Skip to main content

Feel Good Friday- Grounds&Hounds

Dogs and coffee? Not two things we usually put together but two things we really, really love. So does Jordan Karcher, the founder of Grounds & Hounds, a coffee company that supports no kill rescues around the nation. 20% of all of their proceeds are donated to their rescue partners working to find forever homes to man’s best friends.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

We rang up Jordan to hear more about this feel good company:

Where are you based?

Indiana of all places! I started the company when I was getting my MBA at Notre Dame. We are based in South Bend but we do all of our roasting in Minneapolis and have an office in Los Angeles as well. We are big believers in the saying: start with what you have where you are. It’s nice to have less overhead so we can be more risky.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

We are big fans of companies who are not running to open in New York and Los Angeles. What is your background?

I worked in the wine industry in Sonoma and then I moved to Southern California to work in the spirits industry. I have a weird passion for beverage brands. I can’t explain it. My own personal outlet was always coffee so I spent a lot of time in L.A. during the coffee boom about five years ago. I learned about the supply chain and sourcing. I was 25 at the time and left to get my masters degree.

I loved the learning aspect of the MBA but once I saw the direction it was going (working for a big company) I figured I could make my own impact and wake up much more motivated. I have always been passionate about animals and animal rescue. I am confident I can make more of an impact – beyond just spending time and labor at a shelter.

I was looking at what other organizations were doing and wondered where I could integrate animal welfare into daily life. ‘Coffee and Dog Rescue’ was kind of my ‘aha’ moment. I checked out market sizes, did some surveys and I found a lot of people with a similar mindset.

So we started tweaking the coffee and then focused on the branding. We get a lot of attention for our packaging and design. We integrated our love of animals into that and launched 365 days ago on March 23rd.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Happy one year anniversary! How did you find the organic coffee makers to work with?

My background is not roasting. So I found someone who has done roasting for 25-30 years. We wanted someone to bring some craft into it. As for finding the bean, it’s a lot of meetings and a lot of coffee! I spent a fair amount of time on the green side looking for fair trade and organic. Our key regions are Latin America and South America and we have some from Africa and Indonesia. We are always looking for the best. That is a key thing for us. We are a coffee company but we don’t talk about the coffee a lot. We let the customers talk up the coffee and we focus more on the social angle.

How did you find the partner organizations to work with? I see you have ones from Silicon Valley and Charleston to Chicago and Kansas City.

Those are our flagships but we are growing partnerships every day. We are still small so the logistics are tricky; we try to automate it as much as possible with key cities around the country.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

What’s next?

Keeping our goal on the animal rescue but also learning how to prevent the animals from entering the shelters. We would like to focus on finding placement in forever homes and the core issues for animal overpopulation.

Grounds&Hounds coffee is available on their online store.

Editors' Recommendations

Cator Sparks
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Cator Sparks was the Editor-in-Chief of The Manual from its launch in 2012 until 2018. Previously, Cator was covering…
How to lose weight: Eat these foods that help you feel fuller longer
Add these foods to your meal plan
spinach and avocado on toast

Fad diets were once all the rage. Want to know how to lose weight? Standard advice centered around creating a massive calorie deficit by not eating (or barely eating). Thankfully, those days are behind us. Weight loss isn't about not eating anything at all. Generally, no foods are off the menu — unless you're allergic or they cause issues like severe GI discomfort (or you simply no longer wish to eat them).

Instead, losing weight is about consuming foods that keep you satisfied and energized for longer, so you're not tempted to consume too many calories later. Dropping pounds can be a delicious endeavor if you know what to add to your grocery list (and, later, plate). Let's indulge in the best foods for weight loss.

Read more
Dry farm wines: Organic, sugar-free wines you won’t feel guilty about
Are dry farm wines too good to be true?
Hands toasting with red wine

If you love to drink wine but seek a cleaner, healthier option, dry farm wines might be right for you. This sugar-free, organic, and additive-free wine may sound too good to be true -- yet it exists. Dry, warm wines have identified the major problems within today's wine industry and sought to create a wine that is both delicious and guilt-free. Plus, they even offer a wine subscription membership so you can keep the natural wine flowing! Let's dive in and explore what this new "healthy" wine is all about.

Problems with the wine industry
The wine shelves at your local wine store might be full of different enticing labels and unique packaging, yet the majority of these brands contain significant levels of pesticides. Only 5% of all vineyards in the world are organically farmed, leaving the vast majority of consumer wines with harmful pesticides that most drinkers aren't even aware of. Grapes are consistently part of the "dirty dozen," an annual list by the Environmental Working Group that notes the produce that contains the highest level of pesticides. These pesticides used on grapes often include fungicides and insecticides, which ultimately end up in our delicious wine.

Read more
Our favorite vodka you can get under $25 is legitimately good (we promise)
This isn't the cheap vodka you drank in college
Shelves of vodka

In the spirits world, vodka really doesn’t get the respect it deserves. Many drinkers believe that vodka literally tastes like nothing at all. It’s bland and flavorless when made well and harsh and tastes like hand sanitizer when it’s not. These ideas are not only misguided and outdated, but they are also patently wrong.

Vodka is not flavorless. While many distillers craft their vodka to taste neutral so that it can be used as a base for your favorite cocktails, depending on the terroir, the ingredients used (wheat, potato, and other grains), and the distillation and filtering can have a major impact on the aroma and flavor. Corn-based vodka might have a sweeter flavor than a starchier, potato-based vodka. There’s a ton of nuance in the vodka world, and sometimes it takes a trained nose and palate (or at least a lot of tastings) to find them.

Read more