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Le Rêve Bakery & Café
It’s all about community
If you ask anyone who lives on Queen Anne, especially on top of the
hill, why they live there, you will hear that it’s truly a neighborhood
where you run into people you know, talk on the street or in the stores
and spend most of your life (school, business, sports, shopping,
dining). Business partners Sharon Fillingim (left) and Andrea Nakata
(right) wanted to
tap into that neighborhood life by creating a community gathering place.
They’ve done so with Le Rêve Bakery & Café.
Still a brand new business (opened November 12, 2010), their goal is
already being met. People arrive in a steady stream, they all seem to
know at least one person in the room and there’s constant conversation
taking place. Like all neighborhoods, Queen Anne has its share of coffee
shops. Le Rêve ("the dream") uses Olympia Coffee Roasting Co., a small,
local company that roasts organic coffee. Le Rêve is their first client
in Seattle. But Le Rêve also offers something different: a real bakery.
Pastries, muffins, tarts, cupcakes croissants, scones, mini-cheesecakes
and custom-made cakes are all baked on site. Sandwiches on housemade
bread, soup and salad are available for lunch. Local purveyors are used
as often as possible.
"Putting this together was a team effort," says Andrea. "Sharon and I
have been fast friends since we met at our kids’ school. Our daughters
were in the same kindergarten class. We came up with the café and bakery
design and a friend did the build out. Family designed our website.
Girlfriends assisted with the décor. Everyone who helped is a friend,
neighbor or relative. And the staff is our dream team." Their three
chefs, Honor Amourall, Jason Gere and Sarah Mullins have years of
combined experience and are passionate about their chosen careers.
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Le Rêve Bakery & Café
1805 Queen Anne Ave N, Ste 100
Seattle, WA 98109
206-623-REVE (7383)
www.LeReveBakery.com
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The dream started simply enough. Sharon and Andrea had worked
together on arts projects for their childrens’ school fundraising
auction and ended up creating Camp Artsmart at the Queen Anne Community
Center. They did their planning at various coffee shops. A few years
prior, Andrea had been in Paris with friends, loving the café culture.
Sharon had previously owned coffee shops and Cool Hand Luke in Madrona.
They started talking about creating a Parisian-style coffee bar for
Queen Anne. A restaurant deal Sharon was working on fell through and
Andrea was looking to start a second career (along with the property
management company she and her husband own and four children). When
Andrea saw the ‘for lease’ sign on their current space, she could
picture tables on the porch and in the courtyard. "My husband grew up on
Queen Anne and I’ve spent the last 20 years here. Sharon also lives on
Queen Anne," she says. "We wanted to be part of this neighborhood and
bring something to it." They started seriously putting things together
in June. "It seemed like it wasn’t going fast enough, but in retrospect
we opened pretty quickly."
Opening with no fanfare, just word of mouth, they still blew through
their first coffee order in four days, double the speed they thought
reasonable. "The neighborhood has been wonderful, both individuals and
businesses," says Andrea. "They feel that the more foot traffic there
is, the better off we all are. Local business people tell their clients
about us. And some locals come in three times a day, once for pastry,
then lunch, then something to go."
Le
Rêve offers box lunches to go as well as pastry or sandwich and salad
assortments people can pick up for their business and personal
gatherings. They offer classes for adults like baking with chocolate and
infusing truffles. Kids’ classes include gingerbread house workshops and
painted cookies. The space is available for private parties in the
evening and they have a liquor license they use for events. They’ve
already had a documentary film screening and a cabaret soiree. Canned
goods were collected from the film evening and 10% of the proceeds from
the cabaret were given to the Queen Anne Helpline. "We want to give back
to the community through the bakery," explains Andrea. "Even before we
opened, we had donated cakes to the Edgar Martinez Foundation."
One thing they don’t offer is Wi-Fi. "We made a conscious decision
about this. There are plenty of places on Queen Anne with Wi-Fi. We
wanted to create a place where conversations are taking place. We wanted
it to be lively, not silent.
"Le Rêve is our dream come true. We’re so grateful for the
neighborhood support and the way everyone has welcomed us with open
arms. Being part of this community means so much to us."
Connie Adams/December 2010 |
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