~ small batch roasters ~

Coffee,
slowly.

Single-origin coffee from a tiny roastery in Portland. We roast 80 pounds a week, by hand, on a 1973 Probat. Most of it goes to the shop downtown.

~ from farm to your cup ~

Where it comes from.

Every bag of coffee we sell starts with a phone call to a farm we've visited. Here is roughly how a single bean travels from there to your morning.

01

The farm.

We work with seven farms across Ethiopia, Colombia, and Guatemala. We visit each one at least every other year and pay 30% above fair-trade.

The roast.

Eighty pounds a week, on a 1973 Probat the size of a small horse. We roast lighter than most. Five to seven minutes longer if it's raining.

02
03

The grind.

We grind to order in the shop. At home, we recommend a hand grinder and patience. The cheap pre-ground stuff is, frankly, beneath you.

The pour.

Hot water (96°C), thirty seconds of bloom, then a slow concentric pour. Total time: 3:30. Total joy: incalculable.

04
~ currently roasting ~

This week's beans.

Three beans we're particularly proud of right now. We rotate the menu every two to three weeks.

~ light roast ~

Yirgacheffe

Ethiopia / 1,950m elevation

A single-origin from the Halo Beriti farm. Bright, floral, and fruity. Our most popular bean three months running.

blueberryjasminelemon zesthoney
$22 / 12 oz
Add to cart
~ medium roast ~

La Esperanza

Colombia / 1,700m elevation

A washed Caturra from a farm we've worked with since 2019. Balanced, smooth, and sweet. The crowd-pleaser.

milk chocolatecaramelalmondred apple
$20 / 12 oz
Add to cart
~ dark roast ~

Antigua

Guatemala / 1,500m elevation

For people who like their coffee black and brave. A deeply roasted bean with body and earthiness, no bitter edge.

dark cocoatobaccobrown sugarwalnut
$19 / 12 oz
Add to cart
~ visit the shop ~

2418 SE Division,
Portland.

Mon to Fri
7am to 4pm
Saturday
8am to 4pm
Sunday
8am to 2pm