The Beautiful Letdown

A breastfeeding blog that dabbles in tandem, extended nursing, gentle parenting and much more

Chocolate and Coffee

January25

Now, there’s a title to catch your inter­est, right?

Yum. Cof­fee and choco­late. Cof­fee. Choco­late. Cof­fee and choco­late together. I need to stop right now, or I’ll need to end this post to go get some choco­late and brew a pot of coffee!

As I men­tioned in a pre­vi­ous post, I attended a MOPS con­fer­ence in Octo­ber of last year. At that con­fer­ence, I went to a ses­sion called “Brad, Angelina, and Oprah: Rais­ing Kids Who Can Save The World.” The premise of the ses­sion was that too many times, Chris­tians wait for a cause to become main­stream before embrac­ing it.

Chris­tian­ity at times has seemed to be com­pletely opposed to envi­ron­men­tal­ism. How­ever, we are called to take care of God’s cre­ation which he has given us. Chris­tians have also spent much time and money send­ing mis­sion­ar­ies across the globe when there is suf­fer­ing right in our own towns. How I feel about each of these issues could eas­ily fill another blog post. I’m going to try to stick to cof­fee and choco­late and save the rest for another day.

One of the issues that Tracey Bianchi touched on at the MOPS con­fer­ence was fair trade. What is fair trade? Fair trade is basi­cally a (some­times con­tro­ver­sial) cer­ti­fi­ca­tion that is given when a farmer or arti­san is able to fol­low cer­tain prin­ci­ples which include:

  • Fair prices
  • Fair labor conditions
  • Direct trade
  • Domes­tic and trans­par­ent organizations
  • Com­mu­nity development
  • Envi­ron­men­tal sustainability

–taken from Trans­Fair USA Basic FAQs

For me, fair trade con­nects with sev­eral impor­tant Chris­t­ian val­ues. One is that peo­ple are taken care of. If I buy cof­fee or choco­late, it is not grown in the United States. The dif­fer­ence between a farmer grow­ing cof­fee and fair trade cof­fee can mean the dif­fer­ence between earn­ing $500 (non-fair trade) and $2000 a year (fair trade). That is a sub­stan­tial dif­fer­ence. Also, some­where around 80% of cof­fee grown with a fair trade cer­ti­fi­ca­tion is also organic.

Many peo­ple are famil­iar with organic and some of the ideas behind it. Organic gen­er­ally means that some­thing is grown or raised with min­i­mal chem­i­cal input and in a way that is ben­e­fi­cial to the envi­ron­ment around it. In addi­tion to being ben­e­fi­cial for the envi­ron­ment, work­ers who labor on organic farms are exposed to far fewer chem­i­cals and other toxic substances.

All this brings me back to choco­late and cof­fee. I have decided that in the month of Feb­ru­ary, I want to only con­sume organic, fair trade cof­fee and choco­late. I have pur­posely cho­sen Feb­ru­ary because it is the month of Valentine’s Day and choco­late. I wanted to do this when it would require a sac­ri­fice and not sim­ply result in me buy­ing more expen­sive choco­late while miss­ing nothing.

Jason and I have talked sev­eral times about dif­fer­ent cof­fees and how they taste. To him, each cof­fee is dif­fer­ent. Some are smooth. Some are more bit­ter. Some are darker. To me, the only dif­fer­ence is if it’s made right or not. I really can’t tell much dif­fer­ence between an expen­sive cof­fee and a cheap one. I only know if it’s absolutely ter­ri­ble, and the two times I can think of when that hap­pened, it was oper­a­tor error. So, by lim­it­ing myself to organic, fair trade cof­fee, I will pri­mar­ily be say­ing that I am only going to have the cof­fee from my home which I know to be cer­ti­fied both. This means no impromptu stops at cof­fee shops unless they pro­vide this option and no cof­fee at friends’ or family’s homes. Def­i­nite sacrifice!

For choco­late, I am hop­ing to have a lit­tle bit dif­fer­ent expe­ri­ence. Instead of buy­ing one type or one bar of choco­late and using that to sus­tain me for a month, I’m hop­ing to buy sev­eral types of choco­late and com­pare them. I picked up a bar of Green & Black milk choco­late today. This is organic choco­late that I have never tried before! When I bought it, I assumed it was fair trade. I had a lit­tle bit of trou­ble find­ing this infor­ma­tion at first glance on their web­site, but they are fair trade cer­ti­fied! There may be a choco­late tast­ing party in my future, who knows?

While the rea­son I am ini­ti­at­ing this exper­i­ment is because I want to do some­thing, if only for a month, that impacts oth­ers in a pos­i­tive way. I also want it to be a sac­ri­fice to do it. I am hop­ing that this month will be an expe­ri­ence in taste, tex­ture, and aro­mas that I have never expe­ri­enced before.

Stay tuned, and I’ll have you drool­ing even more over choco­late and cof­fee!  If you’re inter­ested in join­ing my exper­i­ment, leave a com­ment!  If you blog, I’ll link up to you, and if you don’t blog, you can send me e-mails and I’ll post your thoughts.

If you’re inter­ested, here are a few links to infor­ma­tion about fair trade and organic products:

Organic Cof­fee Reviews (With a side of social activism)

Fair Trade Cer­ti­fied | TransFairUSA

Grounds For Change | Organic Fair Trade Coffee

Mar­ket­place | Chocolate

4 Comments to

“Chocolate and Coffee”

  1. On January 26th, 2009 at 8:20 am Hyacynth Says:

    I will join you, but as of right now I’m not drink­ing cof­fee (preg­nancy). I will buy only the organic, fair trade choco­late for my hubby for V-day, though. :) Great idea!

  2. On January 27th, 2009 at 11:15 pm Rachel Says:

    Good info on fair trade coffee!

  3. On January 31st, 2009 at 12:08 pm Heather @ Not a DIY LIfe Says:

    Great post, Casey! I got inter­ested in fair trade a few years ago. Although since becom­ing preg­nant with LB, I hadn’t been drink­ing much cof­fee until recently. Now I’m back to decaf only. but I agree with you, fair trade (and even so many “green” projects) does resound with our Chris­t­ian faith. We are to be good stew­ards of the resources that God has given us!

    I have never tried organic choco­late, but I’m sure it’s a treat. I’ll have to look for some! (for those few moments of weak­ness that I have every once in a while!)

  4. On March 24th, 2009 at 11:45 am Niki Says:

    I just did a post on this very topic. I too want to con­sume only fair trade cof­fee. I started and then bang, the price of a small can went up a buck. And this is after pay­ing for the dou­ble a can for reg­u­lar cof­fee. I am going to try hard to fit this in the bud­get but dur­ing times like this it is hard to do the right thing. Thank good­ness I don’t like choco­late too much LOL