After La’s Arts District out of the District, the Stamptown Coffee Roster has a new coffee shop with a new spin.
Cafe is in 1982 in Lincoln Avenue. In Pasadeena, a block from John Muir High School and near Altadena.
Although its soft inauguration was a few days ago, Retail Vice President John Perry said it has begun to look like a neighborhood hangout.
“We have more than 400 customers from our website who live in a very small radius of our cafe. We knew that people could be excited for a place and experience the complete expression of Stamptown.”
Stumptown will celebrate a grand opening with a full day party on Saturday, 17 February.
It will run from 8 am to 6 pm and will include a swag bag for the first 50 customers, a DJ 10 pm and Mocktail prepared by Han Suk Cho of Kato Restaurant, 1-4 pm.
According to President Laura Szeliga, Stamptown was established in 1999 in Portland, Oregon. This is part of the third wave coffee movement that emphasizes relationships with producers and takes care of roasting to bring out the taste of coffee beans. Later it became a leader when Cold Bru emerged as a trend.
In a joint phone interview with Perry, he said, “What do we really say to Vipanak,” he said in a joint phone interview with Perry. “We have a wholesale business and we are lucky for many cafes and restaurants partners across the country. Our mixtures are available in grocery stores. We have cafe business, and then we also have e-commerce business.”
Stumptown is available through such market chains such as whole foods and sprouts, he said, as well as direct online to consumers. Its website lists cafe in Portland and New York, and they are more about hospitality as coffee, she said.
“They have a normal stumptown DNA, but each one is unique to its neighborhood.”
Stamppatown opened its Los Angeles Cafe and Rosti in 2013 at Santa F. Avenue. But in view of the Kovid -19 epidemic, Stamppatown decided to roasting in Portland and according to Perry, there was no need for much space. But Szeliga said that the art is still present in the district district in Stamptown, serving employees for the Warner Music Group.
Perry said that Pasadena Cafe was working for a little longer than a year.
Perry said, “We have deployed the front strip so that you enter immediately, you are seeing.” “We actually take time to see people to see their uniqueness and relationship.”
He called his theme “Vinyl forward”, a combination record store and living room. Stumptown removed the original front entrance and replaced it with a rollup door and indoor/outdoor location, which resembles a mid-century den, which is talking on the bookshelves and talking on the head on the posters and walls for ramps.
12 E. inside LPS spinning. Holi St.’s Indie Shop is cured by Commune Records, Perry said.
Cafe serves pastry and breakfast items as well as snacks that grab and go. Beveraged is for $ 3.75 to 6-ounce drip from $ 8 to $ 8 for 16-inges seasonal Mint Matka Latte.
“We put,” said Perry. “All our equipment are fully dialed.”
This mixture is a hair bender for its espresso drinks. He said that it got its name from the first cafe in Stamptown, which captured a former hair salon.
“Many people think that it likes, bend your hair, it is caffeinated. They let them think, but it’s not really.”
Information: Stumptowncoffee.com