Roasting Plantâs UK CEO Jamie Robertson on launching a Mayfair store and his mission to build a British coffee empire
Words: Will Moffitt
Like any coffee connoisseur worth his salt Jamie Robertson switches his fix according to his mood. If heâs craving something fruity heâll opt for Roasting Plantâs Ethiopian beans; for something nuttier itâs a just-roasted Guatemalan. When the sun burns a little brighter heâll turn to a flash-chilled just-roasted Ugandan over ice to cool things down.
âMany people have learned to accept stale coffee thatâs flat and bitter as part of their everyday routine, but we want to disrupt this mind set,â Roasting Plantâs UK CEO tells me. As someone that has been sampling Roasting Plant coffee for a few months I can confirm that the brandâs output is neither stale nor flat nor bitter.
Nestled on Mayfairâs South Molton Street which Robertson describes as âan iconic cut-throughâ for shoppers, office workers and residents âto find respite from the crowds of Oxford and Bond Streetâ, Roasting Plantâs new store is an artisanal coffee haven that blends beans to suit all manner of tastes. From full bodied and bold to milder and sweeter varieties, the store looks a lot like Willy Wonkaâs chocolate factory due to its snaking pipes and steaming contraptions that turn mounds of beans into caffeinated magic.
Founded in 2007 by American entrepreneur Mike Caswell who invented a device that blended raw coffee from scratch in his garage, Roasting Plant has grown from a small shop in New Yorkâs Lower East Side to a dual national business that sources its beans from places as remote as the slopes of the snow-capped Rwenzori Mountains (along Ugandaâs western border) to the Gayo Highlands in Sumatra.
Roasting Plantâs model favours freshness and flavour: by grinding, blending and roasting coffee in store through Caswellâs machine (the Javabot) customers get an artisan-quality cup crafted in half the usual time.
As Robertson puts it: âThis ability to offer exceptional taste at speed, at scale, through automation, is where we really bridge the gap between the convenience of large high-street coffee chains and the high-quality taste traditionally only offered by small independent shops.â
The company launched in the UK in 2019 and has five London-based stores, but it has grand ambitions to expand its coffee empire and to establish itself as a staple brand on British high streets. That means launching over 200 locations within the next five years.
âWe are currently in five central London locations, including Mayfair, so this is a big target to set looking at where we are now, but one that we feel is achievable,â Robertson says.
âQuality speaks for itself and the amount of people who grab a coffee as part of their daily routine is huge, so thereâs a massive amount of both consumer demand and the potential to really shake up the industry,” he adds. “The fact weâve seen such success in London already speaks for itself.â
Itâs a blueprint backed up by hard data. Recent research suggests that the UKâs cafĂŠ market is expected to grow by 14 per cent in 2022, with independent coffee shops and cafes alone expected to see large growth of 25 per cent this year. Due to the emergence of healthier lifestyles and an increased focus on supply chain transparency and experiential consumers Roasting Plant looks well placed to expand its coffee empire and capitalise on a market that is full of beans.
Roasting Plant Coffee can be found at 46 S Molton St, London W1K 5RX
www.roastingplant.co.uk




