Sustainable, certified organic, fair trade coffee, imported from Ometepe Island in Nicaragua to Salt Spring Island, BC. The coffee is grown on the side of a volcano under the shade of natural flora. This superior coffee is marketed under the name "Ometepe Coffee" by a group of volunteers who then donate their profits to projects in Central America.
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Showing posts with label Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island. Show all posts
Friday, 21 April 2017
Come Be Part Of The Saturday Market
Ometepe Coffee Gulf Islands has existed as a volunteer organization for 28 years. And as happens with any organization things morph and change. Recently a number of key, long time volunteers have retired. Ometepe Coffee is now actively welcoming new volunteers into the fold. It's an opportunity to contribute both to the local community and the global community. We buy certified organic, shade grown coffee beans from a coop on Ometepe Island in Lake Nicaragua for better than fair trade prices. We then roast and sell the beans locally and serve coffee at Salt Spring's famous Saturday market and other events. The profits from these sales then return to Nicaragua and Guatemala to support projects such as potable water, Onile wood burning stoves, loans to Ometepe Island women who are starting businesses, education funds, and primary medical care. So think of Ometepe as double fair trade! All monies are returned to projects in Central America.
This weekend will mark the second week of Ometepe's market presence where we serve appreciative coffee lovers their favourite drink. There are lots of reasons to become part of Ometepe Coffee. It is a lot of fun to be part of the market. If you love to chat and people watch, it couldn't be a more perfect venue. People from around the world (and island :) stop by for a cup of our beautiful brew. Market vendors are always in need of a little refreshment. It makes for a lovely morning or afternoon to volunteer at one of the two market shifts of the day. It's an incredibly positive and stimulating social experience whether you spend the rest of your time working in a solitary environment or just love social interaction. Simply arrive, brew and sell coffee. It couldn't be easier. Set up and take down are handled by someone else. You can enjoy the treats and wears of the market while you are there and know you are supporting a global initiative while you do that.
Please chat with someone at our market booth or contact us via our facebook page if you'd like to join our volunteer team or are curious about learning more.
Labels:
coffee,
Ogifa volunteers,
Ometepe Coffee,
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
Salt Spring Saturday market,
Saturday Market,
volunteering
Saturday, 27 June 2015
It's Market Time!
It's market time again! While the market has been going since April these hot days somehow seem quintessentially market time! There is a holiday feel in the air as people wander the market stands finding tasty bites of this and that to go with their coffee or pop in their shopping bags to take home for later. There are the French pastries from The Rendezvous Patisserie, bread and treats from Salt Spring Bread, just to name a few. A summer bounty of zucchini, peas, lettuce, cherries and raspberries beckon from the farm market tables like Hope Hill Farms. And the many crafts of island artisans tempt visitors. Malas from Purely Om and upcycled bags from Salt Spring Tweeds, beautiful woven shawls and scarves by Christine Johnston of Jaya Weaving and jewelry from Bohemian Arts.
Lots of visitors and locals alike stop by for a cup of Ometepe coffee as they wander and shop. The hot weather doesn't seem to deter the interest in coffee. The lovely brew, dark hot and delicious, perhaps with a little cream or milk and a bit of organic cane sugar if you need sweetening :)
It's always fun to chat with the people who stop by: the women from China who don't understand what decaf is. How do you explain that? The fellow from Sidney who roasts his own green Ometepe beans in a small drum roaster on his bbq. The visitors from North Carolina and Nevada and the friendly local faces of vendors who need their morning cup of joe to start the market day.
It's a fun way to watch the morning (or afternoon) fly by. If you love coffee and would like to be part of the good cause of supporting coffee farmers in Nicaragua and other good works there, come join this lovely group of volunteers.
Labels:
market vendors,
Ogifa volunteers,
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
organic fair trade coffee,
Rendezvous French Patisserie,
Salt Spring Saturday market,
volunteering
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
Summer Coffee
The hot summer weather has returned and we are savouring it's short, sweet visit to our part of the world. And as we bask in the full throes of summer we may not always want a "hot" cup of coffee. Now is the perfect time to try some different ways to enjoy our Ometepe brew. Iced coffee is a simple option. Simply chill some coffee and/or add ice cubes. You can even make coffee ice cubes if you don't want to water down your delicious Ometepe brew. Add a little cream, milk or sugar to make it even more delicious. Remember to add your sugar prior to cooling the coffee so it dissolves easily.
A coffee granita is a refreshing treat on a hot day. I made mine by simply freezing some leftover coffee in a shallow pan and then giving it a spin in a food processor. Perfect ice shavings! The proper way is to make some espresso, sweeten it, and freeze, continually scraping at the freezing mixture to create ice granules. Here's a recipe: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/coffee-granita-recipe.html Mine was the quick and easy kind but it worked. Next time I think Iwill add a little sweetener. I also added a little cooled coffee for more of a "drink" than a desert.
Another favourite summer coffee treat is an affogatto. Affogatto means "drowned" in Italian, not normally a good thing but in this case something quite delicious. All you need is a little ice cream and some espresso (brewed coffee works too if you don't have an espresso maker). Pour your espresso in a cup, add a scoop of ice cream and you're ready to sit on the deck and relax with a good book. Traditionally an affogatto is made with vanilla ice cream but we tried 2 different versions; one with chocolate goat milk gelato from Salt Spring Cheese and the second with hazelnut gelato from Salt Spring Gelato. Both were delicious.
And if you're feeling really experimental you can try making some cold brewed coffee where you use cool water and let the coffee steep overnight. This brew can be decanted and stored in the fridge for up to two weeks, ready for your cool weather drinking pleasure. Here's the how to's of cold brew: https://tonx.org/cold-brew-guide
Happy summer coffee drinking! And don't forget to come visit our volunteers at the Saturday market where you can grab a cup of coffee to enjoy in the park or pick up some beans to take home for your coffee treats.
A coffee granita is a refreshing treat on a hot day. I made mine by simply freezing some leftover coffee in a shallow pan and then giving it a spin in a food processor. Perfect ice shavings! The proper way is to make some espresso, sweeten it, and freeze, continually scraping at the freezing mixture to create ice granules. Here's a recipe: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/coffee-granita-recipe.html Mine was the quick and easy kind but it worked. Next time I think Iwill add a little sweetener. I also added a little cooled coffee for more of a "drink" than a desert.
![]() |
Granita |
Another favourite summer coffee treat is an affogatto. Affogatto means "drowned" in Italian, not normally a good thing but in this case something quite delicious. All you need is a little ice cream and some espresso (brewed coffee works too if you don't have an espresso maker). Pour your espresso in a cup, add a scoop of ice cream and you're ready to sit on the deck and relax with a good book. Traditionally an affogatto is made with vanilla ice cream but we tried 2 different versions; one with chocolate goat milk gelato from Salt Spring Cheese and the second with hazelnut gelato from Salt Spring Gelato. Both were delicious.
![]() |
Affogato with hazelnut gelato |
Happy summer coffee drinking! And don't forget to come visit our volunteers at the Saturday market where you can grab a cup of coffee to enjoy in the park or pick up some beans to take home for your coffee treats.
Labels:
affogato,
cold brewed coffee,
granita,
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
Salt Spring Saturday market,
summer coffee
Saturday, 7 June 2014
The Journey To Your Cup
How does your Ometepe coffee get into your cup? Yes, you pour it in, all bleary eyed in the morning and then emerge your cheerful self after a few sips, but before that I mean? How does that delicious Ometepe java make it's way from the coffee bushes on Ometepe Island to you? When you think about it there's a lot of hands helping you get that aromatic brew into your cup.
Ometepe coffee is grown on the side of an extinct volcanic mountain in rich, volcanic soil. The Arabica beans begin as small red "cherries" that ripen intermittently. Because the coffee fruit does not ripen all at once it must be picked several times during the season, which lasts from November to mid January. The cherries are hand picked and carried down the mountain side to the processing plant. The outer pulp is fermented off and the inner beans spread on concrete slabs in the sun to dry. The pulp is composted and returned as fertilizer to help next season's harvest.
The beans are then carefully picked over by hand, graded for size and uniformity and bagged in 70 kilo units. Ometepe beans and those for BOSIA (Bainbridge Ometepe Sister Islands Association) are gathered together and picked up by a shipping company and put into a container. The container makes its way to a port and is shipped to either Seattle or Vancouver. There the bags are inspected by customs and moved to a coffee warehouse in Richmond where they are put on pallets (10 bags to a pallet) shrink wrapped and shipped to our roaster/storage facilities at Serious Coffee in Duncan. They remain there until we order a roast. To create the coffee that you have come to know and love we have carefully chosen our roasting temperature - usually 475 deg F for dark roast, and 455 for medium. Seventy-six pounds are roasted at a time, taking about 12 - 15 minutes.
Because the beans have been so carefully picked over and sized they contain no debris and don't require cleaning. The result is a very uniform and predictable roasting. Volunteers from the Salt Spring Ometepe Group do the rest. They pick up the coffee from the roaster, bag it, deliver it to the stores that carry it, and sell both brewed and bagged coffee at the Saturday market. And so next time you look at your bag of beans or take a sip of that fragrant brew you can imagine the journey that your coffee has taken to get to your cup.
(with thanks to Brian Finnemore for the details!)
Ometepe coffee is grown on the side of an extinct volcanic mountain in rich, volcanic soil. The Arabica beans begin as small red "cherries" that ripen intermittently. Because the coffee fruit does not ripen all at once it must be picked several times during the season, which lasts from November to mid January. The cherries are hand picked and carried down the mountain side to the processing plant. The outer pulp is fermented off and the inner beans spread on concrete slabs in the sun to dry. The pulp is composted and returned as fertilizer to help next season's harvest.
The beans are then carefully picked over by hand, graded for size and uniformity and bagged in 70 kilo units. Ometepe beans and those for BOSIA (Bainbridge Ometepe Sister Islands Association) are gathered together and picked up by a shipping company and put into a container. The container makes its way to a port and is shipped to either Seattle or Vancouver. There the bags are inspected by customs and moved to a coffee warehouse in Richmond where they are put on pallets (10 bags to a pallet) shrink wrapped and shipped to our roaster/storage facilities at Serious Coffee in Duncan. They remain there until we order a roast. To create the coffee that you have come to know and love we have carefully chosen our roasting temperature - usually 475 deg F for dark roast, and 455 for medium. Seventy-six pounds are roasted at a time, taking about 12 - 15 minutes.
Because the beans have been so carefully picked over and sized they contain no debris and don't require cleaning. The result is a very uniform and predictable roasting. Volunteers from the Salt Spring Ometepe Group do the rest. They pick up the coffee from the roaster, bag it, deliver it to the stores that carry it, and sell both brewed and bagged coffee at the Saturday market. And so next time you look at your bag of beans or take a sip of that fragrant brew you can imagine the journey that your coffee has taken to get to your cup.
(with thanks to Brian Finnemore for the details!)
Labels:
Bosia,
coffee cherries,
coffee roasting,
Ogifa volunteers,
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
Salt Spring Saturday market,
Serious Coffee
Thursday, 17 April 2014
Easter Weekend Brings Coffee To The Saturday Market
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March 30, 2013 Ometepe's First Market Day Of The Year |
Last year was the first year that The Salt Spring Water Company provided us with water to brew our market coffee and the verdict is in: it made our market blend taste even more delicious. Many thanks to The Salt Spring Water Company for their continuing generous contribution to Ometepe.
So drop by on Saturday, say hello, pick up a cup of your favourite organic, fair trade java and a bag of beans to take home and enjoy. Ometepe coffee is one of those feel good purchases; it brings a wonderful taste and aroma to your home while supporting coffee growers on Ometepe Island and their community.
Enjoy your holiday weekend with coffee or without.
Labels:
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
organic fair trade coffee,
Salt Spring Saturday market,
The Salt Spring Water Co.
Saturday, 24 August 2013
Find Yourself, Serve Others, Drink Coffee
The flavours of Salt Spring are rich and varied and go well with a good cup of coffee. And you can find both at the Saturday market. One of the best ways to enjoy these pleasures is to stand behind the Ometepe Coffee table as a volunteer at the Saturday market. As Mahatma Gandhi said: "The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others."
And there is much to get lost in at the market. It is a great place to people watch, see friends and neighbours and chat with strangers. Today on my first shift behind the market table I chatted with a young girl about her pink fairy doll named Lila while her Grandma and mom got coffee. A couple from California who had visited Ometepe Island stopped by to chat and a young woman said that our coffee was the highlight of the Saturday market for her each week. Market vendors are always popping by for their cup of coffee. Today the Raging Grannies came and sang a song beside the table. The Taoist Tai Chi group did a demo on the grass nearby and a palm reader set up on the grass not far away. And there is always a moment to chat with your fellow volunteers.
Baskets overflowing with peppers, ripe melons and onion bread called from a nearby stall and Brigitte and Bruno's artfully displayed French pastries were in clear view. And there is always a moment or two to nip out and buy your favourite market bread and cheese.
As anyone who has volunteered anywhere knows, you seem to get more than you give. You get to feel good about offering your service. The act of doing your work is a pleasure and the memories of your contribution linger warmly in memory. The Salt Spring Ometepe group welcomes new volunteer members. The work is straightforward and not difficult. And there is always an opportunity to make and nurture new friendships and spend some quality social time volunteering at the market, the film festival and the fall fair. There are monthly meetings where you can learn more about the organization and their work (and have coffee of course!)
and a Christmas potluck to get to know members and share a delicious meal.
Labels:
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
Salt Spring Saturday market,
service,
volunteering,
volunteers
Thursday, 28 March 2013
Easiest Chocolate Cake Ever
This is the easiest chocolate cake recipe. The only way it would be easier is if someone made it for you. Honestly, you don't even need a bowl. You mix it right in the pan. And what makes it so good is the secret ingredient: COFFEE.
So of course, you will want to hurry yourself down to the first market of the year this Saturday to see all the people you've missed all winter and pick up a little bag of Ometepe coffee.
And if you don't know about Ometepe Coffee you can find out all about our work from the friendly volunteers at the market table. We support coffee farmers on Ometepe Island in Nicaragua by buying their coffee at fair trade or better and then with the profits we fund other ongoing projects like Onil stoves, programs for streets kids and health care. This is delicious coffee with a feel good flavour. And if you feel really inspired you might just want to join the volunteer crew. Note to coffee enthusiasts: volunteers can purchase their coffee at the wholesale price!
Happy Easter long weekend everyone!
Easiest Chocolate Cake Ever (with thanks to The Moosewood Cookbook)
1 1/2 c unbleached white flour
1/3 c unsweetened cocoa powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 c sugar
1/2 c vegetable oil
1 c brewed coffee cooled
2 tsp vanilla
2 tbsp vinegar
Glaze (optional)
1/2 lb bittersweet chocolate
3/4 c hot water or milk or half and half
1/2 tsp vanilla
Preheat oven to 375. Sift together dry ingredients into ungreased 8 in square or 9 in round baking pan. In a 2 c measuring cup measure and mix together oil, water or coffee and vanilla. Pour liquid ingredients into baking pan and mix the batter with a fork or small whisk. When the batter is smooth, add the vinegar and stir quickly. There will be pale swirls in the batter where the baking soda and vinegar are reacting. Stir just until the vinegar is evenly distributed. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes. Set aside to cool and make the glaze and reset the oven to 300.
For the glaze melt the chocolate in a small ovenproof bowl or skillet in the oven for about 15 minutes. Stir the hot liquid and vanilla into the chocolate until smooth. Spoon the glaze over the cooled cake. Refrigerate the glazed cake for at least 30 minutes before serving.
Labels:
best chocolate cake ever,
coffee,
Ometepe coffee. Salt Spring Island,
Saturday Market,
volunteers