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Farmers Daughters Cafe

That’s right. Not the farmer’s daughter’s but rather the farmers daughters’. Plural. This coffee shop is the months-old brainchild of two sisters name Jen and Michelle in New Bloomfield, PA. You might recognize the name of the town; I reviewed another coffeehouse in New Bloomfield a few months ago. I have a bit of a confession to make: I was close to not even reviewing either coffeehouse here. This town is kind of a secret; it’s not a trendy hipster hotspot and honestly I dread it becoming one. Right now the whole area has the serene ambiance of backwoods America that’s becoming harder and harder to find. This coffeehouse is a cornerstone of that calm.

When I walked into Farmers Daughters, the first thing I noticed wasn’t the coffee, but the decor. The cafe itself is built into a large, old stone home and the interior is artistically done in a style that I can best call…ultra-feminine minimalism? Flowers, vases, and signs written in pretty cursive, but it was all so tasteful and elegant. Someone here is a spot-on interior decorator, and when I go back, I aim to figure out who it is. Though from the outside it’s the apparent deep history of the house itself that draws they eye, and I plan on learning more its story someday.

Now, the coffee itself was a new twist on something familiar: Denim Coffee. You are correct sirs and madams, that’s the very same local roaster that set up shop down in Carlisle years ago (and which I reviewed years ago). It’s actually a well-known local independent operation here in southern Pennsylvania, and that’s for a good reason. It’s categorically excellent. Out of the last string of coffeehouses I reviewed, this one takes the prize for most artfully done coffee. It was a Columbian medium roast that I had, and that thing was rich and butter-smooth, with shockingly well-balanced acidity. I don’t know what their particular brewing technique is there, but these ladies truly nailed it.

The best part of this cafe though in my mind is the garden-party feel. The large building has a lovely patio in the back with plenty of seating space for people; when I was there, it was host to a group of teens who were decidedly not thrilled about going back to school. There’s a coziness to that space which again speaks to the skill and soul of the people who pieced together this little country haven.

I honestly do hope that this kind of coffeehouse culture winds its way further into the mountains. When coffeehouses hit a saturation point in the cities they began the inevitable path towards being self-referential. Yes, I laid out in the beginning of this blog many years ago some of the ‘big ideas’ that make a coffeehouse what it is. However, that artistic spirit can and should express itself in an array of forms. Art must never become orthodoxy and this unorthodox little bastion of artistry (both in coffee-crafting and handicrafting) is worth the trip into the woods.

 

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outside signage…

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elegant exterior…

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interior signage…

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the menu(s)…

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the art…

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the great outdoors…

 

 
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Posted by on September 4, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Middle Creek Cafe

OK, so, this review is long overdue. Presently, I’m sitting about three weeks from when I actually visited this coffeehouse. I’m also presently sitting on my bed, thinking about the loss of a dear uncle which took place less than 24 hours ago. There’s nothing like writing to take your mind off of things, so I figured this would be a good time to type a review following a week that was far more busy than I had anticipated. Expect more posts and quicker ones soon though as I’ll be doing a lot of driving around small-town Pennsylvania over the next few months. These days I’m taking a smoke-em-if-you-got-em approach to civil liberties. Let’s just say I’ve become a lot more grateful for any freedom over the past few months. You all know what I mean.

This particular coffeehouse was on my itinerary for a while because of its remoteness. Middle Creek Cafe is in town of Middleburg, PA. The town is technically a crossroads; the meeting place of main routes 522 and 104 (which are two roads that take you from anywhere to anywhere if you’re west of the Susquehanna Valley). Having a coffee shop here makes incredible sense, and I’m happy to see that logic prevailed by situating this place right at the center of town.

From the outside, the cafe looks rather like a diner. Then again, almost every restaurant in the mountains of Pennsylvania seems to take the appearance of a family diner or dive bar. As I stepped up the wooden stairs and into the dining room, it still looked like a diner, complete with restaurant-style tables. I was starting to think that the interior was even a little spartan, until I turned my eyes to either side of the ordering counter. There’s no way to describe what a horde of meticulously carved wood animals and figures ‘looks like’ so I took copious photographs. The woman who runs the joint, Connie, told me it was her own son that did this startlingly beautiful woodwork. Obviously this cozy little den is a family affair as much as is is a business. In fact, this business doesn’t once feel like one, but rather like an extension of someone’s house, from the moment you see the words of faith and encouragement on the walls, to the lingering scents of country breakfast on the way out.

The coffee I had was a medium roast; they told me it was an Arabian blend and boy did it show its pedigree. It had that sharp, acidic taste that Arabica does give. I’d use the word ‘airy’ to describe it. It’s the kind of coffee you get when you’re on the go and need something simple but solid to fuel you for the road ahead. Apropos for a shop located halfway to anywhere. They aspire to be a better option than truck stop coffee and they succeed on multiple levels. Granted, you won’t find the trappings of hipster life out here. No indie bands play on a stage here and bohemia seems confined to high school drama clubs. Yet, there is art here, as the gorgeous wood carvings and hand-painted signs attest. This is a good place to go. Even if you’re just on your way to someplace else. 

 

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the sign…

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the patio…

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the artisan…

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the ambiance…

 
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Posted by on August 23, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Val’s Cafe

I never knew Val. The more the guy at the counter talked about her though, the more I wished I had. The Val who formerly owned Val’s Cafe in Lemoyne was apparently a pretty awesome person. A pillar of the community, a philanthropist, a beacon of kindness; the young man standing there singing her praises couldn’t seem to find the bottom of that sea. Being an east-shore denizen, I hadn’t heard of her or her cafe; such is the physical and metaphorical span of the Susquehanna River. She passed not too many seasons ago, and a group of her friends are now carrying on her vision for a cafe that could be a refuge of community and care.

The cafe sits squarely on the Market Street ‘main drag’ of Lemoyne, PA. Lemoyne, Camp Hill, New Cumberland, and Mechanicsburg are all discrete communities, but they shade into one another until outsiders only see an endless series of neighborhoods connected by a few main roads. Market Street is hub for trendy startups and small businesses. The main roads of the communities of the east shore of the Susquehanna contain a similar sprawl, but ours are an organic jumble; a timeworn meander of old buildings punctuated by hundred-year-old oaks. Here on the west shore (I really should be capitalizing the names of these shores) there’s an air of ‘newness’ to the facades of many places here; a sense of ‘hipness’ that speaks to the ambitious Millennials seeking to make their mark on the world.

Val’s is clearly a hip place to be in this community, and the young folks running it seem keen to make a positive mark on the world. The interior is painted a calming bluish-grayish pastel and adorned with artwork as well as inspirational messages. In fact, it was made clear to me that this is a cafe with a mission of inspiration and bringing people together. There seems to be a focus on featuring exotic coffees as well, and that’s something I appreciate, especially in an area that all too often focuses on cheap caffeine boosts for businesspeople on the go.

The coffee I had here today is an African dark roast from Uganda. It did have a nutty and chocolate flavor as the package suggested; I couldn’t pick up the pear hints but perhaps that’s what my admittedly unrefined palette was experiencing when some strong floral and possibly umami flavors emerged. Whatever the formal nomenclature, the coffee was truly unique; a flavor that I haven’t encountered before. This experience, like St. Thomas on the East Shore, is another standout where the bar is clearly being raised.

So if you’re one of the many commuters who wind your way through the horizon-to-horizon suburb that stretches from Mechanicsburg to approximately Skyline View (we’ll visit there another time, don’t worry), you really should brave the famously frantic traffic of Lemoyne and have a little calm-down at Val’s. Until next time, stay caffeinated.

the entrance…

soon…

the calm…

the inspiration…

the beans…

the dream…

 
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Posted by on July 23, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Perry County Cafe

As much as coming to this cafe was about coffee for me, it was also about escape. Actually, if we’re being honest, it was mostly about escape. My county and Perry County had just “gone green” in the medical terminology, so that meant that coffeehouses could start to open again. Open up the way they used to I mean; the way they should be. ‘Open’ was something that I was specifically looking for, and figured that if I could find an extra dose of freedom, it would be in the deep, forest-covered mountains to the northwest of my hometown.

If there’s one thing that the town of New Bloomfield is, it’s open, in a way that goes beyond colors and statutes. It’s one of those old fashioned American towns, with statues, colonnaded balconies, and waving flags. Clean air and ready conversation abound. Perry County Cafe itself is one of those locales that quietly screams to travelers that it’s a center of the community. There are some places where you can just tell that people congregate, and this little coffee shop is one of them. It doesn’t hurt that it’s smack dab in the town center, where a roundabout shuffles a surprising amount of traffic east, west, and south.

The owner is an ultra-cool person named Rita Metcalf. No, I’m saying that because I’m shilling for her, hell I didn’t even know her before the day I rounded the corner into the shop. She was only the third owner in all these years who actually came out to welcome me personally. Says a lot about her, the town, and the kind of place that Perry County Cafe seems to be. It’s not a ‘best kept secret’ or a cliquey art enclave. Some perfectly awesome places are, but this establishment is far more active.

The coffee itself is certainly a good thing, and more than that it was actually inventive in the style of blend that was used. The roast I had was Red Diamond High Altitude Papua New Guinea. It’s a medium roast    The truth is, I’d already had coffee in the morning before coming up here (I couldn’t risk falling asleep on the road could I?) but I was slurping this down the whole way home and had to stop myself lest I make myself sick. I don’t think I’d have gotten sick though; for a medium blend it was quite mild. It also struck me as balanced; often milder coffees seem to have a citrus taste (from being under-extracted, usually in the brewing process, or from being brewed too hot) or a bitter taste (from the opposite being true). The fact that a medium roast was neither means someone has strong experience in brewing.  The exact blend seems to be proprietary, but I’ll update if I figure the concoction out.

I’ll be coming back to New Bloomfield again, and soon if I can. It’s a good jumping-off point if you’re traveling west of the big cities of Pennsylvania and up into the Appalachians. I intend to do a lot of that in the near future. It’s a region that I’ve been neglecting, mostly because when I started this blog there simply weren’t many independent coffeehouses in the middle of Pennsylvania. The ‘scene’ as it were has traditionally stuck to the college towns near Philly. In fact, Perry County Cafe has been open only since August of last year. Turns out I’ve been missing a lot by not heading for the hills! Until next time, stay caffeinated.

 

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the county…

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the menu…

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the hometown pride…

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the…car? 

 
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Posted by on June 29, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Jumping back in…at The Gathering Place

I’m breaking a pledge I made long ago by writing this. When I started this blog I said that I wasn’t going to review coffeehouses that had a religious origin. Coffeehouse culture is all about questioning things and rebelling. We all know how kindly religion typically takes to the idea of rebellion. When the first coffeehouses started up in Europe, they were hotbeds of the anticlerical and anti-monarchist thought that led to, well, pretty much every liberty that we enjoy today. Coffeehouses with a foundation in religion just tend to strike me as a little…off.

This coffeehouse is, however, the first that I’m reviewing following lockdown, and that’s because of what I saw when I walked through the door having no idea that their mission was a mission. What I saw was a lot of courage, a lot of heart, and a lot of openness. I arrived just as they were about to close, but I made it in time for the last scents of breakfast-to-go to waft under my nose. They had just reopened on May 18th and my mom and I had coincidentally wanted to take a ride to literally anywhere to get out of town for a change of scenery. This little alcove was a match made in road-trip heaven.

I didn’t even know that The Gathering Place was affiliated with a church until I saw the Ten Commandments hanging on the wall beside a big old-fashioned clock. The ladies behind the counter, Jenny and Patty, proudly explained to me that the coffeehouse is an extension of the Little Swatara Church of the Brethren. They were equally proud of the charity work being done by the institution during the outbreak (which is apparently quite a lot). Both the church and the coffeehouse are planted in the small but cozy community of Bethel, PA. Like many Pennsylvania towns, if you blink you miss it. It is, however, worth keeping your eyes open as you pass through this little village. A historical plaque greets visitors as they drive into a clean, vibrant little main street after exiting the frenetic I-78. Bethel is in the middle of nowhere, on the way to everywhere.

The Gathering Place really does seem to be a gathering place for the community judging by the number of pamphlets and event posters plastered to the bulletin board. I’m hoping that at least some of that blur of planning will still take place sometime this year; Bethel seems like the kind of community that comes together if given even the slightest reason (and this coffeehouse is right in the middle of it), so I’d be willing to bet on them.

The coffee that was being served up was an odd but excellent brew. The staff assured me that it was just “regular coffee” like you’d find in “any diner” but there was a bit of modesty in that claim. It was a step above the metallic-tasting mass-produced coffee found in the average diner. It had seemingly been thrown together from a few different beans, but whoever did the throwing had some skill as evidenced by the vaguely-nutty taste of Arabian which was apparently moderated by something smooth. Colombian perhaps? It was kinda wild, in a good way! Talk about pooling your resources.

This visit was quite a welcome back for the Coffeehouse Tour. Things of course aren’t quite normal yet; the smiling faces of the staff were hidden behind masks for sanitation reasons. The hours were limited as well, but it’s clear that they are doing something very important. They’re fighting for this. They’re fighting for a return to the good life. They’re open because they can be. Talking about what we can’t do is and always has been useless. They get that. Pretty revolutionary if you think about it. To live, you have to live. Let’s get back to life together. Stay caffeinated and stay healthy, friends.

 

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the plan…

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the promise…

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the community….

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the future…

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the stacks…

 

 

 

 

 

 
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Posted by on June 4, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Welcome back!

When I was six years old, way back in the 80s, I remember how excited I was to be ordering books (with my mom’s help of course) from the Scholastic book catalog. It was  like a smorgasbord of treats for young readers and one book in particular had caught my eye: The Curious Little Kitten. I remember waiting for that book to come in the mail and when the package finally came, tearing it open, and seeing a slender tome called Fraidy Cat along with a letter of apology explaining that the book I’d ordered was out of stock.

I never read Fraidy Cat. It’s still sitting somewhere on a basement bookshelf, I’m positive of it. I think I cried that day. Disappointment is always tough, but it’s even tougher when you know it has a human cause. Understocked shelves, misinformed catalogs, shipping delays; they’re all someone’s fault. Every time somebody says ‘we’re sorry, sir’ my reaction is to say ‘Good. I forgive you. Now fix it.’ That last part is usually the sticking point of course, and when the second ‘I’m sorry sir’ inevitably comes, I just can’t shake the feeling of offense that follows. I like to think that my occasional bouts of petulance did and still do come from a real sense of injustice. Certainly this crisis here could have been handled better. This thing was a sum of many bad decisions. Conservatives minimized, liberals catastrophized. Conservatives were foolish, liberals were scared. Everyone played to type perfectly, creating a fear state that foresight and wisdom could have prevented or made better.

The bottom line is, I just plain hate substitutions in life. I detest second best. The weak shadow of something that aught to be but isn’t just leaves a rotten taste in my mouth.  People are expected to accept these things though. ‘Any old port in a storm’ we say, or ‘it’s better than nothing.’ Sometimes that assessment is spot on. If you’re starving, you’ll wisely eat a loaf of bread instead of holding out for pizza while stamping your foot. If a hurricane or a plague hits, you don’t send angry letters to the shuttered bars. On the other hand, to accept mediocrity at face value is to deny our humanity. Humans strive; we have to, it’s in our nature. And as much as adherents to certain ideologies would like to deny that progress is a good thing, they usually do so from behind a computer screen inside a comfortable house. Unless they recognize the irony in that, it’s not necessary to respect their position. So enough about them.

I suppose I might have (and some would say I should have) done such a thing right here on this blog. Accepted mediocrity as a ‘new normal’ I mean and just gone with it for the sake of offering digital comfort food. Heck, that’s what everybody else was doing. Meeting friends over Zoom, having virtual dates, and so on. I could have certainly made a ‘quarantine version’ of this blog and contributed to that way of being. But those things are lame. Mediocre. Things we intend to put in the past sooner rather than later. I don’t just hope this crisis ends, I insist that our leaders end it. Doctors said we’re on the virus’s timetable. Well, screw that shit.

It nauseates me when the supposed experts insist that thinking realistically means thinking pessimistically. Too often they’re content with being victims of statistics. It makes me doubly sick when people seem complicit with endless states of emergency without asking questions or demanding guarantees from those who declare them. Yes, of course when there’s a disaster like a plague we all have to batten down the hatches, show patience and take precautions. That doesn’t mean we have to take the gloom and doom scenarios proffered by every clove-smoking cynic in academia and the media as a new gospel. A new normal. The brave nurses on the frontlines of health care certainly didn’t give in and because of that they’re saving us. The state has now begun the inexorably slow process of reopening and people are starting to choose life over terror, all because humans did what humans do and actively fought back.

To put things simply, I didn’t publish entries for a while here for one reason: I did not feel comfortable contributing to a culture of disappointment. I thought it would be wrong to reinforce the disturbing way of thinking that emerged during this time in which we were collectively conditioned to settle for malaise and paranoia. I didn’t want this blog to be a reminder of the evening news; an echo of bad times. That’s not a comfort to me and I’m pretty sure it wouldn’t have inspired you a folks a lot either. Writing, like any art, has a duty to inspire, or at least attempt to.

I thought it would be better to wait until nature took its glacially slow but inevitable turn for the better, and to in the meantime focus on the basics like loving my family and growing my garden and reading my books until I was free to do this thing again the right way; the last thing I wanted it to become was a tacit acceptance of a world we don’t deserve. I wanted instead to use this blog as a platform to show people who are just starting to not have panic attacks when they leave the house that it’s actually OK to breathe again. I wanted this work to be an exercise in curiosity, not fear. In the immortal words of Bob from The Walking Dead: Nightmares end. They don’t end who you are.

 
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Posted by on June 1, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

The Tiger Eye

I can’t believe I missed a spot. Especially since it’s located right along the Road of Dread. That’s what I call the stretch of Derry Street that leads from my house…to the dentist. Perhaps as I was driving there I was too focused on the impending low-key torture porn that constitutes modern dentistry to think about coffee at all.  Or maybe I was a bit befuddled by Novocaine on the way home and failed to notice something as innocuous and positive as the little multicolored cottage on the left that housed a veritable smorgasbord of coffee and art. Whatever the case, I was genuinely surprised to find this little gem hidden less than fifteen minutes from my front door.

The Tiger Eye is probably the only independent coffeehouse out here in the Lawnton exurb of Harrisburg or anywhere nearby. We’re not known for our coffee culture out here in the burbs. It’s Starbucks, Dunkin’ Donuts, or nothing, as it’s casually assumed that everyone here is either heading to or from work. It’s a place to come home to, not a place to go out to. Cultural events simply don’t happen here. That’s obviously being shaken up within these pastel-pink walls!

So, after stopping by I really don’t know what I can say about this place. No, really, I don’t know what I can say about it because I was sworn to secrecy by the woman behind the counter. Having just opened last December, she’s still in the process of developing the community connections that she intends to make, the nature of which are top secret. Suffice it to say, the owner has every intention of making The Tiger Eye a nexus for art and music in the community, as evidenced by the enormous number of paintings, sketches, and musical instruments adorning the walls.

I ordered the coffee called City Roast. It wasn’t one particular bean; rather a blend of several including my favorite, Colombian. It was quite good; a little on the lukewarm side, but understandable given that I’d come there in the middle of the afternoon in between rush hours. It was smooth but not too bold, making it a rather stellar medium roast. Not a bad start to this enterprise! The hours are wonderful by the way; 6 AM to 9 PM every day but Sunday when it’s closed. It gives me a lot of pride to see people bringing the arts to our blue-collar corner of suburbia. I can’t wait to see what they have in store for us this summer.

 

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the outside…

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art galore…

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a ton of stuff…

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the blends…

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three seashells, no joke…

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a little light…

 
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Posted by on March 8, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

New Year, New Coffee…at Red Canoe

Happy New Year to all of my bean-guzzling readers! I have no idea why, but the week between Christmas and New Years Day seems like some kind of temporal no-man’s-land. It’s like a time outside of time where we’re trapped in limbo between the end of the last year and the beginning of the new; between resting at the bottom of the wheel of the seasons and kickstarting a brand new year full of of potentials both good and ill. At least I got a week off of work, and I could not resist the idea of taking some time to travel about and see the parts of the area that I don’t get to see when I’m working. Which is to say all of it.

I did have to actually pick a destination though, and so I thought I’d go down a road less traveled…at least by me. I’m talking about that long stretch of eastbound road east of Hershey that isn’t 422 and isn’t the Turnpike. That would be the Horseshoe Pike; good old 322 which slowly careens its way from Hershey to Ephrata through multitudinous farms and sleepy little towns. One of these is Campbelltown.

As always, I did a search of the area on Google Maps to see if there are any coffee spots lurking about that don’t have names that start with an S or a D. Come on, you know of whom I speak. Anyhow, what I found was a place called the Red Canoe General Store…or Coffee Shop…or Gretna Brewery. I was bewildered, but the photos I saw seemed to depict people getting coffee, so I decided to chance it, not knowing what I’d find exactly.

It turns out this place is a little bit of everything. It’s definitely a store. It’s definitely a brewery. It’s definitely not only a coffeehouse, but a coffeehouse with a giant 40s-looking dieselpunk roaster. The place is easy to see from the road, but a little hard to get to with a car; you have to drive down an alley and then another alley to get to the parking lot, but then it opens up abruptly into this little plaza full of artfully conjoined buildings. I think ‘artful’ is definitely a word I’d use to describe Red Canoe. There’s a backwoods crafting vibe that I really go for at work here. The paneling is mostly in unvarnished-looking wood, as is most of the furniture. It smells of the forest too, and that goes quite well with a craft brewery. Good IPAs do taste a bit like doing a faceplant in a pine tree (a taste that I love because I’m weird).

Oh but back on the topic of coffee, the only brand available was from a local roaster called “Sonder”. By local, I mean the headquarters is in fact at this very establishment (I told you they had everything at once). If the word ‘sonder’ sounds familiar, it’s a neologism (new word) meaning the realization that each random passerby has a life just as vivid and complex as your own. It’s an existential empathy in other words; the ability to see every ‘other’ as a ‘self’ not dissimilar from your ‘self’. It’s an oddly appropriate name for a coffee company. What were the original coffeehouses of Europe but incubators for revolutionary advancements in thought? And what is sonder but a revolution of that very same type; a leap forward in our personal and collective perception of one another? These steps towards enlightenment exemplify coffeehouse culture. The crafters at Sonder must be quite the reflective bunch.

The coffee itself was an Arabica with hints of dark chocolate and plum (or so I was told). I could pick up on the chocolate hints, but not on the plum. In fact, for an Arabica this seemed to lack the fruit-forward palette that’s so diagnostic of Arabicas in general. I actually liked that; it had a really smooth mouthfeel for a higher-acidity coffee. Not as ‘bright’ as such coffees often are, but still nuanced. Not super-distinctive, but refined in quality. They’re good with their craft and it shows.

This whole experience was exactly what I was looking for on that cold late-December weekend, trapped halfway between an old year and a new. Something to kick off a year of going in new directions both coffee-related and not. The weekend that I’m writing this (January 5th) is after all the real beginning of the new year. It’s the beginning of a new decade in fact. The future is now.

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The entrance.

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Where am I?

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Very woodsy.

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Like a new house.

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The Machine of Glory.

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I’m confused…should I enter or not?

 
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Posted by on January 5, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Copper Cup Coffee

Rewind a few weeks. In early November there was still a hint of warmth out there, and the trees were at their peak of color. They were a bit late this year; usually everything in Central Pennsylvania is grey and brown by the beginning of November. I think that autumn is the perfect time to explore a new coffee spot. It’s not only the cold weather; it’s the milieu that makes it right. The cozy drawing-in of life that practically invites you to take a seat in the dark corner of a cafe to read or just watch the world through the windows and be glad for a warm oasis amidst the encroaching cold. Things are so quiet that the heart searches for an excuse to venture outwards towards something interesting. I know I’ll be going forth on a few road trips during this time of year,  hoping to find places that stand out at least in spirit against the stark cold of the Pennsylvania winterscape.

Now, Google Maps will tell you that Copper Cup coffeehouse is in the well-known town of Lititz. That’s not really accurate; it’s in a smaller town to the north called Brickerville, a quiet little village well off the beaten path of the turnpike. The closest landmark that people around Harrisburg might know is Mount Hope winery, site of the yearly Renaissance Faire. It’s the kind of place that you can blink and miss; yet it exemplifies the rich juxtaposition of Appalachian country town and Yankee country town that you find in the eastern portion of our area. On the one hand, its mostly dusty country homes, vibrant farms, and semi-active shops stretching along a main street corridor. On the other hand, there are a few funky places like this coffeehouse and a small,  hipsterish shopping plaza that speak to a slow creep of modernization in the area. In this polarized age, one wonders how welcome this new way of life is for the locals.

Copper Cup is quite modern. The architecture is open, angular, and airy. There’s a drive through window if you’re in a hurry (you can see the overhang of it in the image below), but like most good coffeehouses, it’s best experienced from the inside. Here’s another good example of that juxtaposition that I mentioned. On the one hand, a drive-through for those who want good coffee, but don’t partake of the coffeehouse culture (Dunkin’ Donuts devotees, etc.). On the other hand, a warm and inviting interior exists, artistically apportioned, and rather out of place when compared to the rest of the town. Copper Cup is doing what coffeehouses have historically done best, which is be a focal point for the introduction of modern ways and thoughts.

The coffee that I tried was the medium roast called Carmo, which you can see below. It’s a Brazilian roast, and like most Brazilian roasts it has a low acidity combined with a slightly nutty flavor. The flavor is a bit bittersweet, but this particular blend broke on the side of sweet; the nutty flavor coming off as almost a savory umami taste. It was pretty much the ideal of what I hope for from this kind of coffee, so kudos to not only the makers of the coffee, but to the crafters of this roast as well. Icing on the cake: they are actually a local roaster. Passenger is a micro-roaster based out of nearby Lancaster which prides itself upon sustainable practices. More of that modernity.

So in summation, I found exactly what I was looking for when I set out down the road on this little autumn adventure. I found warm coffee in a warm place, I found people devoted to creating quality coffee within a quality shop, and I discovered yet another interesting small town that deserved way more time devoted to exploration than I was able to give it during an all-too-short late fall day. Well, I’ve got three months of winter in which to make a return trip if my roundabout itinerary brings me back down the pike to this picturesque spot. Until then, stay caffeinated (and a Happy Thanksgiving to all).

 

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the outside…

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the signage…

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warm interior…

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friends gazing out…

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the roast…

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the rest…

 
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Posted by on December 1, 2019 in Uncategorized

 

A new adventure, and a sad story

Hello readers. I’ve been gone a while. You deserve an explanation for that. This past July, on the afternoon of the 10th, my grandmother passed away at the age of 97 after a months-long illness. From helping my parents with caring for her and her home, as well as dealing with the aftermath of her passing, I was in no emotional condition to do any traveling and precious little writing. It took until now to finally get back the desire to start putting digital pen to paper again. I didn’t know if I’d come back to doing this blog or not, but as the summer wore on and normalcy began coming back to my family, I realized that it was time to get back to doing the things that provide food for the soul, such as going on these little journeys.

It feels awkward combining all of this deep pathos with a post about a new coffee shop. Here’s the thing though: you have to keep going. When someone you love is gone, you go to that dark night of the soul where you feel like there’s less meaning to everything. When that happens, you need to get out of the world of your own mind because that kind of introspection will eat you alive. It will also do no good. That’s my experience at least. The thing of it is, me not adventuring would be the last thing my grandmother would have wanted. She was driving herself to Florida on vacations well into her 80s and packed a lot of life into her years. May we all live that kind of life.

This latest trip took me to a place I’d never gone before but have always been curious about…Columbia, PA. Columbia is one of those small river towns you find here in the Susquehanna Valley that has an industrial vibe. Columbia’s size belies its importance in history: it was the first commercial crossing of the Susquehanna River. Such was the town’s vitality that it was also just a few votes short of becoming the first capital of the United States! Now it’s known for having one of the world’s few clockwork museums, as well as a gorgeous and commanding view of the river. Even so, you don’t hear much about Columbia these days; certainly it’s not one of the towns that’s “plugged in” to the art scene in the midstate the way that York and Lancaster are. Yet it was that unknown quantity of Columbia which caused me to look the place up and decide to take a random drive there.

The coffeehouse I found was called Cafe 301. They mentioned food on the little Internet blurb so I wasn’t quite sure if this was a restaurant-style cafe or a bona fide coffee house.  It is not only a coffeehouse, but quite a coffeehouse. More on that later. My first view of Columbia as I drove down was that aforementioned beautiful view of the river from the top of a hill as you descend into the valley. South Central PA is replete with winding country roads, and the path to Columbia was no exception. I didn’t know I was even close to the city until I was looking down upon it from the little rise.

As I drove in, I could tell that the people here had a sense of civic pride that’s missing from a lot of towns in Appalachia these days. There were signs everywhere pointing the way to historical sites and a beautiful mural painted on the side on an old industrial building. The coffeehouse was pretty easy to find, and the parking was actually non-extortionary, unlike Harrisburg, but we’re not talking about Harrisburg right now. We’re talking about coffee.

Cafe 301 is a pretty spacious coffee spot; it has a streamlined, modern atmosphere to it which I find really sophisticated. The whole place feels new, and it is relatively new, having just started up within the last year! The shop already seems to be a community center; there were pamphlets and business cards set out on one of the tables in the main dining area, so local businesses are obviously keen to advertise here. Importance is a key to permanence in the coffee business.

The coffee I had there was one that immediately struck my eye when I saw it. There’s a photo of it below…it’s called Sasquatch. The coffee is made by Square One; a micro-roaster in nearby Lancaster. Now, anyone who knows me knows that I’m into the paranormal. And every year near Columbia there’s a thing called the Albatwitch Festival, named after the eponymous local mythological creature (similar in size though not in stature to a Sasquatch, or Bigfoot). The most distinct thing about the coffee was its nutty flavor. I really enjoy that in a coffee; as well it has a nice acidity balance to it. Really a satisfying mouthfeel, the kind you want to swish around just to feel it. Square One really knows its craft, and these folks were wise to get their product from them.

On my way out of town, I couldn’t help but feel that this really was the start of a whole new chapter in my travels, as well as my life in general. Sometimes, although I enjoyed driving around and doing this blog for its own sake, I would let things just whiz by, figuratively and literally.  I’d be a little emotionally detached, in other words, even as I was enjoying things; too focused on the outcomes and not on savoring my surroundings.  That was foolish. The world is really something to be savored.

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that view…

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our river…

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the sign inside…

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the town outside…

the

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one righteous clock…

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the beverages…

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my obvious fave…

 

 
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Posted by on September 9, 2019 in Uncategorized