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Alfred H. Peet (March 10, 1920 – August 29, 2007) was a Dutch-American entrepreneur and the founder of Peet's Coffee & Tea in Berkeley, California, in 1966. Peet is widely credited with starting the specialty coffee revolution in the US. Among coffee historians, Peet has been called "the Dutchman who taught America how to drink coffee."[1] Peet taught his style of roasting beans to Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl and Gordon Bowker, who, with his blessing, took the technique to Seattle and founded Starbucks in 1971. Peet later distanced himself, however, from the Starbucks trio as they experimented with ultra-dark roasts. "Baldwin never learned anything from me," Peet was later quoted as saying.[2]

Key Information

Life and career

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Peet was born in Alkmaar, Netherlands, where his father ran a small coffee roasting establishment, prior to World War II.[3] Following the war; Peet left London, where he had apprenticed with Twinings coffee and tea company,[4] to work as a tea taster in the Dutch East Indies and New Zealand, prior to emigrating to San Francisco, California, in 1955, where he worked in the coffee importing industry.[5][6]

Dismayed with the poor quality of coffee in the United States, Peet opened a coffee store in Berkeley, California, on 1 April 1966.[7] He compared the low quality coffee in the United States to World War II "rationed" coffee.[1]

Although often encouraged to expand the business, he remained stalwart in keeping the original location at Walnut and Vine, zealously guarding the quality of the coffee bearing his name. After several years of roasting beans in the back of the store using one-, and then five-pound, roasters, in the early 1970s, he acquired a 5,000 square feet (460 m2) warehouse in the adjacent town of Emeryville, in which he installed a 100-pound roaster, followed by a 300-pound roaster, in 1976. By that time, Peet had two additional retail stores: one on Piedmont in Oakland, and one on Santa Cruz Avenue in Menlo Park. He then also sold roasted-to-order, 20 to 50 pound bags of beans to restaurants throughout the Bay Area.[citation needed]

Retirement

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Peet sold his business in 1979 to Sal Bonavita, for whom he remained a mentor for the next five years. Bonavita soon opened new stores in Oakland, Mill Valley and Menlo Park.[8] In 1984, Jerry Baldwin led Starbucks in acquiring Peet's four locations from Bonavita. After retiring from the coffee business, Peet moved in 2001 to Ashland, Oregon where he died on August 29, 2007 at age 87.[9][10]

Influence on coffee industry

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Peet introduced custom coffee roasting of top quality beans to the United States, at a time when Americans were typically drinking coffee brewed from beans vacuum packed in a can.[11][12]

The origin of Berkeley's Gourmet Ghetto was Peet's first Peet's Coffee location, opened in 1966, at the corner of Walnut and Vine; the area grew around Peet's and adjacent specialty food, health food, and other avant-garde restaurants that sprung up, including Chez Panisse.[7]

While Peet was known to have a "stern demeanor", he also had a genuine willingness to instruct coffee entrepreneurs in the art of bean roasting.[13] Starbucks co-founder Jerry Baldwin has remembered Peet as a "very generous" mentor.[14] And Baldwin was one of many coffee entrepreneurs that Peet mentored, including Jamie Anderson (Anderson's Coffee, Austin, Texas), David Dessinger (Pegasus Coffee, Bainbridge Island, Washington),[15] Arnold Spinelli (LaCoppa Coffee Company, San Francisco, California), John Weaver (Weaver's Coffee & Tea) [16] Susan Ohori (Ohori's Coffee Roasters, Santa Fe, New Mexico) and Leigh McDonald (founder of Coffee Connection in Amsterdam).[16]

Other coffee entrepreneurs got into the business simply because they were inspired by Alfred Peet and their experience tasting his coffee at his first Berkeley store. George Howell is a notable example, who founded The Coffee Connection in the Boston, Massachusetts area. Howell is widely credited as having been the inventor of the Frappuccino. Starbucks later acquired his business.[16]

Media

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An interview with Alfred Peet is included in the documentary Coffee Culture USA by Kenneth van Schooten and Julie Ragusa, released in 2008.[17]

Peet's sister, then aged 100, was interviewed by Dutch editor and author Jasper Houtman, for The Coffee Visionary: The Life & Legacy of Alfred Peet, published in 2018.[18]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Alfred Peet (March 10, 1920 – August 29, 2007) was a Dutch-American entrepreneur and coffee roaster best known as the founder of Peet's Coffee & Tea, which he established in Berkeley, California, in 1966 and which revolutionized American coffee culture by emphasizing high-quality, dark-roasted beans and fresh brewing methods.[1][2] Born in Alkmaar, Netherlands, Peet grew up in his father's coffee and tea business, where he learned the trade by maintaining roasting and grinding machinery during the 1930s.[2] After World War II, he moved to London to work for Lipton's tea company, later traveling to Indonesia as a tea taster before immigrating to San Francisco in 1955, where he entered the coffee importing industry.[1][2] Disappointed by the bland, mass-produced coffee available in the U.S. at the time, Peet opened his first small store at Vine and Walnut streets in Berkeley on April 1, 1966, using manually calibrated roasters to produce deeply roasted, flavorful beans sourced from around the world, which he sold whole rather than pre-ground to preserve freshness.[3][1] Peet's innovations, including signature dark roasts and custom blends like the bestselling Major Dickason's Blend introduced in 1969, helped spark the "Gourmet Ghetto" neighborhood near the University of California, Berkeley, and laid the groundwork for the specialty coffee boom.[3][1] In 1971, he mentored and supplied roasted beans to three young entrepreneurs—Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl, and Gordon Bowker—who later founded Starbucks, earning Peet the moniker "grandfather of specialty coffee" for influencing an entire industry.[2][1] He sold the company in 1979 to focus on coffee buying, retiring fully in 1983; the business was acquired in 1984 and expanded to over 150 stores across 10 states by the time of his death.[1] Peet spent his later years in Ashland, Oregon, where he died of cancer at age 87, survived by a daughter, two grandchildren, and a sister.[1] His emphasis on quality sourcing, precise roasting, and customer education continues to define Peet's Coffee & Tea as a pioneer in craft coffee, inspiring generations of roasters and consumers.[2][1]

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Alfred Peet was born on March 10, 1920, in Alkmaar, a city in the North Holland province of the Netherlands.[4][5] His early life unfolded in the interwar years, though his family's circumstances remained grounded in traditional small-scale commerce.[6] Peet's family was deeply embedded in the local trade of imported goods, with his father owning and operating B. Koorn & Company, a modest shop in Alkmaar that specialized in selling coffee, tea, and spices.[7][8] The business emphasized high-quality beans sourced from international suppliers.[9] This enterprise provided the household's livelihood, instilling in young Peet an appreciation for the nuances of coffee selection and preparation amid the everyday rhythms of a working-class home.[10] He had a sister.[1] From a young age, Peet assisted his father in the shop, gaining hands-on exposure to the coffee industry by cleaning the roasting and grinding machinery and performing basic handling tasks.[2][8] These childhood duties, often involving errands and maintenance in the family's small roastery, sparked his lifelong passion for coffee and laid the foundational knowledge that would later define his contributions to the trade.[1] Growing up in this environment, coffee was both profession and sustenance.[11]

Early Involvement in Coffee Trade

Peet's early professional engagement with coffee began in his teenage years in Alkmaar, Netherlands, where he worked at his father's company, B. Koorn & Company, a small importer and roaster of coffee, tea, and spices.[3][2] There, he handled tasks such as maintaining roasting and grinding machinery, which provided him with foundational knowledge of coffee processing and equipment operation.[3][12] Having left school to join the family business full-time, Peet developed practical skills in tasting and evaluating coffee, essential for blending and quality control, amid the daily operations of a modest European coffee firm.[7][13] This hands-on apprenticeship in Alkmaar honed his sensory expertise and instilled an appreciation for fresh, high-quality beans, contrasting with the more theoretical approaches he later rejected.[13] World War II profoundly disrupted Peet's burgeoning career, as he was conscripted into forced labor for the German regime, working in a factory in Germany.[7][14] This period of wartime hardship exposed him to the severe shortages and logistical breakdowns in Europe's supply chains, including those for coffee imports, which limited access to premium varieties and forced reliance on substandard alternatives.[7] In the post-war years, Peet resumed his involvement in the trade by apprenticing at Lipton Tea in London, where he broadened his experience in importing and evaluating both tea and coffee amid ongoing European shortages.[15][14] These challenges, including rationing and the influx of lower-grade beans, deepened his frustration with the declining coffee quality across Europe, as consumers grew accustomed to inferior products that dulled palates and perpetuated poor standards.[14] By the early 1950s, Peet expanded his expertise through work in the European coffee and tea import sector, including a stint as a tea taster in Indonesia, where he encountered dark-roast traditions in regions like Java that influenced his preferences for bold, fresh brews.[15][7] This exposure to origin sources reinforced his commitment to sourcing premium beans, a principle born from his dissatisfaction with Europe's post-war coffee compromises.[14][7]

Immigration and American Beginnings

Arrival in the United States

Alfred Peet immigrated to the United States in 1955, leaving behind his work in the tea industry in Indonesia, a former Dutch colony, after earlier apprenticing with Lipton Tea in London following World War II.[1] He was also influenced by the decline in coffee quality across Europe after the war, where wartime shortages had led to the widespread use of inferior beans, resulting in a lasting loss of refined taste that had never fully recovered.[1] Upon arriving in San Francisco, Peet settled in the Bay Area and immediately entered the coffee trade by taking a position with the importer E.A. Johnson & Co., leveraging his family's expertise in roasting from the Netherlands.[15] This move marked his transition from tea to coffee, driven by his observations of the American market's potential despite its shortcomings.[1] Peet's first encounters with coffee in the United States were profoundly disappointing, as he found the prevalent brews to be of markedly low quality compared to the standards he knew from Europe.[2] "I came to the richest country in the world, so why are they drinking the lousiest coffee?" he later remarked, highlighting the stark contrast with the more discerning European traditions he had grown up with.[2] This dissatisfaction, echoing the post-war erosion of taste in Europe, fueled his determination to introduce higher standards to American consumers.[1]

Initial Employment and Observations

Upon immigrating to the United States in 1955, Alfred Peet secured employment at E.A. Johnson & Co., a prominent coffee importer in San Francisco, where he worked for the next decade in roles involving the importation of green coffee beans and sales to major roasters.[5][16] Peet's immersion in the U.S. coffee trade revealed stark shortcomings in the American market, where consumers routinely accepted inferior products such as stale, pre-ground beans and lightly roasted varieties that lacked depth and flavor.[12] Through frequent travels to West Coast ports to oversee green bean shipments, he identified significant sourcing gaps, including the prevalence of low-altitude, lower-quality beans from regions like Central America that failed to meet the standards he knew from Dutch importers.[5] Peet was particularly dismayed by the widespread tolerance for "lousiest coffee in the world," as he described it, with beans often sitting in warehouses for months before roasting, resulting in bland, oxidized brews that dominated supermarket shelves.[1][2] These experiences fueled Peet's growing frustration with the industry's constraints on innovation and quality, prompting him by the early 1960s to save capital from his salary while discreetly scouting potential locations for an independent venture.[17] He focused on the Berkeley area, attracted by its proximity to the University of California and a community he believed might appreciate higher standards, though his importer role limited deeper involvement until a 1965 layoff freed him to act.[18][17] This period of preparation marked the transition from observer to innovator, as Peet honed plans to import superior green beans and roast them fresh using his inherited Dutch methods.[19]

Founding and Development of Peet's Coffee

Opening the First Store

Alfred Peet opened the first Peet's Coffee & Tea store on April 1, 1966, at the corner of Vine and Walnut streets in Berkeley, California, near the University of California campus. The modest storefront served as both retail space and roasting facility, where Peet personally operated a manual roaster to produce his coffees on-site. This location in the emerging "Gourmet Ghetto" neighborhood positioned the store to attract local residents and students seeking alternatives to the mild, mass-produced coffees prevalent in America at the time.[3][20][1] The initial offerings centered on two dark-roasted blends made from high-quality Arabica beans, such as the French Roast and House Blend. In 1969, Peet introduced his bestselling Major Dickason's Blend. Major Dickason's Blend is a classic dark roast that is rich, smooth, and complex with notes of chocolate, spice, and earthy depth, without harsh bitterness; it is bolder and less bright than many medium roasts and not overly burnt. The same blend is available in decaf form, processed via the Swiss Water process to retain flavor. Peet emphasized selling whole beans to preserve freshness, grinding them only upon customer request, and provided a free cup of freshly brewed coffee with each pound purchased. These blends drew from Peet's experience with Indonesian roasting styles, resulting in richer, more robust flavors that contrasted sharply with the lighter roasts common in U.S. supermarkets. Early operations involved brewing fresh pots every 20 minutes, though much was discarded due to slow initial sales as customers adjusted to the stronger taste.[21][22][7][20][3] Customer engagement grew organically through word-of-mouth among Berkeley locals, including university students and faculty, without any paid advertising; Peet relied solely on the quality of his product to build loyalty. The store became a community hub where regulars, dubbed "Peetniks," gathered to discuss coffee and share enthusiasm for the artisanal approach. This grassroots momentum turned initial skepticism—many found the dark roasts too intense—into a dedicated following within months.[20][3][7] Early challenges included limited supply chains for premium green beans, as Peet sourced directly from importers to ensure quality, often facing inconsistencies in availability. Manual roasting processes demanded constant oversight to achieve even results, yet Peet committed to daily fresh batches, roasting small quantities to maintain peak flavor and aroma. These hands-on methods, while labor-intensive, underscored his philosophy of minimizing time between roast and consumption, laying the foundation for the store's reputation in the nascent specialty coffee scene.[1][7][12]

Roasting Innovations and Business Philosophy

Alfred Peet revolutionized coffee roasting in the United States by advocating for dark roasts that contrasted sharply with the light, mild profiles prevalent in American supermarkets at the time. Drawing from his experiences in Java, Indonesia, he emphasized deep, dark roasts to bring out caramelized sweetness, full body, and rich flavors by allowing the beans' natural oils to surface during the process.[7][19] These roasts were achieved through small-batch methods on a manual drum roaster, such as the Royal #5, enabling precise control over heat and timing to enhance the beans' inherent qualities without scorching.[19][23] Peet's sourcing principles centered on exclusivity and quality, focusing solely on high-altitude Arabica beans from premier origins like Sumatra and other select regions to ensure complex, vibrant profiles unsuitable for lesser varieties. He rejected Robusta beans outright, viewing them as inferior and unfit for premium coffee, and avoided pre-ground products to preserve freshness and flavor integrity.[24][1] This approach stemmed from his Dutch upbringing in the coffee trade and observations of subpar American imports, prioritizing beans that could withstand his rigorous roasting without losing character.[7][25] At the core of Peet's business philosophy was the mantra "drink better coffee," a call to elevate everyday consumption through education on freshness, proper brewing, and the nuances of high-quality beans. He personally instructed customers—often UC Berkeley students and locals—on techniques like grinding just before brewing to avoid staleness, fostering a discerning clientele known as "Peetniks."[19][25] To maintain unwavering control over quality, Peet eschewed franchising, opting for deliberate, hands-on expansion that preserved his perfectionistic standards.[19][7] In counterculture Berkeley, Peet's original store on Vine and Walnut streets evolved into a community hub, blending his formal, Old World demeanor—complete with ties, grocer's coats, and classical music—with the informal vibe of hippie and academic crowds. This setting not only sold coffee but cultivated a ritualistic appreciation, drawing patrons who embraced his rejection of mass-produced mediocrity amid the era's social ferment.[7][1]

Later Career and Retirement

Company Expansion and Sale

Following the success of the original Berkeley store, Peet's Coffee expanded within the San Francisco Bay Area during the 1970s under Alfred Peet's direct oversight. The second location opened in Menlo Park in 1971, followed by additional stores in the Bay Area, bringing the total to four outlets by 1979.[26][19][27] The company also developed a mail-order operation to distribute its freshly roasted beans to customers outside the immediate region, supplementing in-store sales.[28] Peet maintained a hands-on approach to all aspects of the business, personally training employees in roasting techniques to ensure consistency with his dark-roast philosophy. In 1971, he provided intensive instruction to three young Seattle-based entrepreneurs—Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl, and Gordon Bowker—for over two years, imparting knowledge of bean selection, blending, and roasting that would later influence their own venture.[4][7] This period of growth was not without difficulties; Peet encountered challenges in sourcing premium beans due to global supply constraints, including difficulties importing from regions like Indonesia, and faced emerging competition from other small roasters in the Bay Area.[7] His intense involvement in daily operations, from roasting to customer service, contributed to personal burnout and health concerns by the mid-1970s.[7] In 1979, amid these pressures, Peet sold the company to coffee industry veteran Sal Bonavita for an estimated $1–2 million.[7] He retained an initial advisory role, continuing as the primary coffee buyer and consultant to guide sourcing and roasting practices until 1983.[14][1] The transaction marked a shift toward professional management under Bonavita, who expanded operations while preserving Peet's core emphasis on quality control and fresh roasting, though the founder's direct influence began to wane.[7]

Post-Retirement Activities

After selling Peet's Coffee & Tea in 1979, Alfred Peet retained a brief advisory role as the company's coffee buyer until 1983, after which he gradually withdrew from active involvement in the business due to his preference for a private life.[14][1] In his later years, Peet relocated to the countryside town of Ashland, Oregon, where he lived quietly and occasionally consulted for other coffee companies until a few years before his death.[6][14] He largely avoided the public spotlight, focusing instead on personal pursuits.[1] Peet was married and had one daughter, Judy McCall, as well as two grandchildren, Miles and Amelia; he also had a sister, Gertrude, living in Amsterdam.[29] In retirement, he enjoyed outdoor activities such as hiking, biking, and swimming, along with traveling and attending local theater and chamber music concerts.[29] Peet died on August 29, 2007, at the age of 87 in his home in Ashland, Oregon, from cancer.[2][29]

Legacy and Influence

Impact on Specialty Coffee Movement

Alfred Peet played a pivotal role in pioneering the standards of specialty coffee in the United States during the 1960s, when the dominant coffee culture revolved around mass-produced, light-roasted beans sold in supermarkets. By opening his first store in Berkeley, California, in 1966, Peet introduced freshly roasted, dark-roasted beans sourced from high-quality origins, emphasizing small-batch roasting to preserve flavor and aroma—a stark contrast to the pre-ground, canned varieties prevalent at the time. This approach not only elevated consumer expectations for coffee quality but also laid the groundwork for the second wave of coffee culture, which prioritized artisanal preparation over industrial convenience.[19][30][31] Peet's influence extended through direct mentorship, particularly to the founders of Starbucks—Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl, and Gordon Bowker—who learned roasting techniques from him and initially sold Peet's beans in their Seattle store starting in 1971. Peet encouraged them to develop their own roasting operations by 1973, fostering a knowledge transfer that propelled Starbucks' early growth. In 1984, Baldwin and Bowker acquired Peet's Coffee, which Peet had sold in 1979, further intertwining the two brands and disseminating Peet's philosophy of quality sourcing and roasting expertise. Bowker, who co-founded Redhook Brewery and served on Peet's board until 2008, died on August 27, 2025, at age 82.[32][33][34][35] This mentorship inspired the broader third-wave coffee movement, which built on Peet's model by focusing on coffee origins, sustainability, and direct farmer relationships to enhance traceability and ethical practices.[32][33][34] As a catalyst for the specialty coffee movement, Peet's served as a blueprint for independent roasters nationwide, promoting an ethos of education, community engagement, and rejection of mass production in favor of personalized customer experiences. Peet's stores became hubs for coffee enthusiasts, where staff taught brewing methods and bean selection, cultivating a culture that valued craftsmanship over commoditization. This model encouraged the proliferation of similar artisanal operations, transforming coffee from a mere beverage into a connoisseur's pursuit.[36][37] The quantitative impact of Peet's innovations is evident in the explosive growth of the U.S. specialty coffee sector, which evolved from a niche market in the 1960s to a $47.8 billion industry by 2024, with a projected compound annual growth rate of 9.5% through 2030. Consumption data underscores this shift: by 2025, 46% of American adults reported drinking specialty coffee in the past day, an 84% increase since 2011, reflecting the widespread adoption of quality-focused standards traceable to Peet's foundational influence.[38][39][40]

Recognition and Cultural Mentions

Alfred Peet is widely recognized as the "grandfather of specialty coffee" for his pioneering role in elevating coffee quality in the United States.[25][2] This moniker reflects his influence on the craft coffee movement, with tributes continuing after his death in 2007.[41] In recognition of his contributions, the Specialty Coffee Association established the Alfred Peet Passionate Cup Award, an annual honor for individuals demonstrating exceptional dedication to coffee craftsmanship.[42] The award, first given in 2014, has been bestowed on figures such as Sunalini Menon for her work in Indian coffee education and Jim Reynolds, Peet's Roastmaster Emeritus, for his decades of roasting expertise.[43][44] Following Peet's passing, Peet's Coffee & Tea marked its 50th anniversary in 2016 with commemorative events, including a limited-edition Big Bang medium roast blend honoring his original roasting philosophy and customer surprises like discounted coffee at original prices.[19][45] Peet's legacy has been featured prominently in media portrayals of coffee history. Mark Pendergrast's 1999 book Uncommon Grounds: The History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World dedicates its narrative to Peet, describing him as the "coffee curmudgeon supreme" who taught America to appreciate dark-roasted beans.[7] In 2016, Sprudge published a detailed biography, "The Man Who Taught The World To Drink Coffee," drawing from Dutch author Jasper Houtman's book The Coffee Visionary: The Life and Legacy of Alfred Peet, which chronicles his journey from the Netherlands to Berkeley.[7] Documentaries have also highlighted him, including the 2008 film Coffee Culture USA, which includes a rare interview with Peet discussing his roasting innovations.[46] Peet's influence extends to popular culture, where he embodies the roots of modern coffee enthusiasm. He appears in the 2023 History Channel episode "Clash of the Coffee" from the series The Food That Built America, which explores his mentorship of Starbucks founders and the rivalry that shaped gourmet coffee chains.[47] His story has inspired indirect nods in food media, such as podcasts like Gastropod's 2022 episode "Déjà-Brew," which credits Peet with sparking the American specialty coffee revolution depicted in broader cultural narratives of caffeine-driven innovation.[48] These mentions underscore his enduring place in depictions of coffee's transformation from commodity to cultural staple.

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