had a wraparound porch. We were miles off the main road, and all you could hear were birds and the wind rustling through the trees.

A man and a woman stepped out from inside the house and waved to us. Karen almost didn’t let me finish parking before jumping out to run and greet them on the porch. I approached the group while they hugged each other.

“And you must be the barista Karen says will be the next best thing in coffee!” The man was not much taller than me. He donned a short beard and glasses. His La Marzocco-branded five panel hat was brand new and his plaid shirt was tucked just a little too perfectly into his jeans.

“I’m Justin,” I said reaching for a hand shake.

“Oh, we don’t have to be so formal! We’re all homies here,” He laughed with a wink. “I’m Dave.” The world’s worst attempt at a dap was made between us, but I brushed it off and laughed along with him. “And this right here is Molly.” Dave reached back to introduce his partner, a small woman in a grey “NASTY WOMAN” t-shirt and tattoos on both arms.

“We’re really happy to have you here, Justin,” said Molly.

“Molly and Dave own one of the best coffee companies in the US and mentored me when I was first starting out. They’re the reason why we even have a Level 3,” Karen spoke proudly. “And they built this entire camp facility just for the test!”

Everyone smiled at each other. You could feel the history between them, and I was about to be a part of it.

———

The entire property was a wonderland for coffee pros. There was a room lined with state-of-the-art sample roasters, and another filled with white powder-coated Linea Minis with light wood accents. The nicest grinders on the market—EK-43’s, Mythos 2’s, Lux D’s—they were all here. The cupping lab was separate from the house and doubled as a classroom in the backyard in an all-glass enclosure.

I walked around the property alone, taking photos with my phone and posing for Snapchats I sent back to Damien.

“Did you see the roaster’s cabin yet?” A deep voice with a slight Australian accent came out of nowhere, startling me. I turned to see one of the biggest faces in coffee smiling smugly. Jarrydd Reeves was a career barista competitor, having won both the Australian and United States Barista Championship across several seasons. Jarrydd (two r’s, two d’s and a y) was a good-looking Australian white guy, cocky and brash, who moved from Melbourne a few years ago to Portland to conquer America. Jarrydd’s resume included brief stints at some of the best coffee shops in the world, but he’d never to win the big one—he was many things, after many years trying, but he was not a World Barista Champion.  And so he continued to compete every year, and the entire industry seemed to shift in whatever direction he set through those routines.

“Ha, what’s that?” I snapped another pic of the cupping lab.

“It’s Justin, right?” he asked me. I nodded. “C’mon, I’ll show you.”

We walked about a hundred feet down a dirt path deeper into the woods. Talking with Jarrydd was more like a monologue: he spoke mostly about himself, his thoughts on coffee, and plans he had for competition in the upcoming season. He was an instructor at the camp, too.

“You know, distribution tools really are a game-changer,” Jarrydd said to me. “Espresso is just so much better. I’m talking 26% extraction, bruv!”

“Eh, I don’t think they make that much of a difference,” I said shrugging. Jarrydd grabbed my shoulder tight to stop me. I looked down at his hand then back at him. He was shaking his head.

“Dog—I can call you that, right?—have you ever tested an espresso with a refractometer with and without a distribution tool. The consistency, dog. The consistency. Do you even know what a refractometer is?”

“Yeah, dog,” I said while removing his hand from my shoulder and rolling my eyes.

We approached a small cabin with smoke exiting the chimney. Chaff fell gently from above and the air smelled like warm cookies and popcorn. Someone was roasting.

Jarrydd opened the door into the cabin. A deep red, 25-lb San Franciscan sat in the middle of the one-room cabin while coffee beans turned in the cooling tray. A fresh batch of green was going inside the roaster. Cupping bowls and spoons were neatly set up on a small, round table on the other side of the room. A poster of the Counter Culture flavor wheel was up on the wall. Underneath it were a palette of green coffee bags with the Ninety Plus Coffee logo on every single one.

“Isn’t this tight?” Jarrydd exclaimed, stepping over to the other side of the roaster to where I couldn’t see him. I took a few photos and posted a video to social media. “Yo, come meet the roaster!”

Jarrydd was standing by a desk situated in the corner behind the roaster where sat a clean-shaven, skinny Black man wearing a “Filter Coffee, Not People” t-shirt. He hunched over a laptop analyzing roast curves. I was relieved to see him.

“Hello, my name is Adrian,” said the man standing up. His voice was monotone, but polite. He probably had been in here roasting for hours.

“Wassup, man. It’s real good to meet you.” My tone was seeping with subtext. I went to bump fists but he grabbed it instead. “Oh, haha….” I went in for a handshake instead.

“Adrian’s been roasting for Molly and Dave for a real long time. He’s one of the good ones!” Jarrydd hugged Adrian’s shoulders and smiled. Adrian returned the smile but something felt off.

“This is a cool setup you’ve got here,” I said looking around. “Mind if I snap a pic?”

“Yeah, totally!” Jarrydd chimed in answering for him. I let out an annoyed sigh while Adrian positioned himself next to the cooling tray. The auto-flash went off.

“Oh shit, one more. I didn’t mean to use fl-“ I looked up and Adrian’s entire demeanor changed. He leaned over the roaster as if he were in pain, his eyes wide open searching the ground then up at me. It looked like he’d woken up and realized I was there for the first time.

“Get out,” Adrian said, voice cracking. Jarrydd grabbed both his shoulders and tried to push him back into the chair next to the roaster but Adrian was slightly stronger. “GET OUT!” He yelled this time, struggling with Jarrydd and lunging toward me.

I stumbled back as Adrian started to fight Jarrydd and scream. Jarrydd raised his voice this time and told me to leave and I listened. Running out of the cabin, I fumbled for my phone to send the photo to Damien.

“Is everything okay?”

I physically jumped hearing and seeing Molly suddenly appear in front of me. I dropped my phone and cracked the screen. Fuck.

Uh— yeah. Everything’s cool…” I shook my head and sighed picking up my broken phone. I could make out the message notification from Damien but couldn’t get it open to see it. Molly stepped next to me and linked her arm with mine. She slowly started to walk me forward, back towards the house.

“I’ve been wanting to speak with you since you got here, Justin,” She started. “Let’s go inside and chat…over a coffee, of course”

——

Molly’s back was turned to me as she finished brewing a December Dripper for two. The brew smelled like berries and dark chocolate.

“I just love coffee from Ethiopia, don’t you?” She said turned around, placing a steaming mug on the table next to me. We sat on deep brown Eames chairs directly across from each other. “You know, Africa is the motherland for coffee,” A smile crept across her face as she began speaking. Her eyes did not leave mine and I started to become really uncomfortable. “And here at our camp, we go out of our way to show our appreciation. Diversity in all ways is very important to us.”

Molly bent her head down into her white notNeutral cup and took a loud, long cupping slurp from it. Suddenly, I felt paralyzed. My brain screamed for me to get up and run, but I couldn’t. All I could do was stare wide-eyed back at Molly as she cradled her coffee cup. The tattoos on her arm—long branches of coffee fruit and portraits of Black and brown women picking them—started to move and taunt me. My heart rate skyrocketed. I couldn’t do anything.

Tilting her head to the side, Molly gave me a look of concern that turned sinister. She knelt down in front of me, still holding her cup, and held my right cheek.

“We’re going to help you become one of the greatest coffee professionals ever, Justin. With our help, you can get there.”

Dave, Jarrydd, and Karen stepped into my line and sight and crowded Molly, all staring at me. I noticed a glass bottle of cold brew in Karen’s hand. Molly took another loud slurp from her cup and the space around me disappeared. I sunk back into a dark abyss, the scene of everyone around me fading away quickly. I screamed. I cried. I tried to reach for something but there was nothing.

——

I stirred the bloom and took a large sniff of the bright, citrus aromatics of the coffee sitting in the large vat in front of me. Kenyan coffees really do make the best cold brew, I thought to myself. I stepped off the small ladder and unhooked my apron, revealing my “Coffee Is The New Black” t-shirt.

Adrian wheeled a bucket of freshly roasted coffee into the space. “UGANDA” was written in large letters on the side—no additional information. I maneuvered around the maze of nitro kegs to retrieve the beans from him. We exchanged nods and he retreated back to his roaster’s cabin. My cabin was new. Cases of brown glass bottles with white scripted letters printed on them sat alongside a wall, waiting to be filled with my delicious cold brew. It was outfitted with two white EKK’s, a top-notch RO water system, and a state of the art bottling system.

I became the cold brew guy.

Michelle Johnson (@thechocbarista) is the publisher of The Chocolate Barista, and the marketing director at Barista Hustle. Read more Michelle Johnson on Sprudge.

The post The Tale Of The Cold Brew Place appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2zlKDfp

Monday, October 30, 2017

Caution Sick Fox

This man would have practically stepped on the fox
if the boss hadn't yelled to him

We took a quick spin down to the boat launch at Schoharie Crossing, despite the rotten weather, in order to do a quick bird list. Kinda nasty to be walking at home. 

It may have been a good thing we did. While I was going nuts over a flock of American Pipits, the boss was exclaiming, "There's something in the road!"

Even without the binoculars we could see that it was a fox and not in a normal pose. Through the bins it looked downright awful! 

It was hunched in the road not moving, while a walker approached it from behind a small hill where he couldn't see that it was there.

The boss jumped out of the car and hollered to him. After about three yells the fox finally staggered off the road. The man was grateful to have been warned.

We have been getting notices from our veterinarian on Facebook about rabies in the area and I suspect that this may be a case of that.

We stopped at the sheriff's office to report it and came on home.

We are always cautious about wildlife, but I guess even more vigilance is in order now. 

Watch out if you use the boat launch!


from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/2gPnjeI

Milwaukee: The Pendulum Coffee Festival Is This Saturday

Mill-e-wah-que, the good land, home of the Brewers and Laverne & Shirley. And this weekend, it will be host of the Pendulum Coffee Festival. Back for a fifth year, the Pendulum Coffee Festival brings together some of the best coffee roasters in the Southeastern Wisconsin area, all under one roof.

Taking place on this Saturday between 10:00am and 5:00pm at Evolution Milwaukee, this year’s festival will have nearly 20 coffee companies taking part, including roasters like Anodyne Coffee, Pilcrow, and Kickapoo Coffee, all of whom will be there doling out samples of their brews and talking all things coffee, giving attendees “unequaled access to their favorite local roasters to discuss all things coffee, from farm to cup.”

Also included in the festivities will be a variety of talks and brewing classes for attendees who are looking to step up their own coffee game at home.

Last year’s event had over 700 people show up, and Pendulum Coffee expects that number to double this year. Tickets for the event are available for $10 in advance and $15 the day of. For a full list of roasters, classes and talks, or to purchase tickets, visit Pendulum Coffee’s official website.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

*top image via Pendulum Coffee

The post Milwaukee: The Pendulum Coffee Festival Is This Saturday appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2yeRJCx

The Natural Exfoliators and Scrubs You Need this Fall

Fall is that time when mother earth does her cleaning - the dead leaves drop and the rain washes everything away.  It's also a good time to slough off dead skin cells and rejuvenate the face, since drying electric heating can play a toll on your glow. Since fall is a good time to get a good exfoliation regimen down pat, I've put together the best natural exfoliators on the market together for you to peruse.

Why exfoliate? Well, it's good for uneven skin tone and texture, congested pores, blemishes, dullness and even fine lines!

I try to aim for 2-3 times a week this time of year, to keep things fresh and glowy.

LPN's Winners

I've been trying and testing high and low the best natural exfoliators and facial scrubs, and I've collated for you the best of the best in the market right now (and of course, with the most pure ingredients). My faves for the face? Lina Hansen, May Lindstrom, Saison Beauty and Root Science - with a little Henné Organics on the side for keeping flaky lips at bay.

Root Science's Polish

Your exfoliating heroes in this facial polish are rice flower, kaolin clay, bentonite clay, coconut and French pink clay. It's a light exfoliator including vitamin-rich herbs, roots, flowers (many sourced from the Nordics - Iceland to be specific) that help replenish the new skin cells. It's super gentle and not overly abrasive in anyway - it's great for all skin types (but for overly sensitive skin, please avoid exfoliators all together).

To use, place one teaspoon of treatment in the palm of your hand and add water drop by drop to form a thick paste. Massage onto damp skin, then rinse and pat dry.

Shop Online for $60 USD
 

Lina Hanson's Global Face Trio

Lina Hansen's trio of Cleanser, Exfoliator and Mask is a beautiful powder of Kaolin, Thanaka Wood Powder (used by the Burmese women for its effective skin care properties -- it tightens pores, clarifies skin and removes blackheads), Orange Peel Powder and Rice Bran Powder (which has been cherished by Japanese women for centuries for its ability to smooth and brighten skin).

To get the triple threat experience: add more water for use as a daily cleanser and light exfoliation, less water for a deeper exfoliation and for a mask, simply add a little water and let it sit on the skin as it removes impurities, clarifies the skin and tightens pores.

Shop online at The Detox Market for $70 USD.
 

Saison's Sumer Foaming Cleansing Powder

An exfoliant that foams? Yup! This gentle cleanser naturally removes dirt, oil and dead skin cells, and foams! A combination of organic rice powder (one of the best natural exfoliators), corn starch, pineapple powder and Kaolin Clay all work together for this multi-tasking product.

The essential oil blend is super lovely in this product and the foaming is great when you're trying to rid yourself of the last remnants of makeup.

Shop this handmade product online for $30 USD.
 

May Lindstrom's The Clean Dirt

This has been a long-time love of mine and is a product I always keep in my bathroom cabinet no matter what else I'm testing at the moment. Including white halloysite clay, red moroccan rhassoul clay, red alaea sea salt as well as baking soda, this exfoliator is an essential when it comes to needing the big guns.

Warming spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg and turmeric also stimulate the skin while calendula is soothing. It's a serious powerhouse exfoliator and I can't recommend it enough.

Shop online at The Detox Market for $70USD.
 

Henné Organic's Lip Exfoliator in Nordic Berries

And then there's the lips. Henné Organics has been owning the natural lip care scene since they came onto market a few years back. Their USA-made sugar and coconut oil based lip exfoliators are my faves when it comes to keeping lips smooth and soft. They have created a few variations including nordic berries, rose diamonds and lavender mint.  I'm loving the nordic berries for this time of year (plus, living in Norway).

Shop online at The Detox Market for $24 USD.

Alright beauties, enjoy your next scrub!

X

K

The post The Natural Exfoliators and Scrubs You Need this Fall appeared first on Living Pretty, Naturally.



from Living Pretty, Naturally http://ift.tt/2xzk6GO

A Celebration Of Specialty At The Tokyo Coffee Festival

When we last visited the Tokyo Coffee Festival in 2016, organizer Yuji Otsuki said it was a chance to introduce people to the local scene and show them the ease of brewing at home. Since then, the festival has established itself as a chance to explore new coffee, learn more about it, listen to live music, and try other specialty food and drink.

And with the most recent event just finished, I thought it would be interesting to look at the ways the festival has grown and what new developments have taken place since we first covered the festival—it’s a look at what was, what is, and what to look forward to in the future!

Espresso

The most recent Tokyo Coffee Festival was also its espresso debut, with duties rotating on two-hour shifts to offer visitors a variety of coffee to try from coffee shops including Rec Coffee, Fuglen Coffee Roasters, and And Coffee Roasters

From far flung islands

Though the event is always a showcase for Tokyo coffee roasters like Single O Japan, Light Up Coffee, 4/4 Seasons Coffee, and Glitch Coffee Roasters, it’s also blossomed into an event that introduces a variety of coffee shops from outside of Tokyo, too. Highlights this year included Cerrado Coffee—all the way from Okinawa with a sweet Ethiopia Gedeb—and Coral Coffee, who came from the coasts of the Goto Islands of Nagasaki!

From afar, but not too far

From outside of Tokyo, the Tokyo Coffee Festival hosted Takamura Wine & Coffee Roasters from Osaka, Hoshikawa Cafe from Saitama, Trunk Coffee from Nagoya, and Hibi Coffee from Kyoto, who brought a little of the tea ceremony to their kimono-clad barista working on pour-over coffee!

From neighboring Asia

When we first talked in 2016, Otsuki had mentioned with some surprise that a Taiwanese coffee shop had wanted to take part in the festival. This year, the lineup of Asian coffee shops outside of Japan included Papa Palheta from Singapore, St.1 Cafe and Aroma Cafe Live from Taiwan, and Blooom Coffee House from Macau.

tokyo coffee festival japan hengtee lim kazu poon

The overseas selection

It isn’t just the Asian coffee roasters with an interest in the festival, however, and the September Tokyo Coffee Festival included the likes of The Barn from Germany, Artificer from Sydney, Aloha Coffee Lab from Hawaii, and New Zealand’s Coffee Supreme, who not only sold a selection of cute red and white socks, but have also just recently opened their first Tokyo coffee shop.

tokyo coffee festival japan hengtee lim kazu poon
A celebration of specialty

Though coffee is at the heart of the Tokyo Coffee Festival, it’s also an opportunity to introduce people to other specialty food and drink that shares in the craftsmanship and pursuance of natural flavors inherent in specialty coffee, and products made in the same vein or related to coffee in some way. Craft beer is often on display, but this year also saw specialty chocolate-covered bananas courtesy of Minimal, and Prana Chai with their specialty tea.

Educating and Entertaining

More recently, the Tokyo Coffee Festival has hosted talk events featuring competition champions like Japan Barista Champion Miki Suzuki, and World Brewers’ Cup Champion Tetsu Kasuya. This year the event hosted the JAC finals, as well as a talk on the Taiwanese coffee scene courtesy of Goodmans Coffee representative, Atsuomi Ito.

To keep up with the Tokyo Coffee Festival, check their website or official Facebook page.

Hengtee Lim (@Hent03) is a Sprudge.com staff writer based in Tokyo. Read more Hengtee Lim on Sprudge.

Photos courtesy of Kazu Poon.

The post A Celebration Of Specialty At The Tokyo Coffee Festival appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2yewFvG

The Tale Of The Ghoulish Morning Shift

I don’t believe in ghosts or paranormal activity, but 30 years ago I had a series of experiences I can’t explain in any rational way. It spooked me enough that I’ll never take another job that requires me to work before dawn. I also still refuse to answer knocks at my door.

Bulldog News, owned by Doug Campbell and Gloria Seborg, is a newsstand and cafe in Seattle that’s been serving news junkies and the caffeine-deprived for the past 34 years. In the mid-1980s I worked there as a barista and, eventually, a manager. It was the perfect job for a news and magazine junkie like me. It did, however, require getting up at an obscenely early hour.

Bulldog ran the distribution of The New York Times for the University of Washington campus, which meant I had to arrive by 4:30 AM to make sure our undergrad carriers got their newspapers. After the carriers were on their merry way, I would tune the store radio to NPR’s “Morning Edition,” prime the espresso machine, and hang out until it was time to open at 6:30. Bulldog’s front doors face the normally bustling University Avenue, but at that time of morning “The Ave” was so quiet I’d only hear the occasional “swoosh” of a passing city street sweeper or the slow, erratic shuffle of an inebriated student heading back to the dorms. It was also dark and almost always raining, which I thought early on in my Bulldog tenure was the only half-way spooky aspect of the job.

Then I heard the knock.

It was 5:00 AM on a Thursday morning and I was sitting in the front of the shop, sipping on my first shots of Bulldog Blend espresso. My usual morning routine was suddenly interrupted by two solid knocks at the back door. I walked to the back room to see if it was a delivery, but when I peered through the glass pane, I couldn’t see a soul. I cautiously opened the door and looked up and down the alley. Then I heard a man’s voice say, “Ready?

The only living thing I could see in the alley was a seagull eating trash down by Magus Books. I couldn’t lock the back door fast enough.

Two weeks later it happened again, on a Thursday at about 5:00 AM. I went to the back door and saw nothing. This time I decided not to go outside. But when it happened a third time, I started getting nervous. That early in the morning I was all by myself inside Bulldog and it was always pitch black outside. Was someone playing a practical joke on me? Was there a water pipe that only made knocking noises on Thursdays at 5:00 AM? One afternoon, during a clove cigarette break in the back alley, I shared my story with a friend who worked as a barista at Cafe Allegro, the espresso joint located just a few feet down the alley from Bulldog’s back door. He just nodded his head and rather matter-of-factly stated, “That was probably just Cassidy.”

I waited for the punch line and when it didn’t come, I realized he wasn’t joking. Cafe Allegro, opened by former Starbucks executive Dave Olsen in 1975, was one of the very first espresso bars in Seattle and the staff is well-versed in its history. According to my friend, our end of the building, which was built back in 1909, used to house the Forkner Funeral Home. I pumped him for more information and learned that Cafe Allegro’s front entrance (and our back door) all used to be part of the mortuary’s garage. In 1944 one of their hearse drivers took a wrong turn at night and ended up crashing into the Lake Washington Ship Canal. It was years before they recovered his body. “That was Cassidy,” my friend told me. “Every once in a while he likes to knock on doors like he always did, looking to see if his ‘customers’ were ready for a drive.” Then he laughed and said, “I think Thursdays were his pick-up day.”

After a few more nervous mornings, my level-headed Ph.D. candidate girlfriend convinced me it was probably the Allegro crew playing a practical joke. Given our constant good-natured trash talking about which of us made the best espresso on “The Ave,” it sounded plausible to me. So I decided to catch them in the act.

It was a cold October Thursday morning, and I’d asked one of our other managers to cover the first part of my shift. I told her one of our carriers was sick and I had to make their New York Times deliveries. As Tanya hung out inside Bulldog, I stationed myself at end of our back alley. I got suspicious looks from the occasional passerby, but nobody entered the alley or went near our back door. After about a half-hour I was cold and bored so, feeling a tad stupid, I went back to Bulldog and asked Tanya to let me in the front door. What happened next still gives me goosebumps when I think about it.

“Did you forget your keys?” Tanya asked. When I told her I had not, she said: “That wasn’t you knocking at the back door?” My face turned a shade of white usually found only on polar bears and marshmallows. She suggested I may need to eat more red meat. I just mumbled an agreement.

Astonishingly I stayed at Bulldog for another 10 months after, but every Thursday morning, as the clock approached 5:00, I would crank up NPR and pretend not to hear what I know I heard. I hope ol’ Cassidy didn’t feel slighted. And if he did, he’s going to have to ring a doorbell to find me.

Michael Alberty is a wine writer based in Oregon, and a Sprudge Wine contributor

The post The Tale Of The Ghoulish Morning Shift appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2zZPCiY

Running Against the Wind


So far we have seen a shocking amount of rain, but whatever wind there was wasn't bad enough to wake me up. The dog buckets were full this morning though, and yesterday I noticed that they needed filling. I did not participate in the filling this time.

Now my phone is getting all excited with alerts about road closures and flood warnings, and the gust are getting kind of noticeable so I guess I had better bring the puppers in.

Dang. I wanted to get at least a thousand words written before I went on daytime duty.

Ah, well, welcome to morning. 




from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/2zRvFdx

Sunday, October 29, 2017

Pennants


October's flying her last flags;  she won't surrender to November. 

Walk the wild side, 

Walk it now. Get her before she leaves us;



We went out west again yesterday to visit, and, bird, and so Becky could shop. The colors were fine as frog's hair, all purple, puce, and magenta.....plus every single shade of brown and gold that the good Lord chose to send us. 

Oaks of every shape and sort were clinging to their leaves like oak trees always do. 

I think they're bashful. 


Maples, sumacs, the tender deciduous trees, they just let it all hang out.

Toss their leaves on the closet floor, race away naked, rustle, rustle, rustle.

Oaks hug their wrappers tight around them, like grannies wearing curlers, clutching flannel to their breasts, as if to ward off peepers.



Peeping Toms that we are, we delighted in the colors, and a good thing too, as at least hereabouts the woods are getting awful bare.

All too soon comes the penance of November, payback for every inch of summer.

I was grateful today for one last wild walk....well, maybe not the last, but the end of these passable days is coming soon....before the white stuff flies and ice and hunters keep me near the house.



from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/2yVdxQo

Friday, October 27, 2017

90 Years And A New Machine: La Marzocco At HOST 2017

At Last There Is Coffee For Dogs

I love my dogs, all three of them—four if you count my 11-month-old daughter who exhibits some startling pack behavior. Sometimes I wish I could share my love of coffee with them; just a man and his best friends sharing a big ole dish of joe. It would be great. But it would probably kill them, so I can’t.

But it seems that at least one other person in this world expresses a similar sentiment. That one person is Agota Jakutyte, the creator of Rooffee (ugh), coffee for dogs.

Now, before we go any further, that name is terrible. As Motherboard points out, it is uhhhhh shockingly similar to “roofie”, the colloquial name for rohypnol, also known as the date-rape drug. It is pretty much the worst possible name. Why not just rely on the shared “aw” sound and go with Dogfee? It’s better than Rooffee. Jakutyte tell Motherboard that the name is a combination of “ROOTS + COFFEE” and that any aural resemblance to “roofie” is pure coincidence, which of course it is because who would intentionally name their product after the date-rape drug?

In fact, from here out, I’m going to do them a favor and refer to it as Dogfee.

Dogfee, the coffee for dogs, actually contains no coffee, because again, coffee is bad for dogs. What it contains instead is “a bunch of herbs and vegetables like dandelion root, hawthorn, chicory, burdock, and carrots” and is “intended to be drank by both pets and their humans.” But Dogfee is intended to be made like coffee, kind of. A rather bizarre video from their Kickstarter campaign shows the brew being made using a French press with coconut oil. So it’s really more like bulletproof dogfee.

This is not Jakutyte’s first interspecies product line; she is also the owner of Shoo, the maker of natural shampoos for dogs and humans alike. Shoo also sells logs from hazelnut trees for $10, but I’m not sure those are for humans.

Anyway, Dogfee is also supposed to help with weight loss, if that’s something you or your dog would be interested in. Jakutyte tells Motherboard it makes dogs “less hungry and less food obsessed.” It presumably is the same for humans? I dunno.

Have you ever thought you wanted something and then once you got it, you realized you never wanted it at all? That’s been my 400-word journey with Dogfee. I think my pups and I will continue to share apple slices and peanut butter. But maybe you still want to share a cup with your chubby Chow Chow. If so, grab some Dogfee.

And for those worried about a “Rooffee” showing up on their billing statement, don’t worry, Jakutyte has already said they will be changing the name. Might I suggest Dogfee?

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

*top image © pierrelidar31/Adobe Stock

The post At Last There Is Coffee For Dogs appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/2ib1Yg3