
A forming espresso shot can mesmerize barista Samantha Brandvein. âIt starts out dark, then gets all caramelly, and then at the end it will start to blond,â she says. âItâs so beautiful to watch.â
Customers commend Brandvein, a senior business major at șù«ÍȚÊÓÆ”, for her espresso, and sheâs even entered a barista competition. Although she worked as a barista, making and serving coffee, in high school, it wasnât until being trained at Caffe Ladro in Seattle that she started to feel like an expert. âAs soon as you learn whatâs actually happening in that coffee, you gain some control.â
After graduation, Brandvein will continue to work at her current employer, Cherry Street Coffee House, with new responsibilities as director of coffee. Itâs the perfect position for the self-described coffee nerd. While many Seattle Pacific students and alumni work as baristas before, during, and/or after graduation, the job may look like just a blip on their rĂ©sumĂ©s. Nonetheless, they find, many of the skills gained apply to all kinds of different professions.

Jin Hee Lee creates a pour-over drink at the MiiR Flagship store.
Seattle Pacific senior Jin Hee Lee doesnât have much free time. Not only does she work 15â20 hours per week as a barista, but she is also a full-time art major with a photography emphasis, the art director of the chapel program, and a tuba player with the SPU brass ensemble.
âIâve learned how to say no, set limits, and plan ahead,â she says.
According to Jordan Grant, assistant vice president of enrollment operations and student financial services, that is a benefit of working part time as a student. âWhile it may seem counterintuitive to work while carrying a full school load, research shows that students who work less than 20 hours per week are good at managing their time and do better academically,â Grant says.
As an artist, Lee is very detail-oriented, which she says has paid off as a barista. âYou have to get the right amount of grams of coffee, and time it for the correct amount of seconds,â she says. âItâs more meticulous than itâs presented to the general public.â

Jin Hee Lee works as a barista at the
MiiR flagship store, a
company founded by
Bryan Pape '07.
Begun as a water bottle
company, MiiRâs product
line now includes bikes
and bags. The flagship
store and cafe showcases
the companyâs mission
to contribute to clean
water projects through
business.
Lee works in a specialty coffee shop that only serves traditional Italian coffee drinks, and donates a portion of its proceeds to clean water projects. She constantly explains the mission of the company, and the difference between a macchiato, cortado, and latte. âIt has given me a place to practice educating people in a quick way,â she says.
Not all students recognize the expertise they gain aside from making the perfect cup of coffee, and sometimes students hesitate to put their barista experience on their résumé or mention it in an interview. This is a mistake, according to SPU Career Counselor Patty Farmer.
âStudents learn so much from showing up on time each day, interacting with clients, and coming up with solutions to issues with customers or co-workers,â says Farmer, who works in SPUâs Center for Career and Calling. âWe help students realize that there are a lot of valuable skills that translate.â
Samantha Brandvien
plans to keep building her
career at Cherry Street Coffee
following graduation.
Lindsey Maples Dahlstrom â09 calls the three years she worked as a barista at Simply Desserts in Fremont her graduate school, because of what she learned about herself and others.
âYouâre talking to other people and you want them to be happy,â she says. âWhen someone says something rude, it affects you. Now, Iâm super aware of what Iâm saying and how Iâm saying it.â
She and her husband, Noah, dreamed of buying their own coffee shop for years, and finally started Argonaut Espresso in Leavenworth, Washington, in 2014. Argonaut is a walk-up stand, dwarfed by the Cascade mountains in the background â one of the reasons it was recently named one of the most unique coffee shops in Washington by onlyinyourstate.com.
The shop focuses on two things: serving the best coffee in town and âmaking sure customers are having a good day.â
Baristas are allowed a unique window into peopleâs lives, such as the time when one of Brandveinâs regular customers broke down in tears because she had learned that her childhood home was consumed by the Colorado wildfires. âShe had always been short with me before that,â says Brandvein, who went to the other side of the counter to give the woman a hug.
Working as a barista at Seattleâs Macrina Bakery taught 2013 philosophy and theology double major Jacob Howell how to stand up for himself in his first ministry job.
As a director of family and youth ministry, he once had a mother ask him to confront a youth group student who she believed was teaching her daughter to use bad language. But from Howellâs perspective, the daughter was the instigator. âI had to explain that to the mother very gently,â he says, adding that it was an art he picked up from interactions with customers who felt he had made the wrong drink.

Dahlstromâs Argonaut Espresso has a stunning Cascade
mountain view.
âSometimes with coffee, you just bite the bullet,â he says, âbut sometimes you can say tactfully, âWell, you did order a cappuccino, which has half foam, and thatâs why thereâs half foam in it.ââ
After graduating from SPU with a business degree, Elisa Vatn â13 landed a barista job at Starbucks with the hope of moving up to corporate. Although she later found a recruiting position at Amazon.com, her Starbucks gig prepped her for life at a big company.
Vatn was a hostess at Rayâs Boathouse in Ballard for years, and quickly discovered how much more regulated large corporations can be. Starbucks expected all baristas to move their hands on the espresso machine in a certain way to avoid accidents, and all drinks were supposed to taste the same at every single location.
âYou have to work with other people and abide by company policy at all times, but if a problem arises, you have to figure out how to deal with it,â Vatn says.
Now that Vatn is in operations engineering recruiting at Amazon.com, she says that sheâs used the experience to her advantage, navigating complex systems and making use of data to help inform her work. Vatn believes that everyone would benefit from customer service experience. âYou always have some kind of customer in your job whatever you do.â