Are you getting the most out of your Coffee Program?

Do you own a fast casual market, cafe, bakery, sandwich or prepared foods enterprise? If so, take a moment to think about your coffee program. Coffee is delicious, addictive and the value added product with a great profit margin. We work with many coffee roasters and firmly believe that a good coffee program can make all the difference in enhancing your guests experience and your bottom line.

Let’s take a look at what makes up a good coffee program. One of the most important pieces to this is the relationship you have with your roaster. Your coffee roaster should view your business as an extension of theirs. The more successful you are, the more successful they are. Whether you are an existing enterprise or a new one, your coffee roaster must take the time in understanding the flow of your store, the area where the coffee will be prepared and presented and what your goals are. This includes all hot and cold espresso and coffee drinks. Once this is defined, the roaster should work with you to help choose the necessary equipment and any additional coffee paraphernalia that is necessary in executing that perfect cup. Coffee can be delivered in many different forms including whole beans, pre-packed portion sizes, ground coffee, pods and K-Cups. When evaluating what works best for you, think about the efficiency of your space, level of barista experience needed and storage space. You are now ready for training. Training plays a big part of the puzzle in the execution phase. A coffee roaster can roast beautiful green beans, next it is up to you to deliver your part in producing the great cup of coffee. The training they provide is so crucial to your staff and to your business. The last piece is maintaining the equipment and how responsive they are in responding to equipment malfunctions.

There are many great coffee roasters across the states that are producing great product. Get out there, attend a cupping, try some great coffee and get to know your roaster.

Happy Sipping… TaraPaige Group

88 ORCHARD: COFFEE & WINE CAFE ENTERPRISE

88 Orchard Street, New York, NY 10003 (Lower East Side) • 212.228.8880

88 Orchard

88 Orchard

Their Success… Can a cafe offer it all?  88 Orchard succeeds in combining sustainability across all elements.  They feature organic sustainable coffee, locally sourced pastries and bread, wine and beer selections and on site preparation of sandwiches, salads and cheeses.  They prominently feature their purveyors such as Amy’s Bread, Balthazar Bakery, Irving Farm Coffee Roasters and Saxelby’s Cheese.  This is more than your typical cafe– this is a neighborhhood joint that you too wish you had just outside your door.  In addition to the welcoming environment upstairs, there is an intimate dining area downstairs.  Their design is mainly reclaimed materials and on a monthly basis they featuring a rotating showcase of art from local artists.  This cafe has built a community like culture and makes this operation one to follow.

What We Learned… Sustainability is good for business and good for building a community around your business.  This cafe does it all in offering in serving their community all day with a menu from breakfast to night.

Take Aways… Understanding the the community you serve is value added to your business and to your guests.

Irving Farm Coffee Roasters Opens on the Upper West Side

Our good friends at Irving Farm Coffee Roasters open their 4th location on West 79th Street. This new location unveils their logo and features all of the same great products from their Irving Place Location with the addition of 2 local beers on tap.

Irving Farm Coffee Roasters says hello to West 79th Street.

The Black Tree Sandwich Shop opens in Prospect Heights

Using local and seasonal ingredients, this new sandwich shop’s menu looks quite intriguing for any taste bud. Think short-rib sandwich with spicy pear jam and spinach or white wine with herb pan-roasted mushrooms and Landaff cheese.
The Black Tree Sandwich Shop is located at 724 Franklin Avenue between Park and Sterling Place

Ovenly opened on Memorial Day weekend in Greenpoint

The well-known and beloved Brooklyn bakery finally opens up their first retail post serving up pastries such as Bloody Mary scones, dark chocolate stout cake with salted chocolate pudding or salted chocolate chip cookies
Ovenly is located at 31 Greenpoint Avenue at the corner of West Street

Groupon Aquires Breadcrumb, a New York City IPAD POS Company

Similar to mobile payment service Square, Breadcrumb runs its point of sale system (POS) with iOS apps. This keeps costs lower because businesses aren’t stuck buying pricy cash register equipment. At a restaurant, Breadcrumb can manage an entire patron’s order from the time they walk in the door to when they pay their check. Groupon alludes that it will integrate its services into the Breadcrumb POS system.

Groupon Aquires Breakcrumb POS

Plaza Food Hall opens in Midtown West with notable food kiosks

The Plaza Food Hall expands into a foodie delight with the iconic tastes from No. 7 Sub, William Greenberg Desserts, Luke’s Lobster and much more.

Check out all of the vendors at the hall located at 1 West 59th Street at 5th Avenue

Fast Casual Executive Summit: October 21-23 in San Diego

Join Hospitality executives at the fast casual summit this october in San Diego. This unique gathering will bring together a select group of top executives from the fast casual segment for two and a half days of networking and work group sessions designed to foster the exchange of ideas and innovations covering the industry’s top strategic issues. Fast casual executives will have the opportunity to further establish segment best practices through peer collaboration and executive education in a fun and relaxed environment.

Fast Casual Executive Summit, October 21-23 in San Diego, reserve your spot.

June 11th NYCHG Networking Cocktails at STK in Midtown

Join the New York City Hospitality Group for Summer Cocktails at STK Midtown on June 11th.
NYCHG is a select group of industry leaders that specialize in working with hospitality and restaurants. Each group member is highly recognized in their field, providing insight and expertise to all the clients that are represented in the group.

Sign up today to reserve your cocktail

Vermont sits in the #1 spot on the Locavore Index for locally sourced food

Nationwide, small farms, farmers markets and specialty food makers are popping up and thriving as more people seek locally produced foods. More than half of consumers now say it’s more important to buy local than organic, according to market research firm Mintel, and Deputy Agriculture Secretary Kathleen Merrigan called the local food movement “the biggest retail food trend in my adult lifetime.” But with no official definition for what makes a food local, the government can’t track sales. And consumers don’t always know what they are buying. A supermarket tomato labeled “local” may have come from 10, 100 or more miles away. Strict locavores stick to food raised within a certain radius of their home — 50, 100 or 250 miles. Others may allow themselves dried spices, coffee or chocolate.

Two of the more common standards used by locavores are food produced within 100 miles or within the same state that it’s consumed. A new locavore index ranked Vermont as the top state in its commitment to raising and eating locally grown food based on the number of farmers markets and community supported agriculture farms, where customers pay a lump sum up front and receive weekly deliveries of produce and other foods.

Vermont has 99 farmers markets and 164 CSAs, with a population of fewer than 622,000, according to the 2012 Strolling of the Heifers Locavore Index, which relies on U.S. Department of Agriculture and census figures. Iowa, Montana, Maine and Hawaii rounded out the top five.

Vermont tops the Nation with the highest Locavore Index