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New coffee shop at Spanish Springs? Any info?
We saw a new coffee shop in progress, right on the square at Spanish Springs. Does anyone know if it's open yet? Anyone tried it? Thanks all,
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In Dunkin’s old location. Looks the same inside for about 4 months. It’s a chain, am surprised it taking so long to complete. Not sure how it’s going to go over, if one can’t sit and have useless needless conversations for hours on one cup of coffee.
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It's going to be a "CFS" (Coffee For the Soul) coffeeshop. I just checked their website, their menu shows a medium drip coffee at over $4.00, and their food options start at $15 and go up to $20, for just - protein bowls with steak?
I might try a cup of coffee, once, just to say I've tried it. I did the same when Foxtail showed up next to Tropical Smoothie up on 441. But if I'm paying $20 for steak I need wait service and something other than potato chips for a side. |
Starbucks was in that location before Dunkin' and failed miserably. Residents did not want to spend $$$$ for a cup of coffee. It will be interesting to see what happens with this third attempt.
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CFS, coffee is definitely a step up from Foxtail, but I don’t think SS will be a good fit. Middleton may have been a better choice. After eating in three different CFS, it’s not about the $$, the food product became inconsistent, for a chain that’s unusual. Coffee isn’t unique, definitely better than fast food coffee. I usually get specialty drinks from Starbucks. There are 3 coffee machines on my counter, one was close to $2,000. Yet here I sit with freshly ground Blue Mountain, and Kona in two French Press, waiting for sunrise. |
Starbucks did not fail at that location. The villages increased their rent. It was very popular..as was Dunkin
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And yet Sumter Landing Starbucks is hopping. First thing my daughter wants when she visits.
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Coffee
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I don't think that CFS will last a year. Too much "gourmet" garbage. They'd be better off just selling coffee, tea, (hot and iced versions) and lots of doughnuts like Dunkin used to do.
But to be honest, I think that it's the rent that is charged that makes the main challenge to surviving in the villages. |
I wish that they would’ve just opened a good donut shop. Leesburg is just about the only place where you can get a good variety of fresh made donuts.
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Thanks for update. When this Spanish Springs coffee shop opens, I'll try to get over there and give you a review.
Thanks to posters! |
Let's start a pool on how long this place lasts. We all kick in and pick a closing date. The closest to that date wins the pot. This is a matter of 'how long,' not 'if.'
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CFS serves breakfast, which is reasonable. Lunch and dinner are the same menu. The fresh items at times looked day old, after a few months from opening. If the owner was there food and drinks were good, not great for the $$. But stand alone staff was disappointing, which is why I wonder if SS clientele will frequent routinely to make new business successful |
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If a Krispy Kreme and a Tim Horton's moved in to the area, no coffee shop paying Developer rents in Spanish Springs would have a chance against them. |
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Once in a great while I'll get a Pike's roast at Starbucks. Like, if it's my birthday week and they give me a free sandwich. I'll get the cuppa mostly out of guilt since I never go if I'm not getting free stuff. Back home we had Willoughby's, they roasted on-site every day. Low-temp slow-roast, which is how it keeps it from getting that bitter over-acidity burnt taste. On Tuesdays they'd feature Sumatra Mandheling and that's when I'd stock up if I was running low. It's a medium-light roasted coffee with a deep nutty base that lingers if you put just a touch of sugar in the cup. Before that, after college, I worked for the Coffee Connection in Boston as a "back-bar." Mostly I did the fresh squeezed juices, whipped the whipped-cream (we made chocolate whipped cream fresh every day), and prepared the hot sandwiches. Someone else handled the coffee and tea drinks, and all coffee except for espresso drinks was served in a french press. It was a small local chain, maybe 4 stores total, and they roasted their beans as well in their main store. |
Just checked their menu. You got to be kidding. $20 sandwiches! Who is going to pay those prices? Not me.
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Or an apron for $150
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2. During construction, LSL attracted wealthier buyers from other states, primarily New York. The homes were selling like hotcakes similar to post covid and home prices soared. Nearly 2.5 - 3 times the cost of homes prior. A business like Starbucks needs to be located in a wealthier area. When they saw an opportunity, they hopped on it. 3. I believe another poster explained there are several coffee shops within a mile or two from Spanish Springs. At that time, the cost of their coffee remained relatively cheap. At sit down restaurants, coffee was free with a meal. Starbucks $4 -$5 for a cup of coffee was absurd to most. 4. Every decade of retirees are different than those before. The early 2000 retirees were not yuppies. Most worked in factories, steel mills, etc. They had no interest in expensive items. 5. Much much smaller population than now. The Villages was similar to Mayberry- one small police station, one gas station, one grocery store etc. Folks primarily stayed home at night. Some only went to the square when they had guests. I think you have the gist. The Villages was a much different place than today. This is the reason some complain about the housing explosion. They miss the simple times. |
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