Tuesday, September 25, 2012

History & Coffee Join Forces at Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company


Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company is now the home for two display cases on loan from Napa Valley Museum in Yountville. One case reviews the history of the Napa Valley as illustrated by the Agricultural Preserve and the second case explores the unique geological make-up of the Valley. They can be seen at the Roasting Company’s St. Helena store at Oak Avenue and Adams Street.
 
 

 
 

 

“Why not offer some pop-up Museum experiences,” asks the Museum’s Executive Director, Kristie Sheppard. “Visitors to the Roasting Company can get a sneak peek into the history of the Valley and hopefully be inspired to see what the Napa Valley Museum has to offer. Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company clients will get just a little more with their cup of coffee,” she added.

 
“We know our customers enjoy seeing our environment change from time to time,” adds Doug Dunlap, General Manager, Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company. “This display is also a way of supporting the great work the Museum does at its home in Yountville,” he adds. “We’ve already had numerous comments about how wonderful it is to see a piece of Napa history in a different type of setting,” he says.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Thank you from Afghanistan!

We send coffee to troops stationed overseas. It is a small thing we can do to remind those troops we are thinking of them and we really appreciate them. It is amazing that a simple item like coffee reminds the troops of home. Did you know that Charlie Sange and Doug Dunlap each served eight years in the military?

Here is an email we received from one of those troops stationed overseas. 


UNCLASSIFIED 


Charlie,
I wanted to personally thank you for the fantastic coffee you sent me
here in Afghanistan!! There isn't much in the way of good quality food
and coffee here, so it was a welcomed surprise to get high quality
beans.  We drink it every morning and often find ourselves saying, "damn
this is good coffee--from Napa!" 

I have been here with a small team of mental health professionals taking
care of Army, National Guard and Navy folks in Parwan Afghanistan.
Interestingly, I grew up in Sonoma, studied at UC Davis and currently
stationed at Travis, AFB right over the hill.  My dad lives in Hidden
Valley Lake so I often drive the Napa valley on my way to see him.
Kinda cool that you are in Napa--small world.  Anyway, thanks again
brotha!  I will have to come by the store and say thanks in person when
I re-deploy home.



Best,



MV

To the soldiers serving: We are thinking of you and hope you are taking great care of yourselves; hoping to see you home soon!


RoCo

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

AMBER BOHAN PROMOTED! After 4 years in St. Helena, moves to Manager in Napa


AMBER BOHAN PROMOTED AT NAPA VALLEY COFFEE ROASTING CO.

After 4 years in St. Helena, moves to Manager in Napa



St. Helena, May 2012----Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company announces that Amber Bohan is being promoted to Manager of the Napa store, after four and a half years working at the St. Helena location. “Amber’s leadership skills as well as her coffee connoisseurship explain this well-deserved promotion,” Doug Dunlap, General Manager says. Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company has two locations: 1400 Oak Avenue at Adams Street in St. Helena (963-4491) and 948 Main Street in Napa (224-2233). 



Amber was born in St. Helena and grew up in St. Helena and later, Calistoga. As a young person she worked in several coffee establishments in Napa Valley before coming to the Roasting Company five years ago. “It’s here where my decision to be a coffee professional was almost instant. The environment, the staff, the customers, and the coffee (especially the coffee) were amazing. The information I was taught on my first day about coffee was more than I had learned in four years at the other coffee shops. In these past five years, I see that coffee is way more than just a pick me up in the morning. It’s served all over the world and is great at all times of day. There are many health benefits to drinking coffee and the grounds are perfect for gardening and compost. At the Roasting Company, we are distinctive because we not only serve coffee from several different regions around the world, but we roast every single bean that is sold in our stores,” she says. “In the past two years of my employment here, I have had the honor of being a roaster myself. By doing this, I have learned how to compare and contrast different varieties and see how roasting all of them at different temperatures makes them all unique in their own ways,” she adds.



In other news, The Napa Valley Roasting Company has just moved to summer hours: as of May 31 the Napa location is open until 8:00 p.m. every Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Hours on Sunday – Wednesday will be 7:00 a.m. until 7:30 p.m.; in St. Helena, hours are 7:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. seven days a week.



In more news, it’s also the time of year for Shakeratos: for the first time last year The Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company began serving its version of an Italian classic, Cafe Shakerato. A “Shakerato” is freshly pulled espresso shaken with ice, raw sugar and cream, strained into a martini glass. The Summer Shakerato Special is available between 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. at both locations all summer, for $1.50 each.



 “We’ve admired this Italian twist on presenting the essence of great coffee in the heat of the summer, and brought it home to Napa Valley,” explains Doug Dunlap, General Manager, Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company. “Presenting coffee this way also lets us show off the complexities of our coffee, which we roast ourselves,” he added.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Fifth Graders Perform Poetry at St. Helena RoCo


We had such an amazing time when St. Helena Elementary School students visited! The Fifth Graders came over in four brackets of twenty five students each. They did such a fantastic job!




These seem like they were not just any ordinary fifth graders; they were channeling their inner poet having such a fantastic time reciting their poems to our customers. A few students stood in front of everyone with a microphone and recited their poems with grace and most from memory!




When each group was completed with their reading, each student was rewarded with a well-deserved hot chocolate; with whipped cream of course! Their Poems were on display and looked so amazing!




A big thank you to the Amazing Teachers- Terilynn Buchanan, Judi Hudson, Janelle Davis and Gwen Becker!

These students were also guided and inspired by St. Helena local Mrs. Beclee Wilson. A big thank you to her for giving her guidance and time!
If you would like to see these little poets in action, check out our YouTube page: NapaValleyCoffee - YouTube

The students crafted this wonderful thank you letter for us!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Tiny Poets to hit Roco

5TH GRADE POETS READ THEIR WORK
‘tornado’ poems also go on display

St. Helena, April 2012----Fifth graders from St. Helena Elementary School will take up a corner at the Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company in St. Helena (1400 Oak Avenue at Adams Street) on Friday April 6 from 9:30 until 11:30 a.m. to read poems they’re written and enjoy complimentary hot cocoa.

Teacher Terilynn Buchanan has been conducting a poetry curriculum this spring, which included a poetry reading session at the school library and the taping of poems on the floor of classrooms and the school entrance. This will have a grand finale at The Roasting Company on April 6; students will use a small microphone to simulate the feel of Jack Kerouac and the Beat poets. The poems will also be displayed at The Roasting Company for several weeks. “Think tornados,” explains Buchanan: “the poems look like strips which hang in a twist,” she said.

“This is the second year we’ve done this with the fifth graders from across the street,” says Manager Doug Dunlap. “This is just one way we fit into the life of our small town,” he adds.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Re-usable Logo Sleeves Available


NAPA VALLEY COFFEE ROASTING OFFERS ‘GREEN’ SLEEVES
Re-usable sleeves to keep your coffee hot

St. Helena, March 2012----Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company has found a re-usable sleeve for its paper cups, which are now on sale for $2.25 each. “By offering this re-usable sleeve, customers won’t be wasting a java jacket,” Doug Dunlap, General Manager says in describing the sleeve. “As a Bay Area green business, one of our obligations to remain certified is to expand our green business practices, and this new sleeve can be used many, many times and is of course very planet-friendly,” he adds. The sleeves measure 4.6 inches by 3 inches high and are made of neoprene; they easily slide onto a variety of paper or plastic cups and protect hands from hot liquids. The Roasting Company is one of the first to offer them in northern California.

Among other green practices the Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company has in place is offering its used grounds to customers, gratis. Used coffee grounds have a huge number of uses, most popularly, for augmenting soil in gardens(more at groundtoground.org ). The Roasting Company asks that customers bring a 5-gallon (empty) plastic bucket and leave it to be filled and return to pick it up in a day or two. This service is offered at both of the Roasting Company’s locations.

As another green initiative, the Roasting Company also sells permanent filters for Kuerig brewers. “This gives our customers the option to use our freshly roasted coffee in their Kuerig brewers at home,” explains Dunlap. “It’s a way to not only save our customers money but also not fill up the local landfill,” he adds. These filters sell for $19.95 at the Roasting Company. Find out more about this issue at http://www.treehugger.com/sustainable-product-design/kuerig-and-other-coffee-pods-piling-landfills-across-america.html.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Bistro Blend Now Available


NAPA VALLEY COFFEE ROASTING INTRODUCES BISTRO BLEND
How to taste the art of blending coffee

St. Helena, March 2012----Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company is proudly introducing a new coffee, the Bistro Blend. “This is a thank-you to our customers,” Doug Dunlap, General Manager says in describing the new coffee. “We hear our customers talk about the bad economy and how important their coffee is; for the Bistro Blend we will be searching the coffee market for the highest-quality, most-reasonably-priced Arabica coffee beans,” he adds. This ever-evolving blend will be the lowest priced coffee the Roasting Company offers. “We think our customers will not only appreciate but look forward to buying the Bistro Blend,” Dunlap adds, “because the flavors will vary, and in fact, much like winemaking, showcase the hand of our master roaster and blender, Charlie Sange.”

Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company has two locations: 1400 Oak Avenue at Adams Street in St. Helena (963-4491) and 948 Main Street in Napa (224-2233). The St. Helena shop opens at 7:00 a.m. Mondays – Fridays and 7:30 on Saturdays and Sundays and stays open until 8:00 p.m. seven days a week. The Napa store is open 7:00 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays – Fridays and 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. “We offer everyone a place to go to enjoy coffee, tea, other beverages and light snacks, comfortable seating and a home-away-from-home hang-out.” explains Ryan Heitz, manager of the Napa store. The Roasting Company first opened its doors in Napa in 1985. It was the first local coffee roasting company of its kind in the Napa Valley, modeled upon European cafes and housed in a landmark Victorian building. In 1991, a second location opened in downtown St. Helena. Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company creates signature blends for Napa Valley’s prestigious restaurants and wineries as well as for businesses outside the Napa Valley.

Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company carries nine single-origin coffees from Indonesia, Africa, and the Americas. Roasting profiles are designed to maximize the flavors each origin brings to the finished cup of coffee. The Roasting Company roasts its coffee in 20 pound batches, ensuring the highest possible quality. Beans are roasted 4 to 6 nights a week for maximum freshness.

Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company has pursued community programs since it opened its doors in 1985, creating proprietary blends for non-profit organizations and charities, as well as donating its coffees extensively to local events and groups such as Napa Fire Department, St. Helena Police Department, Vintage High School, Rianda House, St. Helena Family Center and regularly sends coffee to U.S. military servicemen and women around the world.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Meet Our Management Team!


“The experience which made me realized I wanted to be a coffee professional, was the first time my roasting profiles succeeded in extracting radical flavors from all the single origin coffees I had. I realized that’s what I wanted to do, what I still do today, find so challenging and exciting--being able to taste such different flavors in coffees from all around the world. In addition, there’s the delight of people sharing the joy of something that I’ve made, consuming coffee I’ve just roasted!”

Charlie was born in San Francisco and grew up in Saint Helena. He graduated from San Diego State University with a degree in sociology and went on to be a commercial film editor based in Santa Monica. He won a Mobius award for a recruitment campaign for the Los Angeles Police Department. He served in The National Guard for six years as an 11B. Charlie’s father, Leon Sange, co- founded The Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company in 1985; when Leon’s health began failing, Charlie moved home to St. Helena to help with the business. “Taking care of him meant taking on the Company and now, along with my mother and brother, it’s evolved into a family business. It’s been an amazing blessing,” he explains. “We get spoiled living in the Napa Valley,” Charlie says. “It’s a place that celebrates good food and wine and spirits and beer. Everyone takes time to enjoy his palate! We wouldn’t be as successful in other parts of country that don’t share the Valley’s celebration of these things,” he says.





Ryan Heitz, Napa Store Manager
“My pivotal coffee moment, the experience which made me realized I wanted to be a coffee professional, was when I first became interested in coffee roasting. I started making espresso drinks for my folks when I was ten years old. They bought a new machine and needed something to keep the early rising child busy, so I was paid two bits a latte.” As a young man, Ryan worked at The Roasting Company while he also worked in the food world. “I had thought about being a chef and began working on the side as a catering cook. The more I was drawn into the culinary world the more I was drawn back to coffee. Wine can have tens of thousands of possible flavor combinations where as coffee can have hundreds of thousands. When I finally began roasting coffee I knew that I would always have a love of gourmet coffee. The churn of the roaster, the sweet smell of the smoke, the heat radiating from the cooling beans, and the farm five thousand miles away are all present in my mind with every sip of joe.

In my years at the Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company, I see that coffee has really begun to receive the praise that it warrants. In the Napa Valley, with so much emphasis on food and wine, it’s only right to bring in great coffees from around the world and experiment with them until every roast offers a unique palate experience. I am very happy to see all the industry growth outside of the traditional coffee hotspots like San Francisco and Seattle.

At The Roasting Company, we are distinctive because we are a small family run business that focuses on producing the best possible product and in the process we are continuously learn to raise the bar higher and higher.”

Ryan is an avid chef when not roasting coffee. “I love cooking and have always been a huge fan of BBQ. If it walked, swam, or flew I’ll grill it up!”




Doug Dunlap, General Manager
“My pivotal coffee moment, the experience which made me realize I wanted to be a coffee professional, was when I went to a three day training seminar about coffee in Long Beach in 2007. I was amazed with the amount of people, classes, new products and equipment. It was then that I realized this is a huge part of the world economy and a fascinating industry to be working in. I communicated with people who were recently involved with the coffee industry and connected with long time acquaintances within the industry.”

Doug was born in Klamath Falls, Oregon and grew up in St. Helena. He served in the United States Army Reserve for eight years. His tour included serving on a funeral detail which traveled around the South providing honor guard service for fallen soldiers’ services.

Doug loves to garden and cook. One of his favorite kitchen tools is his slow cooker: “I love to cook beef stew with the slow cooker; there is something to be said about waiting and being patient for your food!”

“In my fourteen years at The Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company, I see that coffee is a delicate commodity that requires attention to detail, from harvesting a coffee bean that is hand-picked off the tree to roasting in small batches ensuring one end of the roasted coffee is as perfect as the other end. Medical studies have shown that coffee can possibly lower the risk of diabetes, protect the liver, relieve muscle pain associated with exercise and is a good source of fiber, a great source of antioxidants. Coffee certainly gives you energy and puts you in a good mood.

At the Roasting Company, we are distinctive because we specialize in small batch roasting which improves the final roasted coffee product. Roasting in larger quantities risks one part of the coffee being roasted darker than the other: imagine if you put every piece of clothing you own in the dryer to get dry at the same time---that would be impossible, right?!”



Nancy N. Haynes, President/CEO
“My pivotal coffee moment, the experience which made me realize I wanted to be a coffee professional, was my first cupping at Royal Coffee, in 2004, where I could see how everything I’d learned in the fine wine business fit into everything I was learning about the specialty coffee world

In my years at the Napa Valley Coffee Roasting Company, I see that sharing coffee can create community. The coffee business, from growers to importers to roasters to retailers, is populated by committed families, who pass on their passion for the product.

At The Roasting Company, we are distinctive because we are on our second generation of family participation, with a third coming along, and because all of us look forward to coming to work in the morning and, especially, to our first cups of coffee in the morning!”

Nancy was born in Palo Alto, California. She grew up in San Carlos and graduated from Mills College with a degree in American History. Nancy is a busy wife, mother, grandmother, razor scooter enthusiast, navigator for her husband’s plane and an avid bridge and Scrabble player. She has been very active in the community, serving or having served on the St. Helena Chamber of Commerce Governmental Relations Committee, the St. Helena Public Library Board, the American Red Cross Board. Nancy has also been a volunteer in the St. Helena public schools and she’s also assisted in fundraising for the San Francisco Symphony and the Oakland Symphony.

In the kitchen, she’s known for her maple pumpkin pots de crème at Thanksgiving. On her radar is returning to Paris, one of her favorite places in the world.


Photos by Jim Randall Darter

Friday, February 10, 2012

How Coffee Changed America


How Coffee Changed America

• 2nd most traded commodity in the world taking a backseat only to petroleum, with the coffee market earing nearly 60 billion dollars annually
• 2nd most recognizable odor in America only surpassed by the smell of burning wood
• The nation’s most popular drink that isn’t water
• Americans over 18…52% drink coffee every morning, 30% drink coffee sometimes, 18% never drink coffee
• 80% of America drinks coffee
• US coffee drinkers consume 3.1 9oz cups on average per day
• Both the New York stock exchange and the Bank of New York started in coffeehouses on what is today known as Wall Street
• The founding fathers of the U.S., during the revolution, formed their national strategies in coffeehouses

 1670- Dorothy Jones of Boston was granted a license to sell coffee, and so became the first American coffee trader.
 By 1688, coffee replaced beer as New York City’s favorite breakfast drink.
 1700’s- In the middle of 1700s, tea and coffee were equally favored; many taverns doubled as coffee houses. This all changed as a result of the famous Boston Tea Party of 1773. Thereafter it was unpatriotic to drink tea. Colonist found that they could import coffee from south and Central America, and more importantly, without the help of the British. Drinking coffee became a sign of independence and American autonomy. The Boston Tea Party of 1773 was planned in a coffee house called, “The Green Dragon”.
 1861-1865- The Civil War in the US elevated the popularity of coffee to new heights. Soldiers went to war with coffee beans as a primary ration.
 1865- James Mason created the coffee percolator providing the foundation of the modern coffee maker, and also making coffee much more accessible to the middle class.
 1901- The first soluble “instant” coffee is invented by Japanese-American chemist Satori Kato of Chicago.
 1914-1918- During World War 1, dehydrated packets of coffee were standard in military rations. To the dismay of their commanding officers, soldiers would often use their emergency matches to warm their small, metal cups.
 1920-1930’s- After returning from the war, soldiers were so used to drinking coffee several times a day that the number of coffee houses grew 450% in the years following WWI. Up to that point, people generally went to a restaurant to eat or a coffee house or tavern to drink. The returning soldiers, however, wanted to be able to drink coffee and eat food at a neighborhood store… thus, the iconic American Diner was born.
 1940 1950’s- The British may have invented “Tea Time” but America invented the “Coffee Break”. The practice began in WW II era war effort factories to give workers a brief rest and a jolt of caffeine. Thanks to a clever advertising campaign in the mid 1950’s by the Pan American Coffee Bureau, 70-80% of American workers were taking a coffee break- both factory and office workers.
 1970’s- The 1970’s birthed specialty coffee houses, most famously Starbucks in Seattle in 1971, which sold freshly roasted beans and brewing equipment.
 1995-Present- By 1995, Starbucks had become a pop culture reference, with a store on every block, and, in some cases, every corner. The Starbucks model was copied worldwide. From 1995 to 2000, coffee consumption skyrocketed, rising a whopping 700%. From 2000 to now, coffee has showed no signs of dwindling popularity!