Pasadena Weekly 09.02.21

Page 12

• DINING •

At Café de Leche, coffee is community

Anya Schodorf and Matthew Shodorf own Café de Leche.

Café de Leche

2477 N. Lake Avenue, Altadena 626-807-2900, cafedeleche.net 5000 York Boulevard Highland Park 323-551-6828, cafedeleche.net

att and Anya Schodorf opened their first location of Café de Leche at York Boulevard and Avenue 50 in Highland Park in 2008. It was a pioneering effort at the time, as Starbucks barely managed to open its first store on the other side of Figueroa. Café de Leche was among the first cafés in Los Angeles to serve artisanal roasted coffee. The opening on York also signaled one of the first turns on the boulevard that led to Highland Park’s status as a hipster mecca, on par with Williamsburg in Brooklyn. The Schodorfs’ timing seemed prescient, and their corner coffee shop with a play area for kids soon became a neighborhood fixture. Ultimately, success there led to the opening of their second outlet in Altadena, on North Lake Avenue, in 2016. The interior of the Altadena store is tiny, as compared to its big sister in Highland Park. That said, it has a lovely outdoor shaded patio in back. Elegantly designed with seating areas surrounded by native plants and succulents, it is an unexpectedly serene oasis. “I haven’t been on the patio for the past week, so I want to make sure my plants are still looking good. This is my baby,” Anya said as she surveyed the area. Matt added, “She personally curates the patio and maintains it. More and more people are just discovering it. We like to think of it as a hidden gem, in a way.” Anya has a designer’s eye and is working on a renovation of their original location in Highland Park. “We’re doing a modest remodel in Highland Park,” she said. “So, we’re excited about that. I’m doing most of the interior design for that. We’ve partnered with the original interior designer and architect for that location, David Freeland. He designed Highland Park and this one. They’re both inspired by Nicaragua. That’s where I’m from.” The couple met in the Highland Park neighborhood in 2001. Devoted parents, they raised their two children Penelope, 17, and Tomas, 14, while growing their business. Both are students at Maranatha High School in Pasadena. When Café de Leche opened in Highland Park, so-called “specialty” coffee was a new concept. The Schodorfs opened the café serving Portland, Oregon-based Stumptown Coffee. “We were one of the first Stumptown accounts in Los Angeles,” Matt said. “When we opened, specialty coffee — which is everywhere now, really — was pretty young. We were actually getting Stumptown FedExed out of Portland for three or four years before they started roasting it here. “It’s a big corporate thing now. Back in the day, it was more of a rarified thing. We had them for a long time, and we had a great relationship with them. But then we struck out on our own, about five years ago now.” Anya explained they wanted to express themselves through their coffee. “What’s important are the relationships in coffee,” Matt added. “Most of what people know of coffee are brown beans in a bag. Where do they come from?” That question inspired the Schodorfs to source their coffee “at origin” from the farms, where the beans are grown. “We just wanted to be able to have the power to choose what coffees to put on bar,” Anya said. “At the end of the day, it’s what’s important to us — to be able to choose, to hand-select the coffees we think are best for our business, for our customers.” Café de Leche is part of a global community, Matt said, except for Hawaii and Puerto Rico, where coffee is not a domestic product. It’s originally from Ethiopia. The couple has traveled to Nicaragua, El Salvador and Ethiopia to meet farmers and establish relationships to source the beans they roast on-site in Highland Park. Through Stumptown coffee, the Schodorfs were introduced to Francisco Javier Valle, who grew up on his father’s coffee farm in Nicaragua. Subsequently, he was drafted by Stumptown and moved to Portland to be the company’s head roaster. Valle left Stumptown to return to Nicaragua to establish a dry mill for local producers,

Photos by Luis Chavez

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By Frier McCollister Pasadena Weekly Contributing Writer

12 PASADENA WEEKLY | 09.02.21

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8/31/21 4:02 PM


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