Local coffee is fresh coffee

WINSTED — There is something new brewing along Main Street in Winsted.

Karen’s Cafe, a specialty coffee and sweets shop at 64 Main St., opened two weeks ago.

Owned and managed by longtime Winsted resident Cecilia Atchison, the cafe features a wide variety of hot and iced coffee drinks, lattes, cappuccinos, fruit and tea smoothies, as well as freshly roasted bulk coffee beans.

In addition, the shop also offers a number of fresh pastries, such as cupcakes, muffins and cookies, and gourmet treats including chocolate-covered pretzels, truffles and biscotti.

Customers can take their purchases to go, enjoy them inside the cafe while they browse the Internet on the cafe’s free WiFi network or grab a seat at one of the shop’s outdoor tables.

And everything offered at the cafe — from the fresh-brewed coffee to the art on the shop’s walls — is local.

Atchison said all of her coffee, both bulk beans and those she uses to make her shop’s drinks, is provided by Coffee Trade in Avon.

“They roast their coffee beans right on the premises,†she said. “So my beans are always fresh.â€

In addition, the cafe’s selection of pastries is homemade by Little Women’s Kitchen in New Hartford.

“I’ve already had some people coming in here looking for the pastries, because they are that good,†Atchison said of the local bakery.

Another New Hartford small business, Buttercup Confections, provides the shop’s sweets. And all of the art on the cafe’s walls are works by area artists, including Torrington painter Joe Kopler.

“And I am looking for more people to display their artwork here,†Atchison said, adding that paintings and photographs hanging in her cafe are a great conversation starter.

“I’m just trying to keep everything as local as possible,†she said.

This summer the cafe will feature a Coffee Curb every Thursday night during the town’s outdoor concert series at East End Park. The shop, which will offer hot 8 ounce cups of coffee outside for $1 during the shows, is right across the street from the downtown green.

“It’s perfect for those who just want to grab a quick coffee,†Atchison said, adding that the shop will be open until 9 p.m. Thursday evenings during summer concerts.

The idea to open the cafe first took root when Atchison and her daughter, Karen — for whom the shop is named — began discussing the possibility of a new coffee spot in town last fall.

Although Karen, a Gilbert School graduate, now lives in Colorado, the mother and daughter teamed up over e-mails and telephone conversations to solidify the idea. In fact, Karen has set up the cafe’s website and Facebook page.

Atchison, however, is no stranger to running a small business. For the past 13 years, she and her husband, Erwin, have owned and operated R.J. Hobbies & More at Ledgebrook Plaza. She left the hobby store in December to start her own business.

Later this summer, Atchison is looking to add quiche and other “lite fare†items to her menu.

She is also hoping the cafe will become a popular and welcoming spot for Northwestern Connecticut Community College students, who return to the Winsted school for the fall semester at the end of August.

In the meantime, Atchison is at the cafe seven days a week, managing the shop, chatting with customers and planning for the future.

“And we’re already starting to get some return customers,†she said. “Because they really like the coffee.â€

Karen’s Cafe  is open Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Sundays from 8 a.m. to noon. For more information, call the cafe at 860-238-4010, or visit karens-cafe.com.

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