Sweet Maria's Coffee

Thompson Owen / Sweet Maria's Coffee

Our audio recordings about coffee from West Oakland, CA and beyond, mostly from Thompson Owen.

  1. 08/11/2024

    Migoti, Burundi: A conversation with Dan Brose

    On my visit to Burundi this year, I sat with Dan Brose of Migoti Coffee. Dan and his partner Poncien built this station some years ago, and it all didn't go exactly as planned. With some bumps along the way, this main station in Mutambu district is becoming a hub, with a new station starting in Kimono and another planned for next year. But what I really appreciate is Dan's deep experience in Burundi, and how his background in chemical engineering and other work informs the Migoti approach to coffee. And though I find Dan eloquent and with vast experience, the words you see him repeat over and over are teamwork, partnership and community. Taking a look at Migoti's instagram and you will scroll a long time before you find a picture of Dan. The emphasis is on the work, on the group effort, and the goal of building a sustainable business that builds up the local community. With Migoti these are not a heap of buzzwords … they are how they operate. It's a real pleasure to speak with Dan at the main station, and you will hear birds, people picking coffee in the background, and later the rush of water as they start the flow through the coffee washing channels. This is not a slick recording in any sense! In fact there are zero edits after the first minute. I encourage you to stay with this conversation because I feel the best stuff comes at the end!  -Tom You can see all our podcast episodes listed on our Coffee Library page.

    42 min
  2. 01/08/2023

    Ethiopia 4 - Yirga Alem - Conflict - Culture

    The Aregash Lodge in Yirg Alem is an oasis! I always look forward to staying here on the way to the southern coffee growing areas of Yirga Cheffe, Kochore, Gedeb, and Shakiso. It's owned by Gregorg and his family, since 2003. But last year it was attacked by a local mob and one of the main buildings burnt to the ground. (Nobody was hurt). It's wonderful to be back, and beautiful as ever, but a bit uncanny. Things are not always as they seem in Ethiopia, certainly for an outsider. It leads me to think about this social unrest, ethnic clashes, but also the way America is seen by my Ethiopian friends, equally unsafe and incomprehensible. I am not sure why, but talking about a place I barely know like Ethiopia (despite coming here for so many years) only makes me reflect back on my country, as I know it. I feel the same misunderstandings I probably carry about Ethiopia are parallel to the things I hear my travel companions say about the US. Then again, it seems they could be right … and I could be right too. When can you say you know a place? In what way do you know it, and in what way is it unknowable? The tourist myth of "strange lands" redirects back to "home". I am not sure I know either. What sucks about this recording is trying to speak on behalf of a place, behalf of a country. How can I? I try to assure Teshe that America is not as unsafe as it sounds. Everyone is not armed. But I hear of their friends held up at gunpoint in the US, and they say "yes, you can get robbed in Addis but nobody is going to shoot you! " How can I respond? And this is a country emerging (hopefully) from civil war! I guess there's good reason for my unclear thoughts and sentences in this recording. It's hard to find clarity in this. I hope you disagree with some things I say in here because I already have my own quibbles with them.

    18 min
  3. 01/07/2023

    Ethiopia 3 - Coffee, Photography, Power

    I really was on the fence about uploading this episode. One the one hand, this is stuff I have already said, about photography and coffee travel, about marketing, about representation. It feels like I am just hung up on this. Does anyone care? On the other hand, the second part of this is about a conflict I got into in Shakiso for taking a photo with my phone. And I kinda spun out on it. I think of podcasts as a thing where people want to hear someone talk clearly and with great confidence. That's not how I feel. But I am deciding to go ahead and post this long recording, because people can always just stop listening if they don't like it. You decide!  Intro: I end up thinking a lot about photography and coffee travel. Taking pictures is an important part of documenting my trip (and also tagging photo locations with the camera GPS). But for me, it is complicated by things I can't ignore. I guess since I have a masters in photo from my time in Chicago, it makes sense I am going to be aware of what it means to take photos, who the audience is for them, who the subject is, and how they function in relation to commodifying a product. For me, critical thinking around photo practice can be challenging but I feel it pushes me to think differently, and be aware of what it means to make images. This starts out with my thoughts about what it means to carry this big bulky camera around, but "Part 2" (at 25 min. in)  is about this conflict I got into down in Shakiso because I took a photo of a car that "I shouldn't have taken". It wasn't that bad, I wasn't going to go to jail or anything. But I found it made me spin out quite a bit, and it had an impact on those I was traveling with. It just made me think a lot. I am aware the title Coffee Photograpy Power sounds a bit pretentious. It is probably! I feel it is about power though. so...

    38 min
4.5
out of 5
44 Ratings

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Our audio recordings about coffee from West Oakland, CA and beyond, mostly from Thompson Owen.