4A NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 2007 COFFEE (CONTINUED FROM 1A) Though Wheat runs a business, he says he's not trying to make money for himself and that he's on a mission from God. The mission Wheat founded New Mission, Inc., a Lawrence-based non-profit company with one employee, himself, after visiting Venezuela on a mission trip in 1992. The Lawrence Lions Club and Trinity Episcopal Church sponsored the trip with the goal of giving used eyeglasses to the poor and the church ordained Wheat a missionary before he left Lawrence. He left with one mission and returned with an entirely new one that included coffee and Christ. "Our whole point is that we help the people who do the work so that they can eat for 12 months of the year," Wheat said. The new mission began when a Venezuelan bishop he met took him to Teresen, a village in Venezuela, to visit its small Christian community. Wheat ate dinner with a local family who sat guests, including the bishop, at one table and reserved another for the family. The family sat Wheat at their table. "It was as if they were reserving a place for some person and I happened to be there." Wheat said. A few days later the bishop took Wheat to a run-down coffee plantation nearby and asked him to find a way to make money from the land for the community. Wheat said yes. "I'm obligated to fulfill my promise," Wheat said. "I will or I will die, whichever happens first." It's been 15 years and about 20 trips to Venezuela since Wheat made his promise. The growers About 2,800 miles separate Wheat from the people he buys his beans from, but that hasn't stopped him from forming a personal connection with them. "I'm their family, and they're my family." Wheat said. Richard Bean, a friend who visited Wheat in Venezuela in 2004, attested to Wheat's personal relationship with his growers. people I've ever been around." Bean said. "They treat him as one of their own." "They're some of the sweetest Bean, who has known Wheat for about 10 years, got the chance to see what life was like for the coffee farmers. "I realized how much hand labor picking coffee is," he said. Wheat agreed. "Many of the people who do the coffee work live right among the crops," he said. "They often live in houses made of sticks and mud with a tin roof." Although most of the people of Teresen have access to basic education, clean water and some medical care, he said a family's furniture might include a few chairs with rebar frames and woven plastic seats and that only a few people owned cars, mostly battered American vehicles from the 1970s or 1980s. He said a farm family's primary tools were their hands. Andrew Roberts, shift manager at The Community Mercantile, which sells Wheat's coffee, visited Teresen in 1997 and toured a building where farmers stored and packaged coffee beans. The technology used was not state-of-the-art, although "I'm pretty sure they had electricity," recalled Roberts, 24, a KU alumnus in environmental studies who had Wheat as his youth counselor at Trinity Episcopal Church. Wheat said that the people of Teresen did not consider themselves impoverished because they shared what they had. He said that if a mango tree dropped its fruit the tree's owner would gather the fruit and share it with neighbors. "I saw very generous and kind and loving people meeting the needs of the neediest in very simple means," Wheat said of the people in Teresen. "They were living like they did in the Book of Acts. They were living like people talk on Sunday mornings." The teacher Wheat learned to roast coffee from a master roaster in Teresen named Luisa Alfaro, whom he met through a priest. He said Alfaro was a legendary roaster whose primitive equipment included firewood, a black pot propped up with rocks and a keen, almost magical knowledge of coffee. These business sell New Mission, Inc.'s coffee: Milton's 920 Massachusetts St. and First Floor of Kansas Union for sale Milton's Mirth Cafe 745 New Hampshire Signs of Life 722 Massachusetts St The Community Mercantile 901 Iowa St. The Bay Leaf 725 Massachusetts St. "She watches and smells and listens." Wheat said about Alfaro's roasting techniques. The Merc's Roberts said he was amazed when he first tasted fresh coffee that Alfaro had brewed. He said Alfaro's brewing method was not like getting up and making a cup of Folgers, but was more like a ritual. "I think guru has a certain connotation to it, but that wouldn't be far from the truth," Roberts said about Alfaro. "She probably has some shamanistic medicine tricks she could do." Wheat said, "She has a little garden and she roasts some coffee. She sometimes chastises or encourages her grandchildren or neighbors. She prays for people and sits on the porch and bids you good day when you go past." John Bowden, who owns the roaster and garage used by Wheat, said roasting was more a science than an art. Tom *Wheat* turns and sorts coffee beans in his cooling vat, checking a batch for damaged or burned beans. Wheat will weigh, bag and label his beans before delivering them to local coffeehouses and stores. This is the end of a long process that began more than 2,800 miles away in Teresengua. Venezuela. "There's a lot involved," Bowden said. "Time is a factor, as well as the size of the beans, the moisture content of the air, the roast time, the flame temperature..." The roaster Bowden lets Wheat use his 1895 Royal No. 5 coffee roaster in exchange for fresh coffee and money to buy the natural gas that fuels the roaster. and register to win $500 in cash! You're getting ready to graduate! That means entering the working world, paying bills and making student loan payments. FREE Consultations with Financial Specialists for KU students. University Financial Services will be on the KU campus during the week of Monday, April 16th through Friday, April 20th to provide you with free one-on-one student loan consultations. Learn how to save money each month and lower your future student loan payments by up to 50%. Also, find out about lower in-grace rates, forbearance and deferment rights, and the great incentives that we can offer KU graduates. Monday April 16 11:00am to 5:30pm Tuesday April 17 9:30am to 5:30pm Wednesday April 18 9:30am to 5:30pm Thursday April 19 9:30am to 5:30pm Friday April 20 9:30am to 4:30pm The Jayhawk Bookstore at the top of Naismith Hill. The coffee "They probably want that roaster back," said Bowden, former owner of Cafe Nova at 745 New Hampshire St., now the location of Mirth Cafe. "It's rare, it's collectable, and they sold it to me too cheap." Wheat lives in Iola, where he cares for his elderly mother, and drives his late father's 1995 Buick LeSabre to Lawrence three times a week to roast, package and distribute coffee to buyers. Bowden, who is now out of the coffee business, said Wheat roasted about 300 pounds of coffee per week. Bowden bought the roaster, similar to ones used to roast peanuts at county fairs, about 15 years ago from a coffee company in Louisville, Ky. Wheat sells three varieties of coffee beans: Corozal Estate, Caripe and Black Mountain. He said the varieties derived from the same genetic strain, Arabica borbon, and that the beans were not blended or mixed with other coffee crops. Wheat said that the distinct flavor of each variety came from the three different climate conditions in which they were grown. The coffee beans grow on a mountain ridge near Teresen in northeastern Venezuela near the Atlantic coast. Wheat said Corozal was cultivated on the seaward side of the ridge, Black Mountain on the landward side and Caripe on the ridge's summit. He said that each part of the ridge had a unique climate, and that subtle differences in sunlight, precipitation and soil type contributed to each crop's distinct flavor. "Soil is alive," Wheat said. "It's part of a community of things that live together." He said every morning warm, moist Atlantic air ascended the ridge and condensed into fog over the Caripe plants. "That top-dresses the plants with seawater mineral salts that then influence the flavor." Wheat explained. Katy Wade, a senior in Latin American studies and barista at Mirth Cafe, which serves Wheat's coffee, said Caripe, a light-coat fruit, had a fruity, citrus flavor. Wade said she liked that Wheat's coffee was shade grown under jungle canopy. She said coffee grown in a cleared forest required fertilizers and that direct sunlight was bad for a coffee's flavor. "You can never go wrong with a light roast and you should only buy shade grown." Wade said. goes into the ground to when it goes into people," Renck said. The need Greg Renck, Mirth manager, said the cate bought all its coffee, except decaf, from Wheat. He appreciates Wheat's personal involvement with the coffee. "He sees it from when it Wheat said his wholesale price for coffee was about $7 to $8 a pound. He said that by the time a pound of coffee was roasted, it had already cost him more than $4 to buy, import and package. At $7 a pound, the New Mission gets less than $3 in profits. "Any less than that, someone is not being paid for their work," said Wheat, who supports himself by working as a carpenter and audio technician. "I'm not getting paid for my work." Money doesn't mean much to Wheat, who said Christian standards like balance and equality were part of New Mission's business model. He is following his Christian ideals by converting good coffee into a living wage for the Venezuelan farmers who grow it. "These are people who need to eat and they grow great coffee," Wheat said. But Wheat doesn't think of them as poor, as he explained in Spanish: "Si hay dignidad, no hay pobreza," which translates: If there is dignity, there is no poverty. Kansan staff writer Nathan Gill can be contacted at ngill@kansan. com. Edited by Dianne Smith Environmental & Life Sciences Career Fair Thursday. April 19th 2007 Thursday, April 19th 2007 Burge Union Burge Union Explore opportunities from full-time or part-time employment internships, volunteering, & continuing education opportunities 4:30-5:30 Employer Panel 5:30-7:30 Career Fair Presented by the University Career Center All students welcome! For more information: www.ucc.ku.edu Contributing to Student Success!