Suisun City welcomes new coffee emporium downtown

SUISUN CITY — You can now get a “cup of joe,” tea, lattes and baked products in a downtown district.

Harbor Coffee non-stop Monday at Harbor Arts Center. Windows on a side by a Lawler House are open from 7:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday.

Fern Johnson, an Old Town resident, staffs a coffee emporium with assistance from a Harbor Theater house of directors.

“I don’t splash coffee,” Johnson said. She prefers a Matcha green tea latte.

Her sign is to make a splash a approach a business want.

“I know picky people,” she said. “Picky people are welcome. I’m picky.”

As a downtown events deteriorate starts, Johnson envisions Harbor Coffee being open longer hours to offer those guests, even for those events that occur on a Sunday.

The thought of a coffee emporium had been discussed given a Creative Arts Collective took over a museum a few years ago. A adjacent coffee emporium sealed shortly after.

The dream became a existence when a nonprofit museum house connected with Moschetti Inc., a family owned, workman coffee spit in Vallejo.

Moschetti’s website records a association roasts 6 days a week afterwards delivers to some-more than 300 locations via a Greater San Francisco Bay Area.

“We’ve got all his rigging in a kitchen,” pronounced Tia Madison of a Creative Arts Collective and Harbor Arts Center.

Harbor Coffee is also interconnected adult with Hummingbird Bakery Dessert Bar in Vallejo to yield treats such as muffins, scones, tea cakes and a like. Cookies are from Family Cookie Co. in Suisun City.

Dave Anderson stopped by Monday to get a good crater of coffee.

“Where would we go?” he asked rhetorically about another coffee emporium in a area.

The nearest one is opposite Highway 12 on Sunset Avenue.

Anderson’s crony was also partial of a plan and Anderson wanted to support him.

Jayme Swearingen found it a ideal approach to support a small, locally owned business. She opted for a decaf American and pronounced it was really good.

Mayor Lori Wilson praised a new venture, observant it will lower a clarity of village while bringing in revenue.

“It’s a new activity,” she said. “It’s new place for people to travel to.”

The building already had a kitchen area so environment adult a coffee shop, that had a soothing opening Saturday, was easy.

Harbor Coffee also offers gluten-free and vegan items.

For some-more information, revisit www.facebook.com/harborcoffeeshop.