Coffee

Post image for Four Silos Brewery in Gilbert announces Oct. 4 grand opening

The long-awaited Four Silos Brewery in Gilbert finally has announced its grand opening date: Thursday. Oct. 4.

The self-described ‘‘craft coffee and beer house’’ takes over the former Yo Waffle space in the Bashas’ plaza on the southeast corner of Higley and Elliot.

Besides guest beers, Four Silos will sell growlers and crowlers of its own line of beers, including Wood Shed Wallop, Pkwy Pils, Sun SIPA, and Gilbert Gold.

In addition to coffee and beer, Four Silos will offer tea and wine. ‘‘Light eats’’ also will be available.

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Post image for Get free coffee & win prizes Thursday at Press Coffee in south Chandler

Press Coffee in south Chandler will celebrate its ‘‘grand opening’’ by giving away free coffee all day Thursday. Doors open at 6:30 a.m.

The local chain also will hold prize drawings at 9 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m.. Prizes include bags of coffee, hydroflasks, and a $10 gift cards.

Press Coffee debuted in Phoenix in 2008 and expanded with stores in Tempe, Scottsdale, and Sky Harbor.

The Chandler location actually opened in October at the Downtown Ocotillo development on Queen Creek Road between Price and Dobson.

Two more stores – at the Motley Apartments in Tempe and the Muse Apartments in Phoenix – are scheduled to open this year.

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Tempe-based Cartel Coffee Lab launches nationwide delivery service

By Jess Harter Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Post image for Tempe-based Cartel Coffee Lab launches nationwide delivery service

Very soon, the rest of the country can enjoy a cup of Tempe-based Cartel coffee.

Cartel Coffee Lab has launched Cartel Edition, a subscriber service that offers weekly, biweekly, or monthly deliveries of premium-quality, whole-bean coffees.

“Cartel has become a brand with national recognition,” says Paul Haworth, Cartel’s director of coffee production. “Our extended family of homebrewers across state lines have been wanting this for quite some time.”

The first deliveries are scheduled to go out in early 2017.

Cartel also has beefed up its website to make online shopping and ordering easier.

“We figured out early on that there are coffee drinkers all over the country that love what we are doing,” Haworth says. “How we source, roast and brew coffee resonates with our fans.”

Cartel Coffee Lab was founded in 1997 and now has six locations around Arizona.

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Post image for Thursday is National Coffee Day – here’s where to get a deal

Thursday is National Coffee Day – here’s where to get a deal

By Jess Harter Wednesday, September 28, 2016

  • Cartel Coffee: Free large cold brew or large hot drip coffee for anyone who comes in and registers their email address. For the next week, $3 from every Familia Gomez whole-bean coffee bag sale will support La Familia Gomez from rural Colombia.
  • Ncounter: Get a latte or Nitro Coffee for $1.
  • Krispy Kreme:  Get a free small coffee and a free Original Glazed doughnut at participating locations.
  • Dairy Queen: Get a small iced coffee for $1, an Ultimate Frappe for $2, or a Premium Fruit Smoothie for $2.
  • Dunkin’ Donuts: Get a medium hot coffee for 66 cents (commemorating DD’s 66th anniversary).
  • Dutch Bros.: $1 will be donated to a local children’s charity for every drink sold.
  • Starbucks: A free coffee tree will be given to a farmer in need for each cup of Mexico Chiapas coffee sold.

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Changes are brewing at Cartel Coffee, Cartel Brewery

By Jess Harter Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Post image for Changes are brewing at Cartel Coffee, Cartel Brewery

Tempe-based Cartel Coffee Lab is closing its shop in the lobby of the building on the northeast corner of First Street and Washington in downtown Phoenix on Saturday, but will re-open in a new space right next door in early August.

Until construction is finished, you’ll be able to get your Cartel fix at a temporary “pop-up” shop at the site of the new location. It will open Monday; hours will be 7 to 11 a.m. daily.

Meanwhile, Cartel’s new Tempe brewery – which MXSW reported back in October (see story) – finally is nearing completion. Dubbed The Shop Beer Company, it’s scheduled to open next month across from The Yard in the Farmers Art District.

When it opens, the small Cartel Brewery next to the original Tempe coffeehouse will close.

The brewery’s new name is part of an amiable parting of the ways between Cartel owner David Arnce and COO Hollie Mueller. Arnce will run the brewery, while Mueller will take over the roasting operation and six coffeehouses.

“I’m committed to giving the beer a voice of its own,” Arnce told MXSW last year. “I want to create an atmosphere tailored for beer.”

Mueller reportedly is looking around the East Valley for a seventh Cartel Coffee Lab location.

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Post image for Peixoto Coffee brings 100 years of family tradition to downtown Chandler

Unable to find coffee as good as that her family grows in Brazil – the world’s leading coffee supplier – Julia Peixoto Peters used to sneak bags into this country.

Now she’s come up with much easier way to get her daily fix: She and her husband, Jeff, just opened Peixoto Coffee in downtown Chandler.

The small shop specializes in high-quality arabica beans her father, grandfather, and great-grandfather have been harvesting for more than a century.

The Peters import the green (unroasted) beans from the Peixoto (pronounced “pay-SHOW-toe”) family farm and roast them on-site in their 1,400-square-foot space on Arizona Avenue just south of Boston Street (map).

“Originally we planned to just sell the beans to a roaster,” Peixoto Peters says. “Then we decided we’d roast the beans ourselves and sell them. But then we figured why not just serve coffee as well?”

By cutting out the middle man, she says, “we’re able to sell a higher-quality product for a comparable price (to other coffee shops).”

PeixotoInterior

Born and raised in Brazil, Peixoto Peters came to the United States to get her master’s degree in international trade law at the University of Arizona.

“I stepped off the plane and looked around and thought, ‘So this is Tucson?'” she remembers. “It didn’t look like much.”

But she became an Arizonan. For the past 12 years, she’s worked as a lawyer for shipping giant DHL, which continues to be her “day job.”

When the Chandler couple decided to open Peixoto Coffee, they focused on the downtown area less than two miles from their home.

“We really like all the independent businesses here,” she says. “We’ve always spent a lot of time here.”

In October, they signed a lease to take over a former laser hair removal business.

They stripped the wallboard to expose the old brick, built their own bar, and painted an eclectic mish-mash of furniture to create what Peixoto Peters calls “a rural farmhouse” feel.

PeixotoRoaster

Jeff Peters, an aerospace engineer from Michigan who has been roasting his own coffee for years, built the roaster, which can roast up to 40 pounds of beans in 12-15 minutes.

“Lucky for me,” Peixoto Peters says. “Growing up, our family sent green beans to a cooperative, which sold them to the distributors. So I have no experience roasting coffee.”

Because the cooperative has always mixed her family’s beans with those from surrounding farms, her father has never tasted coffee made solely from his beans.

Peixoto Peters is looking forward to rectifying this when he comes to visit in April or May. She’s also planning a “Meet the Farmer” event where customers can meet her father.

(Her grandfather, unfortunately, passed away just last year.)

PeixotoPouredOver

The weathered-wood bar is equipped with state-of-the-art grinders, drip machines, and espresso machines, but Peixoto Peters’ preference is “pour over” coffee.

Using the old-fashioned technique (pictured above), a barista slowly pours 200-degree water over a paper funnel of beans.

Proponents insist the pour-over method, which takes 4-5 minutes, creates a purer-tasting cup of coffee.

Besides her family’s Brazilian beans, Peixoto Peters wants to introduce customers to those from other countries as well. She currently has beans from Costa Rica and Ethiopa.

What she refuses to offer are many of the add-ons popular at American coffeehouses.

“I will use milk (for lattes, macchiatos, etc.) but that’s it,” she says. “No hazelnut syrup, no whipped cream.”

PeixotoCheeseBalls

For noshing, her small kitchen makes pão de queijo – small balls of cheesy bread, three served in a cup – that are a traditional snack with coffee in Brazil.

Working with local vendors, she also sells empanadas made by AZ Food Crafters and pastries from Pistol Whipped and gluten-free Pure Goodies.

Peixoto Coffee will hold a grand opening celebration from 4-7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12, with a 4:30 ribbon-cutting, live music, and food from AZ Food Crafters.

Peixoto Peters’ plans include hosting a variety of classes, and maybe even trying to talk downtown neighbor SanTan Brewing into collaborating on a coffee stout.

The shop is open 7 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday. Peixoto coffee is sold retail for $15.95 for a full one-pound bag.

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Cartel Coffee Lab now kegs its Cold Brew iced coffee

By Jess Harter Monday, May 5, 2014

Post image for Cartel Coffee Lab now kegs its Cold Brew iced coffee

Cartel Coffee Lab is increasing the production and distribution of its most popular product – Cold Brew iced coffee – by kegging it.

Cartel, which roasts the coffee at its downtown Tempe location, soon will carry its Cold Brew on tap at its other cafes in Scottsdale, Phoenix, Sky Harbor International Airport, and Tucson.

Cold Brew already is available at Chestnut Fine Foods in Phoenix and Sip Coffee and Beer House in Scottsdale.

“Cold Brew is a delicious product and a no-brainer for bars and restaurants with morning service and beer line drafts,” Cartel Brewery’s Dylan DeMiguel says. “It could serve as a nice ‘pick-me-up’ for late night bar patrons.”

A Cold Brew keg can be used with any beer line draft system equipped with nitrogen gas.

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