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Pauls Blend: Roots of Justice
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Pauls Blend: Roots of Justice

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Roots of Justice | Paul’s Blend –
Our Founders’ Roast

January is a month of return.
After the rush of the holidays, we slow down, reflect, and set intentions for the year ahead. At Thanksgiving Coffee Company, January brings us back to the beginning - to the land, the relationships, and the values that shaped who we are.

Paul’s Blend is where that story starts.

Born on the Mendocino Coast in 1972, this Founders’ Roast honors Paul Katzeff’s lifelong belief that coffee could be more than a commodity - that it could be a tool for justice, dignity, and connection between people and place.

This is the coffee that carries our roots.

Paul Katzeff at the original roastery on Noyo Harbor, CA

A Cup Born from Mendocino

Thanksgiving Coffee Company was founded in a working harbor town shaped by fishermen, artists, and back-to-the-land dreamers. Mendocino’s rugged coastline and radical imagination influenced everything - from how we roasted coffee to how we built relationships with farmers around the world.

Paul’s Blend reflects that origin story. It is a classic medium roast crafted with consistency and care, developed through decades of roasting experience and long-standing partnerships with smallholder farmers.

This is not a trend coffee.
It’s a foundational one.

 

Original roastery on the Noyo Harbor, California

Aerial view of a harbor with labeled locations of Thanksgiving Roastery.

Ariel view of the Noyo Harbor with original roastery and new roastery


Roots of Justice in Every Cup

Paul Katzeff came to coffee as a social worker and community organizer. That background shaped the values that still guide Thanksgiving Coffee today:

  • Long-term, direct relationships with farming partners
  • Paying prices that honor labor and sustain families
  • Investing in farmer-led quality control and education
  • Believing that quality of life and quality of coffee go hand in hand

Paul helped pioneer farmer-owned cupping labs, co-founded the Specialty Coffee Association, and advocated for organic and shade-grown coffee before it was mainstream.

Paul’s Blend is a tribute to that legacy - steady, thoughtful, and built for the long view.

Paul’s Blend Organic Medium Roast coffee.

Flavor Profile: A Foundational Medium Roast

Paul’s Blend is designed to be approachable, balanced, and deeply satisfying - ideal for everyday rituals.

Tasting Notes:

  • Smooth cocoa and toasted grain
  • Warm spice undertones
  • Subtle fruit brightness
  • Clean, comforting finish

It’s a coffee that meets you in the morning and stays with you through the day.

Image comparing Paul over time with coffee blend details.

Paul’s Blend is organic and winner of the Roaster of the Year in 2017


Honoring Martin Luther King Jr. and the Roots of Economic Justice

January is also a time to honor leaders who shaped the path toward justice, dignity, and shared responsibility. As we observe Martin Luther King Jr., we reflect on Dr. King’s enduring belief that civil rights and economic justice are inseparable - that a truly just society must honor the dignity of labor and ensure fairness within the systems that sustain everyday life.

Dr. King spoke often about the moral responsibility of both institutions and individuals, calling for an economy rooted in respect, equity, and human worth. He believed that progress is built not only through historic moments, but through consistent, values-driven actions - often quiet and unseen- that collectively shape the future.

Choosing where your coffee comes from is one of those choices. Every cup of Paul’s Blend supports long-standing relationships, ethical sourcing, and a belief that economic fairness begins with respect and reciprocity.

Collage depicting Martin Luther King Jr. and scenes from the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, with crowds gathered at the Lincoln Memorial advocating for civil rights, economic justice, and human dignity.

The 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, where civil rights and economic justice were brought together in a call for dignity, fair labor, and shared humanity.

The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom stands as a powerful reminder that the movement for civil rights was also a movement for economic justice. It called for fair labor, living wages, and systems that recognize the full dignity of every person’s work.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. understood that justice must be woven into daily life - from wages and work to how communities care for one another. As we reflect on this moment in January, we are reminded that meaningful change is carried forward through sustained commitment and everyday choices - values lived out not only in moments of history, but in the practices we choose to uphold.


Paul’s East Harlem Buying Club, 1962

These photographs document a food buying club organized by mothers in East Harlem in 1962, operating out of the basement of a public housing project. Faced with high food prices, limited access to fresh ingredients, and the daily pressures of poverty, these women came together to solve a shared problem: food security for their families.

By pooling resources and purchasing food collectively, they lowered household food costs and increased disposable income - profits were shared, and expenses reduced through cooperation rather than competition. The food they sourced reflected their own cultural traditions, allowing families to eat healthier, familiar meals while maintaining dignity and autonomy.

Women sorting and distributing food through a cooperative buying club in East Harlem, 1962, demonstrating early community-led solutions to high food costs and limited access.
Community food buying club led by mothers in East Harlem, 1962, focused on cooperative purchasing and food security.
Women organizing a community food buying club in East Harlem in 1962, working together in a public housing basement to pool resources, reduce food costs, and improve food security for their families.

Mothers in East Harlem working together in 1962 to organize a cooperative food buying club, using collective purchasing to improve food access, reduce costs, and strengthen community resilience. Photos by Paul Katzeff

An unexpected outcome emerged alongside the economic impact. The act of solving a community problem together fostered pride, hope, and a renewed sense of agency. The enthusiasm visible in these images reflects more than a transaction - it reveals the mental and emotional benefits of collective action and women-led leadership.

This grassroots model would later inform the next generation of food cooperatives, including Ukiah Natural Foods, and ultimately influence the cooperative principles that shaped businesses like Whole Foods Market. Long before “alternative food systems” entered the mainstream, these women demonstrated that necessity, creativity, and cooperation could build resilience from the ground up.

The values that shaped this moment - cooperation, dignity, and shared prosperity - would later shape how Paul approached coffee. Paul’s Blend carries that lineage forward, offering a daily ritual grounded in justice, relationship, and care.


Simple Recipe:
Paul’s Mendocino Morning Latte

A grounding ritual for the start of the year.

Ingredients:

  • Double espresso brewed with Paul’s Blend
  • Steamed milk
  • Light honey drizzle

Instructions:

  1. Pull a double espresso using Paul’s Blend.
  2. Steam milk until silky.
  3. Combine and finish with a gentle honey drizzle.
A close-up of a coffee cup beside an open book.

Enjoy slowly - best paired with a quiet January morning and a clear intention for the day ahead.

A Cup That Started a Movement

Paul’s Blend is more than our Founders’ Roast.
It’s a reminder of what’s possible when coffee is rooted in land, relationship, and justice.

As we begin a new year, we invite you to start your mornings with intention - grounded in gratitude, guided by values, and connected to a story that began over fifty years ago on the Mendocino Coast.


Where to Go Next

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With Gratitude Since 1972

To our farmers, our Mendocino community, and everyone who shares this daily ritual with us - thank you.

Your cup carries our roots forward.

Not Just a Cup, But a Just Cup™


Lavender Grace is the Sustainability Consultant for Thanksgiving Coffee Company

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