Riddle me this Bliss Fans: What do ice cream and fashion have in common?
More than you might think, actually.

Riddle me this Bliss Fans: What do ice cream and fashion have in common?
More than you might think, actually.

It is no accident that bliss is in our name. For us, the word bliss is synonymous with joyful living, healthy choices, and blissful experiences.
Coconut Bliss is made with simple ingredients of the highest integrity and is suitable for people with many different dietary needs and preferences. This is important to us because it is important to our customers.
Recently we were featured in an article in WholeFoods Magazine titled “Treating Your Customers”, about natural desserts. You can read the full article here http://sweetsfromtheearth.com/blog/?p=47. It was a great opportunity to share about our products!

You know that saying, “think globally, act locally”? Nothing illustrates those words more clearly than the 2012 Olympic Trials happening right here, right now in Eugene, Oregon.
Here in the lush Willamette Valley, we place great value on our local community and economy. We thrive on the seemingly limitless creative energy that manifests itself in so many different ways; from the dozens of local craft breweries to our historic Saturday market and an ever-evolving art scene. We are fortunate to call such a dynamic locale home.


Did you know that today, May 14th is World Fair Trade Day? To celebrate we are giving away a basket full of Coconut Bliss Goodies: 2 Free Pints, 1 Water Bottle, and the Diana Stobo smoothie book "Naked Bliss". Leave us a comment on this post along with a way to contact you if you are our winner, we'll randomly draw a winner on Friday May 20th at noon PST.

Well this is a tricky subject, being an efficient perfectionist who feels that humans take the world and her resources a little too much for granted--I have wandered the road of an eco warrior for many years now. When I was a wee sprog (little nipper, rambunctious tyke, or to use American diction- 5 or six years old) and about the height of my mother’s knees, I used to ask why people were allowed more than one car per family, and why roads weren’t all built underground, leaving paths through the forest for us to walk through leisurely. Perhaps I was lucky enough to be brought up in the countryside before the big commute (in the UK) of the eighties and nineties got into full swing...