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Baked, Brewed, Beautiful

Why Coffee and Kringle Are the Flavors of Home in Wisconsin

in Baked, Brewed, Coffee & Travel Stories, Food & Coffee Combos, Small Towns on 12/10/25

How one cup of coffee and a slice of kringle always take me home again.

Overhead view of Wisconsin kringle and a cup of coffee on a table, styled as a cozy breakfast at home.

☕ Quick Sip Summary

  • How Wisconsin’s small-town flavors—kringle, local roasters, and bakery stops—create a sensory ritual worth traveling for.
  • The nostalgic power of coffee culture in Racine and Madison, and how it shapes each return home.
  • A look inside the places and traditions that make this region an overlooked food-and-coffee destination.

Coming Home Through Coffee & Pastry

There are two things I look forward to every time I fly home to Wisconsin: seeing my family and reconnecting with the food traditions that shaped my childhood. Without fail, the moment I walk through the front door, my mom has a kringle waiting on the counter and a bag of freshly ground Blue Heeler coffee from Colectivo Coffee sitting beside it.

It’s a pairing that has quietly become the scent and flavor of “home”—warm, buttery pastry and bold, roasty coffee, always served in the same familiar kitchen. These little rituals have followed me across every move—California, Philadelphia, Seattle—and reconnect me instantly to where I’m from.

O&H Danish Bakery: A Ritual of Its Own


Growing up in Racine, O&H Danish Bakery was woven into nearly every celebration, holiday, and ordinary Saturday morning. The location we visited most was the Durand Avenue bakery—our family stop long before kringle became “famous.”

Today, there are several O&H locations, but that Durand spot still holds my nostalgia. Now that I come home once or twice a year, I visit the newer Highway 20 bakery—closer to my parents’ house—to wander through, sip a drip coffee (always Blue Heeler on rotation), and admire the rows of glossy pastries behind the glass.

And the kringle? Yes—it really is award-winning. Racine is the official “Kringle Capital of the World,” and kringle is Wisconsin’s state pastry. O&H, Lehmann’s Bakery, and several small local shops carry the tradition, but O&H is the one tied to my earliest memories.

My family’s favorites:

  • Cherry (my mom’s)
  • Apple (mine)
  • Wisconsin Kringle — Door County cherries, cranberries, and cream cheese
  • Blueberry (Christopher’s)

Lehmann’s Bakery: Our Fall Tradition

Another place that holds a special spot in my story is Lehmann’s Bakery, especially their old Spring Street location. When Christopher and I were newly married, we would visit every fall curling up on their cozy couches, sipping hot coffee, sampling free kringle slices, and soaking in that unmistakable Wisconsin bakery warmth.

Lehmann's Bakery at Christmas time  Sign at Spring Street location

That location has since closed, but the Sturtevant shop continues the tradition. It doesn’t have quite the same intimate feel, but the heart of Lehmann’s—the kringle, the community, the comfort—is still there.

A Sweet Slice of Memory

The kringle nostalgia runs deep for me—so deep that at my wedding, instead of a traditional cake, we served kringle to all our guests.

My mom somehow transported a whole assortment from Wisconsin to Santa Barbara, and it remains one of my favorite details from the day.

Wedding dessert table with a sign reading “A Taste of Wisconsin’s Award-Winning Kringle” surrounded by flowers and pastries.

I’ve tried making kringle myself, but the technique, patience, and generations-old bakery secrets are something I’m happy to leave to the experts.

A Cup That Carries Me Back: Colectivo’s Blue Heeler

My love for Blue Heeler actually began during my years living in Madison. Colectivo’s Capitol Square café was a staple—my roommates and I meeting there to study, talk, unwind, and watch the farmer’s market unfold across the street.

Photo Courtesy of Colectivo Coffee

Now, when I’m visiting my parents, O&H grinds the beans for us, and we drink Blue Heeler all week long. Even pre-ground, it’s delicious—and tasting it in my parents’ kitchen feels like slipping back into a time I didn’t realize I missed.

It’s amazing how a smell, a sip, or a familiar bakery box can bring an entire city, season, or chapter of your life back in an instant.

Why These Small Rituals Matter

Every trip home reminds me that travel doesn’t always have to be sweeping or elaborate. Sometimes it’s as simple as:

  • A favorite local coffee blend
  • A pastry tied to childhood
  • A bakery that has watched your family grow
  • A return to places you once loved in a different season of life

These small sensory markers—the flake of pastry, the sharp smell of beans, the creak of an old bakery door—are their own form of travel, grounding and expanding us at the same time.

If You Go (or If You’re Curious): Places to Explore

  • O&H Danish Bakery — Iconic kringle, rotating flavors, Colectivo drip coffee.
  • Lehmann’s Bakery — Cozy community bakery with deep Racine roots.
  • Colectivo Coffee — Blue Heeler and seasonal blends worth seeking out.

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Cheyenne Elwell

HI, I’M CHEYENNE.

Cheyenne Elwell, ASJA is a travel and lifestyle writer covering coffee culture, small towns, and slow travel. Her work explores how people experience place through everyday rituals like coffee, meals, and quiet moments. She has written for Business Insider and The Spruce Eats.

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