Saturday, December 26, 2009
Happy Day Off Day
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Colombian Coffees
Monday, December 7, 2009
Colombia Chat
Monday, November 30, 2009
Colombia Report
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Concordia
Wanted you to know two things.
I donated $1000 to the community center project. $250 of that was proceeds from the races Kari and I put on this year. I hope we can think of another fund raiser to give a little more to the cause. They were very happy for the donation.
Second, I'm speaking at the Philbrook on Jan 14 at 530p. It's an event called Green Drinks and everyone is invited. Please put it on your calender.
Third, I'm going to try to smuggle 30 pounds of El Boton natural on the plane. Well, smuggle might be a bit of a strong word...
Monday, November 2, 2009
Magazines
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
What a Wonderful World...
Book 1 is Annie Dillard's "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek." This is a book to read with a dictionary--but even if you don't have one at hand, it's completely fascinating! It's a chronicle of one year in which Annie Dillard lived by Tinker Creek in Virginia. Every day she went out to observe nature--bringning home praying mantis egg sacs, learning to stalk muskrats, etc. The book is as much about the beauty of nature as it is about its horrors. She spends alot of time on parasites--because they make up the majority of the world's organisms! And she reflects on what it means to live in a world that is both so wonderful and so painful. I learned so much about nature reading this book, I came away wondering how it's so easy to be 'an adult'--to see things mundanely. When in reality, it should be possible to live an entire life with "a child's curiousity" because things are so complex we'll never know it all! Here is a quote from my favorite paragraph in the book, and this is the most obvious way the book connects with coffee :) Annie talks about finding a wounded butterfly in a gas-station parking lot. She coaxes it onto her finger. "The closing of his wings fanned an almost imperceptible redolence at my face, and I leaned closer. I could barely scent a sweetness, I could almost name it...fireflies, sparklers--honey-suckle. He smelled like honeysuckle; I couldn't believe it. I knew that many male butterflies exuded distinctive odors from special scent glands, but I thought that only laboratory instruments could detect those odors compounded of many, many butterflies. I had read a list of the improbable scents of butterflies: sandalwood, chocolate, heliotrope, sweet pea...."
So, maybe you start out thinking, "I want to be able to smell the different aromas in my coffee. To move beyond thinking coffee smells like coffee, tastes like coffee, end of story." And as you start developing your ability to smell and taste subtleties in coffee, you're developing skills that can be used to make your chocolate-consuming, wine-tasting, cigar-smoking...and even your butterfly-holding experiences more rich and complete!
The next two books are about chocolate, but they might have to be kept for a later post. But here is a quote from one, "The Chocolate Connoisseur" by Chloe Doutre-Roussel. This is a woman who has spent admirable amounts of time and money--ever since she was just 13 years old!!--learning to taste chocolate scientifically, recording her observations, etc. Chloe writes, about learning how to smell aromas in chocolate: "Experience the scents of wet weather. If you're in the woods, smell the soil and the leaves. Breathe in the odor of a tree trunk. When you go to the market, take a sniff of each basket of mushrooms, herbs, fruit, and flowers. Do all this and you will rediscover the potential of your sense of smell. We all have the ability, but many of us have forgotten it." See? all those things--the mushrooms, the herbs, the weather, coffee <3 --all help us to enjoy each other! But they're all so different. even a chocolate that tastes like mushrooms...is nothing like eating a mushroom!
Okay, very quickly, the third book is Mort Rosenblum's "Chocolate: A Bittersweet Saga of Dark and Light." But more on that, and chocolate itself, later. :) Hope you all have a wonderful day! Oh, final question: What are some of your favorite chocolates?
Monday, October 12, 2009
El Boton Natural
Monday, October 5, 2009
Thursday, September 24, 2009
New Coffees
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Kenya
Friday, September 11, 2009
Follow-up to The Perfect Cappuccino
Watching it reminded me of a book I read awhile ago (actually, long enough ago that I no longer remember it vividly, so this is going to be a 'book review' in a very superficial sense...): Starbucked by Taylor Clark. It's at the Central Library. If you watched the movie and are curious to learn more about this omnipresent company for whatever reason (I read it to fuel an anti-Starbucks bias, although it is a fairly balanced book), you should check it out! Since I don't remember anything, here is a trivia quote from the back of the book: "Americans now drink so much coffee that scientists have detected caffeine in many of the nation's rivers, lakes, and bays--and even in treated drinking water." Interesting--
Secondly, if you watched the movie you'll remember when Amy showed clips from old coffee commercials. Here are some Blues lyrics written by Mississippi John Hurt, copyrighted in 1963...back in the days where prepackaged coffee was the only option. *Shudder* They're in the same vein as those old commercials: "This is the 'Coffee Blues,' I likes a certain brand--Maxwell's House--it's good till the last drop, just like it says on the can. I used to have a girl cookin' a good Maxwell House. She moved away. Some said to Memphis and some said to Leland, but I found her. I wanted her to cook me some good Maxwell's House. You understand, if I can get me just a spoonful of Maxwell's House, do me much good as two or three cups this other coffee..."
Don't know if that was originally written as a commerical for Maxwell's House, or if the songwriter really did love Maxwell's enough to include it in a song, but...there you have it. :)
Finally, an interaction-question: A personal "goal" is to learn how to say "I like Coffee" in as many languages as possible. If you are able to say/write "I like coffee" in a foreign tongue, please share! I think in German it's "Der Kaffee schmeckt mir gut"--literally, the coffee tastes good to me.
Thanks, and I hope you all have a great day!
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
The Perfect Cappuccino
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Colombian Coffee Children
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Colombia and Cappuccino
Monday, August 10, 2009
Most Exciting
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Baby Coffee Tree
I'm visiting home for a couple weeks--which means, among other things, over-indulgence in the area of baked goods (i'm convinced my father could open a hugely successful bakery in any city he chose, including NYC) and under-indulgence in good coffee. But it's getting better! When i left five years ago for Tulsa, there were basically No coffee shops here (starbucks-excepting)--since then, several have opened, all with a gelato component, which is interesting. At my dad's neighborhood coffeeshop, cafe posto, they offer a "turkish roast" flavored gelato. I don't know exactly what that means, but am intrigued. Coffee...cardammon...cinnamon?
Anyway: the prospect of two whole weeks devoid of doubleshot coffee was not the most difficult thing about making this particular journey home. It was leaving behind my baby coffee tree! It sprouted 4 days before i left--a tiny, spindly green stem with a bean on the top (the bean will turn into the first leaves). I bought a packet of coffee seeds in Italy (they were in a seed packet, just like you'd buy tomato or squash seeds...how bizarre!), and planted them on returning to tulsa. The thing about growing coffee is that it takes 2 to 3 months for anything to happen above the surface, so you have to be patient! you have to keep the soil moist but not soaking--but after months of watering a pot of dirt, up came this adorable plant! if all goes well, in approximately 2 to 3 years, there will be flowers and cherries! Here are two web pages that give some more info on growing your own coffee. The sweetmaria's one is especially fascinating because there are some beautiful pictures towards the bottom of trees growing in their greenhouse--several different varietals. i'm still trying to get a grasp on coffee varietals, so will hopefully be able to blog more about that in the future. the plant i have is coffea arabica var. typica which, according to coffeeresearch.org, is considered to be one of the two original varietals, along with bourbon. http://www.sweetmarias.com/growingcoffee/Growing_Coffee_at_Home.html
http://www.coffeeresearch.org/coffee/homegrowing.htm
oh, and if you want to see a coffee tree "in the flesh" there is one growing in the greenhouse at woodward park! no flowers or fruit last time i checked (a couple weeks ago), but it's still fun to see the leaf/tree shape, and just to know it's there...well, here are the pictures--drink a great cup of coffee for me :)
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Samples
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Thoughts, Hopefully Relevant
1) jimseven blog
2) anne lamott (author, not related to coffee, but life in general)
3) david schomer (author of espresso coffee: professional techniques)
4) brian's previous post on the concordia children's center]
First, a warning: this post may be more emotional than factual, more ego-centric than coffee-centric--and I promise to try not to do that too often. But the truth is, coffee has become what I do, what I spend time thinking about, dreaming about, reading about...and I guess for this reason, it has become one of my major avenues of self-revelation. That is, through working with coffee, I often am jolted into realizing how selfish and insecure I can be.
Here is a recent example: Yesterday, I tried reading the jimseven blog--the blog of James Hoffman, 2007 World Barista Champion. It is very interesting, and you should check it out! Anyway, back when I'd first heard of it, my illogical assumption was that the name "James Hoffman" would belong to someone much older, someone whom I could cheerfully allow to have a very popular and informative coffee blog...someone whom I would not feel threatened by, because I'm young and still learning, etc etc. Ok, I don't know how old he is, but he is fairly young. And incredibly enthusiastic/passionate, innovative, and curious. And has an entire bookshelf full of coffeebooks--which makes the maybe 6 books I own seem, all of a sudden, nearly pathetic.
I'm trying to be honest, not depressing. This morning was spent reading Anne Lammot's book Travelling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith. Anne is a writer who admits to "my emotional drag-queeny self." She candidly admits to failure, and at the same time, speaks of what she learns from it--while being very clear that she is still emotional, still failing, still learning every day. So maybe I'm trying too hard right now to be like her, but she's incredible. The point with all of this is: I don't even know how much I don't know about coffee...and the temptation is to get discouraged because I'm proud and Want to think I know everything. Or, similarly, I want to believe that I'm the kind of person who is going to do incredibly beautiful things for the coffee industry, fighting injustice and all that...when I am rarely compassionate to the people right in front of me because I wrap my insecurity in snobbery.
I love coffee, and what I understand of the coffee industry--it's encounters like this, like reading jimseven and jealously freaking out, or narrowing my eyes at every person for whom i have to make a brr-latte (frozen blended drink), that threaten to paralyze everything--that make me afraid that all my love is selfish and therefore i can't do anything. But I don't think that's true.
Now I'm at the point where I want to wrap this up, but don't know how because it's a process and I'm still living in doubt and fighting mis-motives. Does this resonate with any of you? Do you look at what needs to be done, at what you love, and think "How can I possibly do any of that?" And if so, what then? What do you do about it? Again, I apologize for so much emotional venting...but it's important to me. It's what I want to do with my life, but haven't "figured out" yet. Which is okay.
To end on a positive note, here is my very favorite quote ever from a coffee-book. From David Schomer's Espresso Coffee: Professional Techniques. "Ideally, espresso should taste like the freshly ground coffee smells. Texture is featured always, and should feel like a pair of velvet pajamas wrapped around your tongue." That image of velvet pajamas makes me smile every time. :)
Friday, July 10, 2009
Concordia Kids' Community Center
On Silence and Acids
Lovely. And now for the chemistry part. Did you know that there are a ridiculous number of acids, and that the taste of coffee is quite dependent on them? And that these same acids are found in other natural edibles—such as apples or citrus—which explains why, when you sip your coffee, you may detect the flavor of lemons or berries--? I may be completely out of my depth here, but am going to try to make sense out of the “Coffee Acidity” section of Ted Lingle’s The Coffee Cupper’s Handbook.
Here are the first two points: 1) Coffee is actually less acidic than most alcoholic beverages (gin and vodka are exceptions), juices, and sodas—really, anything you’d typically drink other than water, milk, or tea (though tea is close to coffee in acid content). Which is interesting, because I think coffee’s reputation suggests otherwise.
2) “Acidy” and “Acidity” are not the same things. “Acidy” refers to a sweet taste sensation, and relates to how sugars in the coffee combine with certain acids. Other acids, however, interact with other components and may produce sour, salty, or bitter taste sensations. (Sweet, sour, salt, and bitter are the four basic tastes).
Here is the outline version of Coffee Acids:
I. Amino Acids—influence sweet sensations
II. Phenolic Acids—influence bitter sensations, includes caffeic acids
*Chlorogenic Acids—it is the decomposition of these acids that results in the
unpleasant (overly bitter/sour) taste of coffee that has been sitting around
too long. So, when you enjoy a cup of fresh-brewed coffee, thank the
chlorogenic acids.
III. Aliphatic Acids—influence sour sensations—and others
*Tartaric
*Citric--citrusy
*Malic—apple-like
*Lactic--buttery
*Acetic—fruity—also, too much acetic acid results in a fermented taste. (Acetic
acid is not inherent to the bean, but is formed when the beans for a wet-
processed coffee are fermented. Fermentation is one step in the process
of separating the coffee bean from the fruit of the coffee cherry.)
Again, the word “Chemistry” is one that I typically think of with horror or disinterest. The words “chlorogenic” and “aliphatic” have no meaning for me—yet—but, thanks to coffee, it has become a personal goal to be able to drink a cup and identify, “oh, an apple sensation—malic acid” or “this coffee must have more citric acid, and reminds me of grapefruit.”
Why? Think of all the citrus fruits, the different varieties of apples, different butters, berries, etc—and how each time you taste one of these, you’ll have a flavor memory that a future cup of coffee may bring to mind! And these are just tastes that came up because we were talking about acids! If we talked about sugars, think of all the different kinds of chocolates or caramels—or aromas, flowers like jasmine and lavender, spices—cinnamon, vanilla, cloves—it is incredible how all these organisms relate to one another, and I must grudgingly owe a debt of gratitude to chemistry and things like chlorogenic acids. And happily go to the grocery store to buy a pineapple, so as not to miss a potential pineapple note in my next cup of coffee :) Hooray for flavor!
So that’s acids--I know I left some holes in the explanation, so if you have any questions…or corrections…let me know, and I’ll see what I can find out!
Friday, June 26, 2009
Colombia Stories
Isaiah and I had a great, productive, educational trip to Colombia. We returned Tuesday night, excited to be out of the cool mountain air and back to this fantastic heat.
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Some Answered Questions, and a Coffee Book Review!
Thank you to everyone who came to the Illuminati event on Thursday! I emailed Mary at La Marzocco with the unanswered questions: How many machines does La Marzocco produce per year? and How long does it take to produce a single machine? She replied:
“Lead time varies according to the type of machine, eventual special colored panels etc. But excluding lead time issues, if we begin a machine on Monday, it will be ready by Friday.
We produce 2800 machines a year. Indeed, La Marzocco is a very small factory in comparison to other Italian brands.”
So…approximately 5 days/machine, 2800 machines/year. Maybe I’ll try to find out the numbers for other Italian brands…
On another note, starting with some biographical information: I have a degree in literature. No, I do not want to teach. I want to work in the coffee industry. However, I love to read and one of the best ways to satisfy both a love for reading and a love for coffee is to read books about coffee…obviously accompanied by a cup of Doubleshot coffee.
It’s time for a book review.
Today’s book is The Devil’s Cup: A History of the World According to Coffee, written by Stewart Lee Allen around 1999. It is a fabulously entertaining and informative read. Basically, the book chronicles Allen’s travels from
That’s all for now…feel free to comment, share reading recommendations, ask questions, etc!
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Colombia
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Espresso Machines!
OK, here's a preview on why it's so important to have a great espresso machine. This passage comes from David Schomer's book "Espresso Coffee: Professional Techniques." His book is very helpful in that it breaks down the factors that affect the quality of the espresso, explaining how each factor may go wrong, and what to do about it. His broad categories are: 1)Environmental Factors (like the weather) 2)Equipment Factors (the machine!, etc) 3) Ingredient Factors (not just the espresso blend but water quality, etc) and 4) Barista Techniques. Under each of these categories come many sub-categories, so it is obvious that pulling a perfect shot of espresso is a very precise process, and never as simple as just pushing a button. In chapter 7 of his book, Brewing Water Temperature, Schomer writes:
"The better you become at making espresso, the more that the factor of brewing water temperature will emerge as the final vexing problem. Brewing water temperature is a very difficult factor to control. But its control is essential to quality espresso making, because water temperature plays such an integral role in the preservation of coffee's volatile flavor compounds. Water temperature is responsible for the quality and quantity of flavors in the espresso coffee."
Reading Schomer's book is fairly daunting, because there are so many things that can go wrong...that is just one example of what your espresso machine needs to do--maintain a stable, optimal water temperature. If the temperature is off but just a couple degrees, the espresso will start to taste sour, flat, or burnt...gross. All that to say, the espresso machine is important! So, come to Doubleshot Thursday, June 11 at 7 pm to learn more about them! Hope to see you there!
Monday, June 1, 2009
Tara Bowen
Monday, May 18, 2009
Another Trip to Colombia
Monday, April 27, 2009
New Coffees
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
San Rafael
I'm hoping to dial this in on the roaster and I think it will be one of the best coffees we get this year.
It's for sale today, so if you want a pound come get it. It's selling for (a very reasonable) $16 per pound. That's $14 on $2 Tuesday.
This is really exciting for me because it's the culmination of the first time we've been able to travel to origin, cup coffee, meet the farmer of the best, and buy that coffee. Alfredo is awesome, and I was lucky to stumble upon him. You're lucky too.
Monday, March 30, 2009
Roasting and Cupping
Dang there's a lot going on around these parts.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Ethiopia
Posted on 04. Mar, 2009 by Joseph Brodsky
The last chance to buy Aricha and Beloya is upon us. Due to an unexpected development in Ethiopia in recent days, all coffee will be sold within a week.
On Monday, The Ethiopian government issued a mandate for all coffee exporters to liquidate all coffee stocks. Within a week…
The country is starved for foreign currency. The exchange rate for the Ethiopian Birr against the dollar was bumped up to 12 Birr/$ in recent weeks from around 9 this time last year to encourage an influx of cash. The dollar goes a long way in Ethiopia these days. In a worsening global credit environment, borrowing foreign currency becomes increasingly difficult for nations dependent on it to run their operations. An excess of coffee inventory is much more valuable as cash in the bank from a national perspective.
So all 2008 coffees must go, quickly.
It is amazing how this has jump-started shippers into action. Some are obviously longer on positions than others, and this creates quite a problem for them.
What this means for Ninety Plus Coffee is that coffees it handles from 2008 - including all remaining Aricha and Beloya Macro and Micro Selections will ship next week.
The current situation with a lack of much specially prepared coffees this year due to the new ECX regulations, remaining Aricha and Beloya coffees are in high demand.
Please contact Steven Holt: +1.303.884.2380 or steven@ninetypluscoffee.com to find out how you can receive these coffees for shipment by air and sea next week.
We have around 60 bags of Micro Selection coffee remaining at the time of this entry. The coffees have been cupped in Addis several times this week and will be cupped again by Ninety Plus guests Tim Wendelboe and Paul Geshos.
There will be no time to sample Micro Selection coffees prior to purchase. Buyers will have to go on the cupping reports.
Say goodbye to Aricha and Beloya with us in style.
Coffee exports plummet below target
SATURDAY, 14 MARCH 2009
By Hayal Alemayehu
Coffee exports are sharply falling below the target set for the year with falling world prices exacerbating the situation, it was learnt.
The government set a target of over 101,000 tonnes of coffee to be exported during the first seven months of the current fiscal year while the actual export stood at 66,000 tonnes, thereby decreasing the forecast in coffee export earnings by over 46 percent.
The world coffee price per pound has plunged by some 67 cents over the last several months following the global financial turmoil-one of the major culprit for the country’s sharply falling coffee exports-operators in the sector noted.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development had last week warned coffee exporters against hoarding which it believed has a major contribution to the sharp drop in coffee exports, according to observers.
Major operators in the sector, however, say that the drop in coffee exports is directly linked to the global economic crises, bringing down world coffee prices to one of their lowest level in decades.
“Major coffee buyers such as Star Bucks, which had to layoff tens of thousands of employees months ago, are finding it hard to access loans from banks to buy coffee in bulks,” a mojor coffee operator told The Reporter on condition of anonymity. “This has led [coffee] prices to tumble down which, in turn, makes us unable to export as much as we could.”
Despite government urging for more coffee exports, the situation has yet to improve, government export figures indicate.
Only 7.4 thousand tonnes of coffee were exported in January 2009 against a 22,000 tonnes export forecast for the month, according to the latest export figure. Likewise, earnings from coffee dropped by a sheer 400 percent against the target for the same month.
However, earnings from coffee exports during the first seven months are slightly higher than that of the same period of last year.
Starbucks Delays Ethiopian Coffee Research Center, Capital Says
By Jason McLure
March 9 (Bloomberg) -- Starbucks Corp. put on hold plans to build a coffee research center in Ethiopia because of the slowing global economy, Capital said, citing Vivek Varma, a spokesman for the company, and Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi.
Starbucks’ then chairman and current Chief Executive Officer Howard Schultz said during a visit to Ethiopia in November 2007 that the company would open a research center to improve the quality of Ethiopian coffee, the Addis Ababa-based newspaper said. A similar facility in Rwanda has also been put on ice, Capital said.
By Jason McLure and Ichiro Suzuki
Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Ethiopia urged Japan to lift a ban on imports of its coffee, saying the Horn of Africa country has taken measures to prevent pesticide contamination that led Japan to halt purchases last year.
“It’s time to put the Japanese market back and this has already been communicated to them,” Ethiopian Trade Minister Girma Birru said in an interview in the capital, Addis Ababa, on Feb. 17. “I think this is a problem we can leave behind us.”
Japan halted deliveries of coffee from Ethiopia in May after finding “abnormally high” pesticide residues in a shipment of the beans. Japanese officials demanded that Ethiopia find the source of the chemical and prevent future contamination.
Ethiopia is Africa’s biggest coffee producer. Japan had previously purchased about 20 percent of the country’s exports, said Girma, making it the nation’s third-largest market after Germany and Saudi Arabia. Ethiopia exported $525.2 million of coffee in the fiscal year ending July 7, according to the Trade Ministry.
Girma said the coffee shipment that led Japan to halt imports probably was contaminated by growers using sacks that previously contained insecticides or other chemicals. Most Ethiopian coffee is produced by smallholders who grow the beans without chemical sprays, he said.
Mocha beans from Ethiopia are highly regarded in Japan for their distinctive flavor and last year’s ban forced coffee shop owners to seek new blends.
No Beans
“We haven’t been able to offer Mocha coffee since last November because the supplier said they have no supplies of Ethiopian coffee beans,” said Takayasu Ito, a coffee shop manager in Tokyo’s Jimbocho neighborhood.
Japan will lift the ban once it receives assurances from Ethiopia’s government that there are no “reappearance risks,” Hiroyuki Uchimi, chief of the inspection planning section at Japan’s Health Ministry, said in a phone interview on Feb. 18.
Measures taken by Ethiopia to prevent a recurrence of contamination include establishing a laboratory to check for impurities in export coffee.
“We are now going to make clean all the coffee from smallholders or from state farms,” Girma said. “We have everything ready.”