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Coffee with a healthy twist
Ravensara marks eight-year anniversary
By Jeanette Brown
Special to KP News
Mother
and daughter team Jody Stark and Tara Frode are
self-described “Key Peninsula locals” since 1976. These
two versatile and multitasking entrepreneurs are looking
forward to celebrating eight years in business this
April as co-owners of Ravensara Espresso.
Their
business is located at the quaint landmark known locally
as “Collins Corner,” just north of the brush shed at the
intersection of 118th Street and State Route 302, and is
housed in the same unique building as Serenity Salon,
filling the store with healing aromas and peaceful
ambiance.

Tara Frode
(left) and her mother, Jody Stark, enjoy
being able
to sell organic espresso to State Route 302
customers.
Photo by Mindi La Rose |
Customers
are welcome to either use the drive-up window or come in
through the salon and order their gourmet espresso
drinks right from inside the building.
Both
women share a passion for the organic and healthy
products they brew and sell, and also offer
preservative-free goodies from Suzy’s Bakery in Gig
Harbor. In addition, they are proud to offer a new
protein drink, which has been well received by
customers.
Stark was
studying aromatherapy at the time of Ravensara’s
inception, and the two decided to name the business
after the tree of the same name that is found on the
island nation of Madagascar. Island people there extract
an essential oil from the tree, which is known “as the
oil that heals.” Ravensara is considered to be a very
good oil to use in blends, as it lends intelligence to
the drinks.
According
to the two women’s “coffee philosophy,” the most
intelligent and healthy way to drink espresso is by
starting with Tony’s locally roasted organic espresso
beans using the Italian brewing method.
Customers
who choose the drive-thru can expect fun, fast and
friendly service; but beware, as they will also be met
by the “enigmatic Indonesian wooden tip box” that has
enjoyed its designated spot on the espresso pass-through
shelf from day one.
While
some have become upset by its “pagan features” and left
notes to have them remove the tip box, most customers
have found the humor in it, assigning it a gender and
pet name, some even naming it after their spouses.
Everyone seems to have a need to comment about it.
The
wooden statue mysteriously disappeared just recently,
only to be found on the lawn of one of their regular
customers, who brought it back, much to the relief of
its owners. Frode and Stark had purchased the carving at
an import store with the intent that it be used as a tip
box, and were then told it had protective properties and
it would bring prosperity to people who owned it. Both
women are happy to report they have prospered, but will
also attest that prosperity came by implementation of a
strong work ethnic, and not by luck.
Frode
worked at an espresso stand while attending the
University of Washington and received her bachelor’s
degree in environmental studies. She learned a lot
about the espresso business while working her way
through college. When the two started their business,
each worked 60-plus hours a week for about four years.
Their hard work paid off; they now have four employees,
who have been trained for four weeks to ensure
consistency in product preparation. Thanks to their
employees, the owners say they have more free time to
volunteer in the community and pursue other business
interests.
Stark
wears many hats and has lived in her unique A-frame home
for 32 years. She loves art and describes her home as a
showcase of art, also having done much of the outdoor
landscaping herself. As an educator, she enjoyed
teaching high school English and sociology; prior to
opening Ravensara she owned and operated a landscaping
design and construction business in Gig Harbor. Three
years ago, she branched out into the mortgage business,
working mainly from her home office as a mortgage loan
consultant. She and her daughter are both active members
of the Key Peninsula Business Association.
Frode
moved to her Longbranch waterfront home from Minterwood
a couple of years ago with her young family and enjoys
spending more time with them as well as attending Key
Peninsula Planning Board meetings. Her husband works for
her father, Paul Frode, a Longbranch resident who owns
Coast Rail. Younger brother Shane also works for his dad
and just recently moved to Longbranch along with sibling
Blake.
And, as
if they didn’t have enough going on, this enterprising
mother and daughter’s future plans include opening up a
Ravensara at Key Center. It will be a sit-down espresso
café, and since Key Center is definitely on the uptick,
it will most surely be a popular spot!
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