Did you purchase a manual coffee grinder from us at our local Farmers Market and now you wonder, how do I adjust my manual coffee grinder?
Your coffee grinding mechanism is ceramic burr and is set to a very fine grind; but what if you want a medium or course grind coffee?
Vintage Reproduction Manual Coffee Grinder for Regular Mouth Mason Jars
The plastic cover has a little tab to pull it open. Close it while grinding to keep the beans from jumping out. It also grinds hard spices like peppercorns. It does not work well with soft spices, flax seeds, or nuts.
To adjust the grind size:
Remove the top black nut, the spring, and the round piece under the handle.
Screw the hexagonal piece up and down the threaded rod. You will see the 2 pieces of the ceramic grinder moving closer or farther apart. Closer creates a finer grind, farther apart creates a courser grind. Reassemble and grind.
Coffee and Spice Grinder for Regular and/or Wide Mouth Mason Jars
To adjust the grind size:
Remove the gold nut, the handle, and the round piece under the handle.
Screw the gear shaped piece up and down the threaded rod. You will see the 2 pieces of the ceramic grinder moving closer or farther apart. Closer creates a finer grind, farther apart creates a courser grind.
It grinds hard spices like peppercorns. It does not work well with soft spices, flax seeds, or nuts.
Silicone Cover Now Available
Are your coffee beans jumping out of your grinder? We now offer a silicone cover. Simply slide the cover onto the grinder to keep your beans in place.
Cleaning Your Grinder
To clean the ceramic burr grinding mechanism, grind uncooked white rice.
And thank you for shopping local!
We aren’t just a market, we are Rustic Country Market Living.
Have you noticed that wine, coffee and chocolate all have similar, distinctive, flavor characteristics?
All three are influenced by the age of the crop, the ground they are grown in, elevation, weather, water, insects, etc. All can have a great crop year followed by a bad crop year.
Whether you are coffee, chocolate or wine tasting, you will rely on your eyes, nose, taste buds and hearing the story behind the harvest you are tasting.
Experts pair wine with chocolate, and chocolate with wine. They pair coffee with chocolate, chocolate with cheese, cheese with wine. Food is paired with coffee, chocolate and wine. Why? Because it enhances the taste (which is a selling point).
Below are some flavor wheels I’ve collected over the years that are used to describe coffee, chocolate and wine. See the similarities? (Click on the image to enlarge.)
We aren’t just a market, we are Rustic Country Market Living.
We planned to have our first, local, Rustic Country Market on April 27, 2024. We worked diligently the week prior to having our first market; getting our “store” set up. We priced everything, made directional signs and staged our store inside our enclosed utility trailer. The morning of April 27 we woke up to a blanket of snow; so we rolled over and went back to sleep. (Gotta love being a self employed retiree.)
Fast Forward to May 3 & 4, 2024
We rescheduled our first Rustic Country Market the following weekend. That morning I advertised it on Facebook. We used Friday as a test to see how long it would take to get the store set up (and tore down). It was a slow Friday, but things picked up on Saturday.
Our Rustic Country Market specializes in small batch roasted coffee beans, our nest run eggs, a variety of artisan rustic decor, including: cabinets/shelves, caddies, signs, birdhouses, benches, cups/mugs, unique gift items, plus seasonal items like Russian Sage bunches (similar to Lavender), dried spices, mixed spices, and vegetables.
Our Local Rustic Country Market Sale Dates
Every Friday, 9 – 12, starting May – Labor Day, 2024, we set up at the R Lazy J Ranch Farmers Market in Eagar.
Saturdays, 9-1, we set up at the Greer AZ Farmers Market. Dates: 6/15, 6/22, 7/13, 7/20, 8/3, 8/17, 8/31 (2024).
Local customers can reach out to us for local pick up if they want to order coffee beans or buy eggs. We prefer cash and Zelle.
UPDATE September 14, 2024: As a small business owner, we will no longer accept credit card because of the excessive costs related to accepting credit cards. Thank you for understanding.
In 2009 we started a micro coffee roasting company named Cold Creek Coffee Company, located in Battle Ground, WA. Our beans were used by two coffee shops and we had several repeat customers. We closed our business in 2014, when we moved to Arizona. (The move was complex enought, much less relocating a business.)
Our oldest grandson wearing our previous business .com hat. Today he’s a teenager!
Fast Forward to 2024:
Our original company name, Cold Creek Coffee, is now used by a company in Canada and another in Ohio. Honestly, that doesn’t matter because we want to rebrand our coffee business under Rustic Country Market as we start roasting again. This time we will specialize in mobile, small batch roasted coffee beans, in addition to selling a variety of rustic decor, coffee mugs, seasonal lavender bunches, dried spice mixes and our nest run eggs.
Local Market Focus
We are going to focus our small business on our local market. At this time, we are not going to sell online. We plan to start participating in a local farmers market, and roast coffee at the market. This way, our customers are getting the freshest roasted coffee beans possible. Our local, repeat coffee customers will be able to reach out to us to order fresh roasted coffee beans outside the farmers market hours. Expanding our market will be subject to demand and profitability.
In addition to attending our local farmers market, we plan to have several Rustic Country Markets at our house. I plan to set up a photo shoot booth so customers can share pics with their friends on social media. In the future, we’d like to invite other local, complimentary product vendors to participate in our Rustic Country Market, which may involve moving to a more central location in our local community. Our Rustic Country Market would be more of an artisan market vs. farmers market.
The pictures below are a sampling of some of the “one of a kind” items we have created for props and to sell. Some are a work in process…
Handcrafted. Reuse. Repurpose. Renovate. Rustic.
Most of what we sell at our Rustic Country Market is handcrafted at our home. We limit our outsourced items to other small business owners whenever possible. We scout for things we can reuse, repurpose, renovate or recycle. I love using my Cricut to design and create rustic country decor and household items. Some of the items we create are made using some materials that were not made in the USA which is (unfortunately) inevitable in today’s world. (IE: ink, vinyl, blank stickers, blank coffee mugs, blank canisters, etc.)
Primitive Bird House
A lot of the materials we use are old. For example, the bird house pictured above. We bought the antique roof tiles on the east coast a few years ago. The wood and handle (perch) were salvaged to create this rustic bird house.
Our Home Base…
My craft room.His Greenhouse.
Our produce is grown in our greenhouse that Jon built mostly from repurposed materials, and our garden. We primarily use heirloom seeds to start our plants. We try to avoid the use of chemicals on our plants, sticking with organic options and composting. Our spice mixes are produced in our home kitchen (and are not subject to public health inspection under the AZ cottage food program).
Air tight packaging to keep it fresh.
Our Russian Sage is grown in our back, which I will use to create decorative bunches to sell seasonally.
Our 2023 Russian Sage (similar to Lavender) and backyard chicken coop.
We purchase green coffee beans from US based coffee bean importers who source from coffee bean producing countries.
All that to say, our goal is for Rustic Country Market to be as small business, locally sourced as possible.