When you walk into the Sechelt Wheatberries, you get the feeling that this is the nice cafe in the small town that locals take all of their guests to. It is probably listed as one of the top three places that visitors can go to if they are staying in a B&B nearby. It is still a locals cafe. It just happens to be conveniently located along the tourist route. The clientele is the real tell tale sign of the place. Everyone from the young college students on a study break to the spunky seniors in the neighbourhood seem to flock here. Everyone is friendly and is willing to talk to you about the sites that you have to be sure to check out nearby. Because the clientele here is so friendly - almost to the point of being a little bit too Stepford for my liking- the place has an instant homey feel which just reels in the tourists.
As the name of the place states, Wheatberries is a bakery. They make all of your many of your baked goods needs. On the display table, the food is packaged up and displayed in only the way a small town can: cellophane wrapped goodies tagged with raffia and a hand script font printed label or freshly baked loaves in baskets or on shelves carefully displayed. All of the furniture has that honey waxed rough pine look and there is a bright golden hue that seems to take over the place. It is in a sense the safe haven for those tourists who do not know any better after they have lost sight of the last Starschmucks or Timmy's. It has country style details with the artisan flair, and the clean cut teens working the counter could not intimidate even the shyest of shy violets passing through town.
The coffee here is from a Sunshine Coast local roasting company called Straight Coffee Traders. I thought the americano was decent with a tasty deep roasted initial flavour but then the flavour seemed to fall flat in the finish. The baked goods were tasty and the fact that you could get a panini or a slice of pizza for a little lunch break makes the place that much more inviting. There is plenty of seating for people to come on in for a cuppa and enough space for the line up of people who want to get there caffeine fix to go.
As much as I think this cafe fits the small town of Sechelt very well, and is great sanctuary for the weary coffee deprived traveler, I feel like it is a great place to visit, but I certainly wouldn't want to permanently drink there.
Out of 5 Tourists
Grub: 4 You can't beat freshly baked goods. The fact that they offer something outside of baked goods to fill the travelling lunch void, makes what they have to offer even better.
Scene: 4 To clarify, I would give it a four as a tourist. It is a great little place and is conveniently located for the people. It has a few locations I believe (Sechelt, Gibsons and Langdale) and it seems to have a neighbourhood following. If I was a resident, I'd give it a 3. I would still go there, but because I feel there is no edge to the place or that the design is just too country cabin with no other real option, I think I would be convinced to start roasting my beans at home and drink my coffee in the solitude of my own dwelling.
Coffee: 3 The coffee was good. It wasn't great. It didn't blow my mind away. It did however, fulfill my caffeine fix and it was a notable step above utilitarian coffee.
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Wheatberries: Welcome to the Sechelt Safe Haven
Labels:
americano,
bakery,
coffee,
review,
Sechelt,
Straight Coffee Traders,
Wheatberries
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