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April’s Coffee of the Month – Guatopia!

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Guatemalan Coffee and Ethiopian Coffee = Guatopia

It’s Back!  Last Year we debuted our “Guatopia” for the April coffee of the month and it was a HIT with our prosumers!  So for April, exactly 1 year later, we’ve brought this fun blend back.  Get it while you can for April because when May hits, it disappears until next time!  You can add it to your Coffee Lover’s Club order or you can purchase it as a one time order for yourself or a friend. Click Here to go directly to our website and order some now!

Note: If you’re reading this post after April just order our Guatemalan medium roast coffee and our Ethiopian Reserve coffee. Then blend them together 50/50.

coffee of the month

Bean Notes:

The pleasant blueberry tones of our Ethiopian coffee begin this flavor experience as you take the first sip.  Once your mouth fills with the syrupy body of this blend, you’ll notice a subtle, well-balanced nuttiness and a slight hint of fruity sweetness.  Finally, you’ll enjoy the slight citrus note in the finish, which will leave you longing for more

Roast Notes:

This Guatemala coffee is slightly darker than our other medium roasts, and on our scale of roasting, it rates just below a dark roast.  This Ethiopia coffee, on the other hand, is more of a medium roast coffee or light roast coffee. The differences in the two roasts are what make this one of the best coffees in seattle.

Country Notes:

coffee of the month

Our wonderful Trapichitos Guatemalan coffee has more than a great flavor to it. It’s the first coffee CICR has carried that has a direct connection to our relationship with Agros. Check out this link to read about Agros’ work in Trapichitos. The country of Guatemala is bordered by Mexico to the North, Belize to the Northeast, and Honduras and El Salvador to the Southeast. It is known for having some of the most desirable coffees in the Americas with its high elevation coffees being among the hardest beans available (dense coffee is GOOD coffee).

See our Guatemala Medium Roast coffee on our Website: Click Here

coffee of the month

Our Ethiopian coffee is one of our two current reserve coffees. The reserves are harder coffees for us to come by for one reason or another. We offer them because they add a flavor nuance to our coffee offering list that our other coffees miss. The Ethiopian coffee is among my favorite coffee choices as it has an extremely distinct blueberry tone that really gives this coffee a uniqueness all to itself.

See our Ethiopia Reserve on our Website: Click Here

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March’s Coffee of the Month – Brazil Dark and Medium Blend

Cupping Notes:
Our Brazilian coffee bean is definitely one of our best selling coffees. Both the Medium roast coffee and Dark Roast coffee are very popular with our customers. Our Brazil coffee has a bright caramel tone that seems to carry through both the medium and dark roasts and maintain its richness.

I usually recommend this coffee to people that don’t want to add sugar to their cup, yet would like a natural sweetness. Of course, coupled with that sweetness is a delicate nutty tone that holds the bottom of the cup and provides the medium/heavy body in your mouth.

Roast Notes:?
When our Brazilian Cerrado is roasted to a darker level, the bean develops a beautiful, dark brown color similar to the look of dark chocolate.The roast, while being similar in length to our medium roast, roasts hotter which brings the bean to a higher temperature in the same amount of time. This provides a similar brightness in the flavor while brings out the smoky characteristics many dark roast coffee drinkers enjoy.

Region Notes from wikipedia.org:
March’s Brazilian blend comes from the Cerrado region of Brazil. Cerrado means “closed” or “inaccessible” and has earned its nickname from the closed canopy of forest. Cerrado has earned a unique reputation as being one of the few areas in the world where fire and the surrounding environment have found a way to co-exist. Fire is constantly purging the land and putting nutrients back in the soil while the rest of area continues to flourish.

Enjoy!
Dan Ericson
“Coffee Guru”
CICR

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February’s Coffee of the Month – Papua New Guinea Medium Roast

Our Papua New Guinea coffee (PNG) is one of our most popular coffees which is entirely understandable given its hints of cocoa. Our papua new guinea coffee has a medium to full body and is considered by many to be among the finest coffees in the world. Most of PNG’s arabica coffee comes from trees that were uprooted in Jamaica (Blue Mountain) and replanted in PNG.

Here’s some information on our Papua New Guinea coffee:
According to the Department of State’s website (click the link if you’d like to read all the in depth details on PNG), PNG is roughly the size of the state of California and has around 6.3 million people. It has three official languages (English, Tok Pisin, and Motu) as well as close to 860 other languages which plays a huge part in the overall fragmentation of the country and it’s people. Another topic of note is that PNG only has 49.3% literacy.

PNG is known as a country ripped in pieces by civil war, lawlessness and poverty. Yet in the last few years, thanks to many factors including sustainable coffee purchasing, Papua New Guinea has started down the road to recovering its economy and government corruption. It’s a long road ahead, but we have helped immensely and can continue to help just through responsible purchasing.

That’s it for this one. Thanks for reading!
Dan Ericson
“Coffee Guru”
CICR

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It all starts with the dirt – By Jeremiah O’Hagan

It all starts with the dirt – By Jeremiah O’Hagan

This last week, an article was written about Jeff, Dan and their heart behind our company and why we supply only ethical coffee.

Other than the fact that they are uncle and nephew, not brothers, and few other small things, it was exciting to get some exposure in the local paper.

I’ve copied the entire article below; take a look and spread the word. The more eyes we get on this stuff, and the more people we can get involved, the more we can do to continue our work helping the poor get themselves out of poverty.

-Matt

By Jeremah O’Hagan

Staff Reporter

Jeff and Dan Ericson, owners of Camano Island Coffee Roasters (CICR), would like to dispel a rumor.

“We’re not in the coffee business,” Jeff said.

Surprising, coming from men who oversee daily roasting, packaging and shipping of coffee. Men who tout the “Coffee Lover’s Club’s” certified organic, fairly traded, shade-grown, sustainable coffee — the top 1 percent of all beans produced throughout the world.

“We’re in the fuel business,” Jeff added.

“(Our partner) Agros is a machine,” he explained. “It needs fuel. We’re selling fuel.”

If that fuel happens to look, smell and taste like a shot of espresso or your morning coffee, even better. The brothers do, after all, love coffee.

Agros, they explained, was founded in Seattle in 1982, to enable rural Central American and Mexican families to escape poverty by purchasing and working their own land.

“Land, hope, life — that’s the idea,” Jeff said. “It all starts with the dirt.”

So, Agros works like this: People come to Agros, usually migrant workers who want to start a village and become landowners. Agros promises one thing — “work, work and more work.”

“We’re not there to give handouts,” Jeff said.

Which is hard, he added. Many people in the United States are used to simply cutting charity checks.

“In the U.S., we’ve historically had two things most places in the world don’t,” Jeff said. “One, we have a ridiculous amount of money.”

But, he argued, the second asset is really more valuable.

“Traditionally, we’re great at critical thinking. It’s like a birthright of sorts — give us 10 problems and we can create a product out of them,” Jeff said.

At Agros, that “product” begins as training, which takes place in the country where the village will be started.

Once training is completed, Agros lends the group money to purchase land, then teaches them to work the land to pay back the loan and establish a small economy. Essentially, Agros facilitates the startup of self-sufficient villages. Many grow coffee as an agricultural
product, and CICR buys their coffee. If the beans don’t meet CICR’s standards, Jeff said, they help the growers source their coffee elsewhere.

“Micro-economy and micro-lending are buzzwords right now,” Jeff said, “but this is about more than that. We’re teaching sustainability.”

They’re also practicing sustainability.

Charities and non-profits do valuable work across the globe, Jeff said, but are unable to operate unless philanthropists keep donating.

For-profit business keep themselves going, Dan added, but the bottom line keeps most of them from doing real work in the world.

Between these extremes is a narrow band of companies called “social businesses,” Jeff explained. CICR is a social business.

“We operate with for-profit motives, and, at the end of the day, get rid of the profits,” he added.
That’s why the Ericsons opened CICR, more than 10 years ago.

“I retired when I was 30 years old,” Jeff said. “I was very fortunate. Then I decided, to get back into the business world, but with different rules.”

He started looking to use business as a vehicle for change, and kept running into the same problem: Accomplishing real work requires dependable revenue.

There are many charities selling T-shirts for $50, or some such, and donating the proceeds, Jeff noted, and that’s great, but most people don’t keep buying $50 T-shirts. His vision needed repeat customers, which meant a product people wanted, over and over again, at an acceptable price. Jeff needed to provide value.

“People always want coffee,” he said.

Once the strict standards for the kinds of beans they would purchase were in place, the building acquired and the roasters churning, growth was all about a customer base. And the Ericsons knew one thing: Camano Island wasn’t big enough. Neither, for that matter, was Washington state. The entire nation, they decided, would work as a start.

“We set up our Coffee Lovers’ Club,” Jeff said, “targeting ‘prosumers’ of coffee.”

“Prosumers” is how the brothers describe their customers, whom they say are discriminating coffee drinkers with consciences. They market their beans as “the coffee that helps you sleep at night.”

“Our prosumers buy a coffee subscription for $32.90 a month,” Jeff said. “They get three pounds of whatever coffee they choose, and can rest assured we paid fair prices for it, that it’s certified organic and that it’s not removing Rainforests.”

And, that the profits are going to Agros, by and large, to start villages and facilitate autonomy across the globe.

Jeff said people have commented that CICR could be the next Starbuck’s.

“We don’t want to be the next Starbuck’s,” the brothers agree. “Starbuck’s does a great job of being Starbuck’s. We want to do a great job of being us.”

They are.

Each day, CICR roasts, packages and ships coffee orders all over the U.S. An online matrix handles complicated subscriptions where each member picks their coffee’s variety, roast and grind, and whether the coffee is caffeinated, decaf or half-caf. All three pounds might be different, and can change with each shipment.

“It was a pain to build,” Jeff said. The result, though, is “the most robust and complex coffee membership matrix on the Web,” which has enabled CICR to help fuel the startup of 42 villages. That, Jeff and Dan agreed, is the real work.

In October, they traveled to Nicaragua to meet people living in the newest village. Nicaragua is the second poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.

Frankly, Dan said, it’s depressing. A really nice home might have a little metal on the roof, while many houses don’t have a roof — families sit, sleep and eat in the hot sun and soaking rain.

The reward is seeing how the villages they’ve helped start are different.

In a country where most people steal or beg their next meal, Dan said, these villages greet us with food, as friends. They’ve grown up with fear and scarcity, and now they’re free to have hope.

“They appreciate us, when we visit,” Jeff added, “but their hard work is on display.”

The families displayed a six-month store of food, picked them grapefruit and showed off the coffee plants. People were smiling and kids were running around, Jeff said.

“By American standards, they don’t have many material possessions,” Dan said, “but they have so much happiness.”

“Life, then, becomes relational,
focusing on hard work and educating their kids,” Jeff added. “At the end, it’s not about people eating — it’s about breaking the chains of generational poverty.”

Food and shelter aren’t the only benefits Dan and Jeff have witnessed — the villagers’ self-sufficiency has also freed them to be autonomous.

“History has always been set up with masters and slaves,” Jeff said. He and Dan recently watched this played out.

In Nicaragua, they said, a political party was offering small pieces of sheet metal roofing in exchange for votes. Many people walked a couple of days to get their sheet metal and vote.

“But not in Agros villages,”
Jeff said. “People could sustain themselves and had freedom to say, ‘I’m not letting someone promise me something to sell a piece of myself.'”

In Nicaragua, Jeff and Dan met the young man recently placed in charge of the village’s coffee production, and he summed up the mission of CICR and Agros in a single simple sentence.

Jeff asked who, among the village, was the best at picking the cherries that coffee beans come from.

“He didn’t seem to understand, so I repeated the question,” Jeff said. “He looked at me strangely, and then he said, ‘We all pick as one.'”

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What Is Prosperity?

Is chasing the next biggest thing prosperity? Is being successful at your job prosperity? What about having more “stuff” than your neighbor next door?… Loads of money in the bank?

I personally am challenged by this question. Having been to Nicaragua recently, my definition of prosperity has changed. I’m a geek and any good geek, by nature, really ALWAYS desires that next piece of technology. I tell myself, “If I could just get that next laptop, TV, cellphone… (etc), I would by happy and content!”

Really, there is truth to that. A person would enjoy contentment that lasts a day or a week. I compare that to giving money to the poor without helping create sustainability. Sure, that will help them for the next day/week/month… but does that create a sustainable prosperity?

So, what is prosperity? When we were at the various Agros villages in Nicaragua, we enjoyed seeing something that is so very rare and special in America. While the people had VERY little in material possession (they hadn’t even heard of Microsoft!), they enjoyed so much more in relationship. Family, friends, and neighbors did everything together and enjoyed the pleasure of each other’s company. They worked together and helped each other out with their various projects. Each person had a unique and important role in creating the whole of the village.

When we were there, Jeff asked a gentleman by the name of Bismark a simple question. “Who is the best coffee cherry picker in the village”, he asked in hopes of figuring out who the village star was.

Bismark’s answered suprised us all…

“No one is the best. We pick as one.”

This is why fair trade coffee is so important to us.

Thanks for reading!

Dan
“Coffee Guru”
CICR

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Merry Christmas

On behalf of the all of us here at Camano Island Coffee Roasters we would would like to wish you a Merry Christmas and blessed holiday season.

We hope that this is a special time of year for you and your families and friends, that you are able to spend some quality time with those who care about you, and that you can reflect on the good in this world.

We would like to say thank you for your partnership in transforming lives around the globe, we look forward to the coming year of creating more positive change with you.

We’ll be back after the Holidays!

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Last Chance for Free Holiday Shipping on Organic Coffee Gift Boxes!

The Holiday House here at the Coffee Roasting building has been a hit again this year! We are always excited to see that many of our local customers make the trip over to visit as well as many customers that aren’t so local (even a few from the east coast!). Everyone comes to get a cup of coffee and finish their Christmas shopping with fun! The Holiday House is full of fun gift ideas, including of course, coffee, gift baskets, sipping chocolate, specialty truffles, and many other tasty treats!

We wanted to remind you that if you are shopping for family and friends there are still two days left for you to take advantage of free shipping! If you are looking for the perfect gift and want it sent in beautiful packaging that shows how much you care, look no further! Click the following link to see our great holiday gift box selections and enjoy FREE shipping for 2 more days!

https://camanoislandcoffee.com/holiday-coffee-gifts/

Here are a couple pictures of the beautiful boxes you can get!

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Ordering Your Organic Holiday Blend Coffees!

Here is a preview of our seasonal Holiday Blends, available only in November & December!

Holiday Blend

Holiday Blend Midnight (Dark Roast)

Holiday Blend Swiss Water Process Decaf

Club Members: Because this is a seasonal coffee, we aren’t allowing you to add it to your club order from the website. It is available to add to your club, however! Just call or email our customer service department and we can take care of it for you!

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Holiday Blend Coffees – Dark, Medium, and Swiss Water Process Decaf

It’s that time again! We’re releasing our highly anticipated “Holiday Blend” coffees into the wild yet again. Now is your chance to grab our most popular coffees! Need a gift? Need coffee for yourself? Here at the “Roastery”, we don’t have the opportunity to talk too much about our Holiday Blend coffees before one of our prosumers take over and let everyone know how much they love them and why. It’s always fun to have such passionate support and these coffees ALWAYS instill that passion.

Well, enough chat… let’s get down to the nitty-gritty:


Holiday Blend:
Papua New Guinea – Light/Medium/Dark Blend
Our Papua New Guinea is such a popular coffee throughout the year. Around 6 years ago, Cristy came up with a great idea: “Since Papua New Guinea is so popular, we should do a special coffee for the Holidays that has a light, a medium, and a dark profile blended together. It’d be a great Holiday Brew!” Well, Cristy was right… and it’s been overwhelmingly popular from year to year!

Our Blog and Website both describe the Papua New Guinea bean as follows:

Sweet and medium-bodied, Papua New Guinea coffee is prized for its richness and crisp, clean finish. Subtle, yet distinct chocolaty tones make this light roast organic coffee a favorite among our customers. The Papua New Guinea coffee bean is versatile and makes a distinguished cup of morning coffee, as well as a smooth after dinner coffee served with dessert.


Holiday Blend Midnight
Brazil Dark Special Roast
Just a year after we first introduced our “Holiday Blend”, we decided to add another yummy coffee to our Holiday Lineup. We’d received a lot of feedback from customer requesting something a little darker for their Holiday Coffee. We cupped, tested, drank coffee, didn’t sleep at night, drank more coffee… Finally, after weeks of too much coffee and no sleep (only slightly joking…), we developed a special Brazil Dark Roast profile specifically for our Holiday Blend Midnight.

Our Blog and Website both describe the Brazil bean as follows:

Our Brazil is perhaps one of our most complex coffees. Its well defined caramel tones coupled with a finishing hint of spice give it a unique and addictive flavor. Rounding out the undertones of the coffee are nutty hints. Brazilian weather conditions are very unique and produce excellent Arabica naturals.


Holiday Blend SWP Decaf
Honduras Dark Roast SWP Decaf
Now two years after the birth of our Holiday Blend, we came to one big conclusion: Decaf drinkers were feeling left out! Of course we had two regular Holiday coffees, and it seemed natural we needed a decaf to add to the lineup. The original Holiday decaf was a Sumatra Dark Roast. A couple years later we introduced our new Honduras Dark Roast Decaf and instantly knew we had found the perfect fit for our Holiday lineup.

Our Blog and Website both describe the Honduras bean as follows:

Although Honduras is relatively new to high-end Arabica coffee, its soil, climate, and altitude are all perfect for coffee growing. Dark roast organic coffee from Honduras offers the perfect blend of rich molasses tones with slight hints of caramel and spice. This sustainable organic coffee has a pleasant brightness and a medium to heavy body to compliment the sweeter molasses and caramel tones.


So, there you have it. 3 great coffees for 2 fun-filled, eventful months!

I hope you enjoy them all!

Dan
“Coffee Guru”
CICR

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A Coffee Bean Match Made in Heaven!

Well, we decided CICR’s coffee roaster was getting lonely.

No we aren’t talking about Glenn, our Roast Master. Cristy would have words to say about that (she’s his wife). We’re talking about our actual Coffee Roasting Machine.

Our current machine had been working long, hard days to keep up with the demand of our Coffee Lover’s Club members, retail purchases and our wholesale accounts. Finally, after much research and careful planning, our coffee roaster has found its mate!

For those who haven’t been able to visit us on Camano, here is a quick explanation of what you’ll be looking at.

  • The green roaster is our old machine. It does 12kg (about 28 pounds) per roast.
  • Our new roaster is the red machine. It roasts 24kg (about 56 pounds) per roast.

The fun thing is that the new roaster uses the

exact same technology and setup

as our old roaster. If you took our old roaster and just added a bit more metal (and adjusted the airflow and flame controls… and all that technical stuff), you’d have the same machine.

We’re excited to share images from our remodeled roasting room with you all!