Owner Alyza Bohbot of Alakef Coffee Roasters has topped the cup with her 2015-launched City Girl Coffee of Minneapolis.
"City Girl accounts for most of the growth of the company," Bohbot said of the reinvigorated firm that she expects to top $2 million in revenue this year. "Alakef is still the majority of the company. But we will grow [revenue] about 25 percent this year.
"Our goal always is profitable growth without sacrificing our core values and priorities for our [14] employees, customers, and our commitment to quality and environmental sustainability."
Bohbot this month moved City Girl from her home to an office-warehouse-coffee bar in a renovated northeast Minneapolis building dedicated to small-food companies.
She is off to a good, three-year start as a coffee entrepreneur who has lit the fire under a reborn family business.
Bohbot, 32, also is the embodiment of the Minnesota specialty-foods movement that is growing much faster than the overall grocery market. She has emerged as a leader among women in her industry. And she's taking the risk of her life.
And Bohbot is enjoying reinvigorating a business started by her immigrant parents in Duluth in 1990.
Nessim, 70, and Deborah Bohbot, 65, emigrated from Israel to Duluth in the early 1980s. Deborah worked for the Duluth schools. Nessim, who grew up in Morocco, started Alakef in the basement. He wanted to introduce a darker, richer coffee.