Description
☕ Crème Brûlée Coffee
Smooth. Creamy. Finished with a rich caramelized sweetness.
Crème brûlée is one of those classic desserts that feels indulgent in every way—silky custard with a crisp, caramelized top.
This coffee captures that same experience in a cup: rich vanilla creaminess layered with warm caramelized sugar notes and a smooth, full-bodied finish.
✨ What to Expect
Roast: Medium
Flavor Profile: Vanilla custard, caramelized sugar, light brown sugar
Body: Full, smooth, creamy
Crafted for: slow mornings, dessert moments, and coffee that feels like a reward
🤎 Why You’ll Love It
This is a dessert-style coffee that doesn’t feel heavy—it’s smooth, balanced, and naturally sweet in flavor.
The vanilla and caramel notes build into a warm, brûléed finish that lingers just enough to feel indulgent without overwhelming the cup.
This coffee was chosen in honor of Jace Ward.
Like Jace, it carries strength, clarity, and presence—bold in impact, steady under pressure, and impossible to overlook.
🎗️ Jace Ward – Say My Name 🎗️
Because of Jace, many good things have happened. You see like a good coffee Jace was strong, warm, and focused. That's Jace! At 20, in his Junior year of college Jace Ward was diagnosed with Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG), on May 17, 2019, ironically DIPG Awareness Day.
This is the day Jace first learned about the aggressive inoperable brainstem tumor that would take his hearing, sight, speech, walk and finally his breath. Jace asked one question: "How long do I have?"
As the doctors searched his Mo-mo's eyes, Jace said, "I'm not afraid to die, I know where I'm going. I want to know how long I have to make an impact."
Nine months.
Jace hasn't waited one day. He challenged Congress, NCI, doctors and funders with his battle cry #DIPG won't Wait!
Jace was the first patient on the DIPG CarTel Trial paving the way for a cure. Jace has helped over 125 kids access better treatment. He led efforts funding $2 M for DIPG research trials. Jace's mantra is "I can't die, I'm Busy!"
Enjoy your coffee, wake up to life, be grateful for today and tell someone it's time to cure DIPG.



