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  • >>Wafting in the air outside of this nondescript strip mall,

  • hints of burnt sugars with a slight malty floral background

  • escape the confines of Roast House, a small Spokane Coffee

  • Roasting company. In the midst of cooking up small batches of

  • beans, coffee roaster Aaron Rogers diligently scoops up

  • green coffee beans from burlap bags and dumps them into a

  • roasting convection oven one-bucket load at a time. By

  • offering ONLY 100 percent organic coffees that are fairly

  • traded and sustainably grown, Roast house has created a niche

  • for itself in the Spokane coffee market that only they populate,

  • coffees that owner Deborah Di Bernardo characterizes as

  • ethical sustainable and delicious!

  • (Deborah Di Bernardo) Besides dealing in

  • fairly traded sustainably grown coffees,

  • coffee, soy, cotton, sugars are a major cause of Third World

  • deforestation and coffee being the heaviest traded commodity of

  • those contributes significantly to that so one of the tenants of

  • the business is, can we share that model and how many people

  • can we share it with, so using the company as a sustainable

  • model for food production and using that, that's one of the

  • goals. We're just delighted that recently we have been asked to

  • speak of it and I believe part of that is because of the good

  • food awards.

  • >>The annual Good Food awards held in San Francisco,

  • is a premiere competition for some of the best new

  • artisanal boutique products nation wide. Ten different

  • categories of goods compete for a best

  • of award in their respective groups.

  • (Di Bernardo) We entered it with no thought to

  • actually winning we just hoped to be critiqued and then use

  • that critique to kick up our game. What the parameters are

  • for the award is the product has to be transparent, you have to

  • be able to clearly define where it came from, who produced it,

  • it has to be fairly traded and it has to be grown sustainably.

  • And since all of our products on the floor are sustainable and

  • fairly traded it was fairly easy for us to compete we just one

  • day after roasting scooped some coffee out of the bin and sent

  • it and won it very much to our surprise.

  • (Aaron Jordan) I was shocked

  • - there were several nominees and then finalists I

  • respect every single one of them I've had most of the coffees I

  • was just kind of honored to be up there next to them so if

  • anything it was kind of a humbling experience for me it

  • was really exciting it was cool that something that we are doing

  • on a small scale in a small town Spokane was being recognized by

  • guys that I think are changing the world of coffee, guys that I

  • respect and love what they do and so to be up on a stage with

  • them so to speak was pretty cool. The coffee that we

  • submitted - from Guatemala - Batzchocola, When you buy that

  • coffee in the grocery store that's the exact same coffee

  • that was entered into the competition so it's cool to get

  • that pat on the back I guess.

  • >>That pat on the back was a direct result of

  • Deborah and Roast House deciding to bring on

  • a young aspiring 19-year-old coffee roaster, with a penchant

  • for roasting very small batches for his friends at school. Aaron

  • Rogers, now 21 years of age, began apprenticing with Dave

  • Reier, Roast Houses' original coffee roaster., and after

  • spending 9 months under his tutelage, Deborah decided to

  • give Aaron the reins after Reier left the business.

  • (Di Bernardo) Oh my goodness he's one of

  • those young hipster boys that wants to roast everything

  • super light he was to bring out the citrus

  • notes loves African coffees that are very fruity very citrusy

  • very lightly roasted I think he's come to understand that 80%

  • of our customers like those medium dark coffees so the

  • relationship is sweet enough that he's open he's receptive we

  • butt heads at times but we've also allowed him to create a

  • whole line of coffees that he feels the younger people will

  • really enjoy and were calling that our 20%.

  • (Jordan) I tend to gravitate

  • towards the lighter spectrum of roasting because I

  • find that there's a lot more transparency in the flavors

  • darker roasts you can taste more of the roaster, you can taste

  • more of the roasting process the smoke the kind of burnt sugars

  • it's almost borderline bitter but in a positive way it's my

  • job to produce something that people enjoy darker roasts are

  • what people enjoy we're always striving to create something

  • that's extraordinary.

  • >>Extraordinary organic fair trade sustainably grown

  • coffees start with extraordinary beans and Roast House

  • has committed their business model to support the farmers

  • and communities that produce these products.

  • (Di Bernardo) The coffee we buy that one percent is less than

  • 1% is all that's left of natural coffee production so everything

  • else is grown in the clear-cut environment heavy chemicals. So

  • I think more importantly to me is that coffee has to be grown

  • sustainably it has to be grown without chemicals it can't be

  • mucking up the water systems in these countries, it has to be

  • something that can go on and can be continued for generations to

  • come we need to be more sustainable in everything we do

  • especially when it comes to food production.

>>Wafting in the air outside of this nondescript strip mall,

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