Saturday, December 26, 2009

Happy Day Off Day

It's been a rough season, work-wise, around here.  Isaiah, Garth, and I have been working way too much, and on top of it, they are preparing to compete in the South Central Regional Barista Competition in Austin January 7-10.  We're all tired, and for sure enjoyed the day off yesterday.

But we haven't lost our zeal for coffee.  I hope you all got the chance to try the Panama Gesha La Esmeralda.  That was our special coffee this year.  I thought it was really good.  I also roasted the El Boton Natural that I hauled back from Colombia in my suitcase.  We'll have more of that (a lot of it) probably mid-January.
I just read a blog entry written by a guy I've never heard of, but I really enjoyed it and I agree with what he wrote.  I thought the comments below it were interesting too.  Many of the big players in the industry seemed to try and defend their positions.  Here it is:

Here's something too about new botanical discoveries this year, including varietals of coffee:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8424817.stm

I am speaking at Philbrook Museum on January 14 (Thursday) at 530p for a group called Tulsa Green Drinks.  Generally they get together for drinks and listen to someone speak about something related to sustainability.  They're giving me 20 minutes, which you know isn't much if you've ever come to listen to me speak in the past.  I'm not exactly sure what I'm going to talk about yet, but it will most likely skim the issues with buying coffee and the responsibility I feel regarding coffee producers.  You should come.  I'd like to fill the house and see a lot of familiar faces there.  And hopefully I'll discuss some things, in a different format, than you've been exposed to.  You can pick up passes to attend at the DoubleShot if you want to come.  Read about it here:  http://tulsagreendrinks.blogspot.com/2009/12/january-green-drinks-at-philbrook.html

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Colombian Coffees

More news about our coffees in Colombia.  
The El Boton Natural is in a shipping container in port in Colombia, waiting to get loaded onto a ship.  Before they can, every coffee in a container must be cupped by the Coffee Quality arm of the FNC (The Federation).  Yesterday they cupped the El Boton and rejected it, which means it could not be exported.  Cristina asked me to write a letter to the head of the Coffee Quality institute, stating my intention to buy the El Boton based on its unique cup profile.  I did that, and he accepted my letter, allowing for the export of our coffee.  Whew.  
It will ship out on the 22nd and arrive in Oakland on the 10th of January.  We will get it on a truck at that time and it should be here by the 18th, if there are no holdups in customs or whatever. 
Remember, also in this container is a coffee from a farmer named Octavio Restrepo whose farm is called La Alondra.  You can see pictures of La Alondra here.  This coffee will be good- chocolate, raisins, cinnamon, and a big, silky body.
I haven't mentioned the story of another coffee we'll hopefully be buying soon.  Because I don't want to spread this around.  I don't want to set a precedent for every situation like this, and I don't want to focus so much on a story as I do the coffee that results from it.  That's my job, to worry about who gets what and how and where we get coffee.  But I'm going to tell you this story anyway.  While I was in Medellin, Cristina told me about an old couple named Gabriel and Orfilia Escobar.  They own a very small farm called Las Animas (around 2 acres) outside Concordia.  They work this farm by themselves, and Cristina told me they produce delicious coffee, but in very small quantities.  Apparently Gabriel has been ill and his vision has been deteriorating until he finally fell completely blind.  Orfilia has been tending to him, afraid to leave him in the house alone.  So their coffee is not being harvested.  Orfilia called Cristina to tell her the story and ask if Cristina could buy their farm so they could move into town and be able to support themselves.  This story really bothered me and I couldn't stop thinking about it.  What can I do?  So one day I called Cristina and asked her if I could hire people to pick the coffee for Las Animas.  She said she would find out.  My one stipulation was this.  I wanted them to dry-process the coffee, like Ariel is doing at El Boton.  I promised her I would buy it even if it wasn't good.  Cristina told me they have a marquesina, like the one Ariel built (a raised drying bed).  Cristina called and talked to Orfilia about it, explaining the process over and over.  Because it sounds stupid to them.  But Orfilia let us pay for pickers and she laid the coffee out on the marquesina.  Las Animas is planted all in Caturra, so it is a different varietal from the Maragogipe planted at El Boton.  Orfilia dry-processed some coffee and sent it to Cristina.  It is only a small amount, but when Cristina cupped it she said it was delicious.  She seemed very excited about it.  So hopefully we will have some of this coffee to buy soon.

The other thing I need to find out about is another small experiment Ariel is doing at El Boton.  While we were there, he seemed distressed that all the coffee cherries weren't completely red.  He talked to the farm manager, Luis, and they discussed why and what for.  Luis said they have to pick coffee that is at least half-ripe because they will not be back to that area for another week, and by then those cherries would be overripe.  In spanish they call the ones that are half-ripe and half green, PINTON.  Ariel argued that Luis wouldn't eat an avocado if it were pinton; he would buy one that is maduro (ripe).  Because when an avocado or a mango or any other fruit is ripe, it is sweet and delicious, but when it is pinton (or unripe), it is sour and bitter.  Ariel argued that coffee is probably the same way.  In general, coffee producers do not drink their own coffee.  They export all the good coffee and drink the worst coffee or instant coffee.  So they don't know.  And Luis doesn't drink coffee at all.  So Ariel told Luis to separate one square foot on the marquesina for ONLY pinton cherries and another square foot for ONLY maduro cherries.  Cristina will cup them side-by-side and we will see the results.  What effect does ripeness of cherry have on the cup?

Monday, December 7, 2009

Colombia Chat

This Thursday 12/10 at 7p we'll meet up down here at the DoubleShot to chat about Colombia.  I won't have any pictures to show and don't have an agenda to talk about, so bring your questions.  And whatever you want to drink.  I'll brew some coffee, but if you want beer, whiskey, or whatever, feel free to bring it with you.  We'll just hang out and celebrate Colombian coffee.

See you then.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Colombia Report

I posted pictures from this last trip here:  http://www.doubleshotcoffee.com/Origin/Colombia_09-2.html

I am thinking maybe about doing a discussion of the trip, but a little different than usual.  Let me know what you think of this idea.
Thinking about having a time where we just have an informal chit-chat about it.  Maybe BYOB or whatever.  Sit down, talk about Colombia and coffee in general, and just enjoy each other's company.  Thoughts?  Times y'all might be available?  Do tell.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Concordia

Indeed I am in Colombia again. It has been a good trip so far. I'm getting to know people here and that makes things easier. I met a couple farmers today, one we sold a year ago and one I'm buying in December. It's good.
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

A couple of really exciting things for us here at the DoubleShot.
Fresh Cup Magazine asked me to write a story for their Roasters Realm column about the El Boton Natural.  I wrote the first draft today.  It needs work.
More importantly (and you should keep this on the DL), Mark Pendergrast is going to write a story about the El Boton Natural for Wine Spectator Magazine!  THE Mark Pendergrast, author of UNCOMMON GROUNDS.  Wow.  Wine Spectator Magazine.  Hittin' the bigtime!  
Let's keep that between me and y'all.  Should come out in March, so we have plenty of time to forget about it.  (Not Me!)

I'm headed to Colombia Nov 18-25.  Let's try to come up with some sort of a fund raiser before then (I know that's soon) so I can deliver some money to them to help with their project.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

What a Wonderful World...

So...I've been reading again :) Today's recommended reading list contains three books, none of which are [directly] about coffee. But my English teacher in ninth grade had a quote by Chief Seattle painted on his wall: "All things are connected like the blood that unites us all." I haven't read the quote in context, so don't know exactly what Chief Seattle was talking about at that point--however, the more I learn about foods, flavors/aromas, etc, the more this quote seems to be true! Hopefully the following will explain:
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

If you're following me on twitter, you probably already know that the small bag (45 pounds) of coffee from El Boton came in today via FedEx.  It is the dry-processed coffee we've been waiting for.  Isaiah and Garth were planning to use this coffee in their competition in Austin at the end of this month.  But we just found out that the competition isn't until January, so we have this to play with.  The samples we've had were really difficult to roast, but they tasted so good anyway.  We tasted the sweetest, fruitiest coffee in the world.  It was every bit as good as the best Ethiopian we've had.  I'm roasting it tonight for the first time.  That's a tough roast because I don't know what's going to happen during the roast cycle.  But we'll have one batch for sale tomorrow.  When it's gone, it's gone.  
Because of the demanding processing, ridiculous shipping method, and limited availability, I have to charge $30 per pound for it.  But you should try it.  Even if it's just a press or a pourover here at the DSCC.  
As far as I know, this is the only Colombian natural in the U.S.  Maybe the only one to reach our shores in the past 50 years.  Hey hey!

Monday, October 5, 2009

Happy Birthday Tara Bowen!

Just found out it's Tara's Bday.
Hope you're having a good one!

Thursday, September 24, 2009

New Coffees

I ordered a few new coffees.  Here are the notes about some of them from Cafe Imports.
Kenya Chania French Mission Varietal, new crop Tanzania Songea Peaberry, and Ethiopia Harrar East Haraghe Highlands.  I also ordered a Brazil Ipanema Yellow Icatu from Beccor, which will be a good coffee.








Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Kenya

I got up early this morning and sample roasted four Kenyans from Cafe Imports.  The guys from Hanson are coming in this afternoon to taste them and potentially sell one of them on their website.  I hope.
I'm doing a little research, so I don't sound so ignorant if they ask questions.  Thought I'd share with you.
As far as I can tell, there are 8 grades of coffee coming out of Kenya.  
AA is the highest grade, but all it really means is th
at it is a 18 or 17 screen (18/64 or 17/64 inch).  
AB is a 16 screen.  
PB - Peaberries are sorted out and make up about 10% of the crop.  
C grade is smaller than AB.
TT is the size of AA and AB, but are less dense, and separated via air pressure.
T grade are very light and broken pieces.
It appears there are two other grades of coffee, but I'm not certain what they are.  I'm sure at least one of them is a designation of domestic consumption coffee.

Most coffee produced in Kenya is Arabica.  But there are many, many different varietals grown there.  The French Mission Varietal is one of the oldest types of coffee in Kenya.  It is a Bourbon strand brought over from Reunion Island by French missionaries in the late 1800s.  Bourbon coffee developed (sort-of) naturally.  The British East India Company sold seeds from Aden, Yemen to the French, who planted them on the island of Bourbon (which is now called Reunion).  After a few generations on the island it took on unique characteristics.  It is generally more "robust" than Typica and tends to have a higher production.  The trees and cherries have a distinctive look, as well.
Some hybrid varietals are grown in Kenya.  SL-28 was created by Scott Labs from Bourbon and Ethiopian Mokka varietals.  (From Sweet Maria's site:) "It supposedly is selected from Tanganyika DR cultivar, found by A.D Trench on a trip through Tanzania, and has similar drought resistant properties.  DR is of French Mission Bourbon origin.  Many prefer SL-28 to the other successful... cultivar SL-34."  I don't know who A.D. Trench is and I can't seem to find anything on the internet about him.
SL-34 is another hybrid produced by Scott Labs.  (Again from Sweet Maria's:) "It supposedly is selected from French Mission Bourbon trees at Loresho Estate in Kabete Kenya.  SL types are responsible for 90% of Kenya coffees.  SL-34 has better yields than SL-28, and is grown at lower altitudes than SL-28."  Generally, a higher-yielding varietal that produces well at lower elevations doesn't taste as good, so that's my assumption.
RUIRU 11:  "is named for the station at Ruiru, Kenya where it was developed in the '70s and released in 1986.  The initial tests were with Hibrido de Timor (a cross between Arabica and Robusta, resistant to Coffee Leaf Rust) and Rume Sudan, an original coffee strain resistant to Coffee Berry Disease.  Later they added SL-28 and SL-34 inputs due to poor cup character of the early tests.  The Robusta content of Ruiru 11 is still an issue, and the cup does not match the quality of the SL types."
Here is a map of Kenya with the growing regions highlighted.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Follow-up to The Perfect Cappuccino

Good afternoon! Thanks to everyone who came to watch The Perfect Cappuccino! If you were unable to make it, I think you can still purchase it at Doubleshot, or online at www.cappuccinomovie.com. It's wonderful!
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

I hope you all will do your best to make it to the screening of The Perfect Cappuccino here tomorrow night at 7p.  I got the projector and a big screen.  We're going to have a live video web chat with Amy Ferraris afterward.  Should be a fun time.  Please come and bring people.  We'll open the doors at 6p, so come early to socialize and drink coffee.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Colombian Coffee Children

This is something that has slid onto the back burner over the past few weeks.  It's on my mind again now though.  
I'm referring to the community center they are proposing to build in Concordia for the poorer coffee workers' children.  We talked about finding a way to raise money to help.  
Obviously we could do anything.  We could have a bake sale and send them $200 and feel good about ourselves that we did something to help.  But that's not much help.  Nothing we do will be A LOT of help, but I feel that we can do something.  
One thing that we already do is put on the DoubleShot races.  This is the fourth year for it.  And this year, we decided to do three duathlons and one six hour mountain bike race.  The second duathlon is this weekend at Osage Hills State Park.  We've always donated proceeds from the races to a charity (Coffee Kids).  This year we decided to set up our own 501(3)c not-for-profit organization so we could do more than just give to an overall cause.  This way we can donate directly to the project in Concordia.  Or do other things I've thought about doing, such as building swing sets or taking soccer balls for the kids.  If we don't do it this way, our all-consuming government will tax the hell out of me.  It's not easy to give to charitable causes.  
You can see the website for the DoubleShot Duathlon series here:  www.DoubleshotDuathlon.com
If you'd like to come volunteer (hang out, help a little, drink coffee and beer, and eat hotdogs), please send an email to Kari:  Kari@DoubleShotDuathlon.com

Anyway, let's try to get back on track and thinking about what we could do to raise money for this project.  I think we should help.  If you have ideas, post them in the comments of this blog or email me.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Colombia and Cappuccino

First, I've decided that we should push back the showing of the film The Perfect Cappuccino to the evening of Thursday, September 10 at 7p.  It lasts 90 minutes and then we'll (hopefully) have a live video chat with Amy Ferraris, the filmmaker.  Stay tuned for details.  

The coffee experiments are going really good.  I skyped with Cristina a couple days ago and we talked about all that is happening with these developments.  She told me the first sample was with red Maragogipe dried on concrete, and it was really great.  The second sample Ariel used yellow Maragogipe (they ripen yellow instead of red), dried on raised beds and covered with a cloth.  She said it wasn't as good- cooled more astringent and green.  She thinks it's because it's harder to tell if the yellows are ripe or not, so more unripe could've gotten in.  Also the cloth he used to cover the coffee wasn't porous enough and the coffee may have gotten too hot.  So he did another sample with red Maragogipe dried on raised beds and covered with a more porous cloth.  She hadn't tasted it yet when I talked to her.
The first two samples Ariel milled at his mill on the farm.  The sample I got still had silverskin on the outside of the beans and on that was a lot of sugars, so when I roasted it, it suddenly looked like it was burning.  This third sample, Ariel brought to Cristina's father's dry mill in Medellin.  They have better equipment and she's hoping they can polish the silverskin off the coffee, so it looks more like a washed coffee and roasts better.  She was hoping to get that lot of coffee in two days ago, after I talked to her.  Then she was going to roast and cup it hopefully today.  This could be the one.  If it works out, there's a possibility she can get us a few bags.  And THAT would be awesome.  Right now, we're the only people in the world who are even talking about natural coffee from Colombia.  The FNC (Colombian Coffee Federation) is not going to let this coffee out of the country if they find out about it, so the key is to mix the bags in with a container of other coffee and try to sneak it through.
She told me that she had the same experiment done at one of her father's farms in Concordia, and the coffee was a Caturrra variety.  She said it was sweet, a lot brighter (higher acidity) and not as complex as the Maragogipe.  Could be interesting though.
I asked her about having Alfredo do this with his coffee.  She said she asked him to and he had been too busy with the beginning of their harvest.  But she asked him again and she was hoping that he had done it.  This could actually change the face of Colombian coffee forever.  And we're involved.  Exciting.
I can't wait to taste the next samples.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Most Exciting

This is one of the most exciting events of my coffee career.  I've learned so much (yet so little) in my few years on the industry, and the more I learn, the more it enables me to ask questions.  Those questions sometimes have answers and sometimes they don't.  Usually one answer brings more questions than I had before.
So the last time I was in Colombia, we were asking lots of questions as usual.  What makes the coffee taste the way it does?  What if we did things differently?  What if we planted a different varietal of tree?  What if we fermented the coffee instead of running it through a desmucilaginadora?  What happens if we ferment it for 12 hours or 24 hours or 36 hours?  How does it change the flavor?  What if we put it in refrigerated tanks and introduced lager yeast?  Or what if we fermented it with Trappist yeast?  Yum.  How much different does it taste if we dry the parchment in the sun as opposed to using a static dryer?  And what if we process the coffee using pulped natural method or dry processing instead of wet?  Interesting.
Finally, at Ariel's farm, El Boton, we found a place where we could experiment with a couple of these questions.  We asked Ariel a lot of these questions.  I told him what I have learned in my travels to other origins and I described coffee from other countries.  The people in Colombia only get to drink Colombian coffee, so they don't know what it's like to taste coffees from exotic locales around the world.  We are fortunate in this way.  Ariel is a curious guy with the means to play, so he agreed to do these experiments with small lots.  He divided a lot into four batches.  One he fermented 24 hours.  One he fermented 36 hours.  Cristina said these two were not very good, and we didn't get samples of them.  The third part he processed using the pulped natural method.  That means he stripped the skins off the cherries and dried the beans with the parchment and mucilage still intact.  The fourth he dried the cherries whole.  Ariel built raised beds to dry the coffee on for these last two methods.  These are the two samples I received from Cristina last week.  
I roasted them yesterday (along with 20 other samples).  I waited until I really had the sample roaster as dialed in as I was going to get it, and then I roasted these Colombians.  There was only enough for one roast, so one shot and I had to get it right.  I was more than slightly concerned because everything was going fine with all the other coffees, but when I was roasting the Natural it suddenly seemed to be burning.  For no reason.  It hadn't even hit second crack.  But I could see (by drawing samples) that the outsides were beginning to get shiny.  Not good.  So I dropped it.  I thought I had ruined it, for sure.  The Honey (pulped natural) roasted just fine.
Today I cupped them on a table with 6 other coffees, including Ariel's regular coffee (which is run through a desmucilaginadora).  By the way, all of the coffees from El Boton are maragogipe, which means they are larger beans.  Usually these coffees are a bit flatter than other types, but I had cupped Ariel's maragogipe a couple weeks ago and found it to be very interesting.  It had a nice acidity, chocolate and nut flavors, and some dark fruits or grape in the nose.  
As soon as I ground the Boton Natural, my nose lit up.  The fruits were jumping off that coffee like crazy.  I started to get excited.  When I took my first sip... well, it was an amazing experience.  It was like a great natural Harrar or a really complex natural Sidamo.  Just freaking amazing coffee.  The pulped natural was pretty good, but nothing like the natural.
Now I have more questions.  The processing method dramatically changed the taste of that ONE LOT of coffee.  Is it repeatable?  We'll see.  Cristina is cupping another batch tomorrow in her office in Medellin and is going to call me on skype afterward.  Would coffee of a different varietal (besides maragogipe) taste the same, just as good, not as good?  How much does terroir actually affect the taste of coffee?  The soil, climate, elevation, and agricultural methods affect the taste, but compared to processing, how much?  
This thing has big, juicy fruit fragrances and a bit of vanilla in the aroma.  Very fruity taste that was a lot like artificial, intense cherry you find in flavored gum or soda.  Lots of other tastes muddied the waters and added insane amounts of complexity, but I haven't even gotten that far yet.  I'm still reeling from the sweetness on my palate.
I know Cristina is amazed and excited.  Ariel is very excited as well.  We have no idea how we could get these coffees exported to the US because the Federation has such a tight grip on exports, there's no way they would let this go through if they sampled it.  
My thoughts run much deeper.  What if...
What if this is the thing that makes Concordia famous?  Could it be that we've discovered something about Colombian coffee that could make it a highly sought-after coffee destination?  Could this replace Ethiopian coffees on the market, since that origin is so wrought with problems?  I'm sure Cristina is thinking the same thing.  This could be huge.  I'm wondering what Alfredo's coffee (San Rafael) would taste like if we processed it exactly the same way.  What if, somehow, Cristina were to find a way to change the rules of the Federation, so that they would let her export this coffee?  Or maybe she could find a different way to send it to the US.  I'm telling you, this is the beginning of something REALLY BIG.
When you taste it, you'll understand.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Baby Coffee Tree

Greetings from Wichita, KS!
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

Pretty exciting for us.  The experiments I told you about in Colombia have come through.  This morning we received a package from Cristina containing the samples of coffee from El Boton.  One is a pulped natural and the other is a dry process.  They look interesting.  I also have a sample of Ariel's regular coffee, which he processed using a desmucilaginadora.  So we should be able to taste the differences processing has on a coffee.  
They also did a couple different washed coffees fermented for 36 hours, but Cristina said they weren't good and didn't send samples. 

Also on the cupping table recently are a few Brazils from a company called Beccor.  We've been running into Bruno, Beccor's... cupper?  Salesman?  Representative, at least.  We see him at all the industry events and he is a character.  The samples we have received from Beccor have been very interesting and a couple of them are delicious.  So new Brazils could be on our horizon.  The current Brazil (Fazenda Ambiental Fortaleza...) is going fast.  We only have a half bag left.

An El Salvadoran Pacamara from Tim Castle cupped out pretty good.  This could be the first coffee we've had from El Salvador.  I also cupped the coffees I brought back from Colombia.  The El Boton (mentioned above) was good.  I was surprised.  A coffee from La Eternidad also cupped out really nicely.  

We're still struggling to find a good Ethiopian this year.  The situation is grim.

I just opened a box of samples from Cafe Imports.  There is a Harrar on the top of the list.  Along with 5 Kenyans, an El Salvador, 3 Costa Rican micro lots, a Guat, and two Brazils.  Should be a fun table to cup.

I also just ordered a bag of coffee from Hacienda Rio Negro- the farm I visited in the south of Costa Rica last time I was there.

Exciting stuff coming up.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Thoughts, Hopefully Relevant

[Here is all you need to know, if you would like to skip out on the following, emotionally-driven post. No feelings will be hurt :)
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

Thanks to everyone who came to the Colombia event last night.  I hope you were entertained and learned something.  I never know if we're saying anything interesting or informative.
We talked briefly about the project that the Coffee Children group is working on in Concordia to build a community center for youngsters to hang out, study, play, and eat while their parents are working in the coffee fields.  I really want to support this project because I think it's the right thing to do and because it helps the people on the lowest rung of the coffee chain.  And this time it's OUR coffee chain.  These aren't just anonymous coffee people, they are the people (potentially) who pick the coffee cherries that make up our San Rafael, the La Aurora, La Estrella, and anything else we buy from Concordia.  
Like I was saying last night, I want to do something bigger than just us.  I feel like if each of us pitches in a few bucks, it's not going to go very far in building this project, so I'm trying to think of a way for us to pool our resources and raise more funds.  I have a couple ideas, but I'm looking to you for a better idea.  

Below are the pictures of the proposed new project.
And here is a link to a video they put together in Colombia:  http://www.cafemontesycolinas.com/downloads/video06.wmv





On Silence and Acids

Before diving into a discussion that stirs up memories of agony (high school science classes), I’m going to start with a quote from The Phantom Tollbooth by Norman Juster. The Phantom Tollbooth, by the way, is an excellent book—my Dad first read it to us many years ago, and I remember learning, among others, the words “lethargic,” “dodecahedron,” and “unabridged.” It is about a boy, Milo, who is always bored, until one day a mysterious box appears in his room: the Phantom Tollbooth. He drives through it, and adventure—and a growing love for learning—follow. The quote comes from the time Milo visits the Valley of Sound, which is completely silent because the Soundkeeper took away all sound as it became evident that the Valley’s population had quit caring about sound, and only were interested in the ugly noises of economy, destruction, etc. He visits the Soundkeeper, and finds her sitting in front of a radio. She says: “Isn’t that lovely?...It’s my favorite program—fifteen minutes of silence—and after that there’s a half hour of quiet and then an interlude of lull. Why, did you know that there are almost as many kinds of stillness as there are sounds? But, sadly enough, no one pays any attention to them these days. Have you ever heard the wonderful silence just before the dawn?...Or the quiet and calm just as a storm ends? Or perhaps you know the silence when you haven’t the answer to a question you’ve been asked, or the hush of a country road at night…or, most beautiful of all, the moment after the door closes and you’re all alone in the whole house? Each one is different, you know, and all very beautiful, if you listen carefully.”

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.
We will be discussing the trip, showing our pictures, and divulging what we learned on Thursday, July 9 at 7p here at the DoubleShot.  Of course, we'll be brewing the San Rafael, Alfredo's coffee.  Please plan to come and invite friends you think might be interested.

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 Ethiopia to the United States—his route is determined by the route that coffee took in its spread from Africa to the rest of the world. You will learn about coffee’s role in ancient religious ceremonies, key figures in coffee’s expansion—like DeClieu, who risked death-by-dehydration in order to smuggle a coffee seedling to South America (his ship was becalmed, but he shared his scant water ration with the seedling)—other ways of consuming the coffee plant, etc. Oh, and how the introduction of coffee into a culture often coincides with periods of enlightenment (!). Allen is adventurous and has a good sense of humor—so this really is a fun book to read. It ends with a quest through the United States via Route 66 (go Oklahoma!) to find the worst cup of percolated diner coffee possible. Gross. The Devil’s Cup can be bought on amazon for about $11.00. I think Tulsa’s Central Library has a copy, and I believe it’s on the shelves at Doubleshot.

That’s all for now…feel free to comment, share reading recommendations, ask questions, etc!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Colombia

Isaiah and I are headed to Colombia on Tuesday.  We'll leave that morning and arrive back here the following Tuesday night.  So one week.
We'll be flying into Medellin and visiting Concordia again.  Cristina Garces is helping us so much.  It should be a really great trip- Isaiah's first trip to origin.  There isn't much coffee being harvested right now, but Alfredo (Finca San Rafael) is holding off on some of his harvesting so we can see his mill working while we're there.  I think we'll stay with Guillermo again at his farmhouse, which is an amazing place.  Hopefully we'll go on a horseback ride through the coffee fields.  Probably get some pictures of coffee flowers blooming.  I hope we learn a lot and are able to bring that back to share with you.
I also hope we find more amazing coffee.  I'm really enjoying the San Rafael from the last trip, and I hope you are too.
Cristina told me about a project going on in Concordia right now that we might be able to help with.  They're building a school and playroom for the kids while their mothers work in the coffee fields.  It's being built in the poorest part of Concordia.  We'll see it while we are there, and I'll bring back as much info as I can attain.
I'm also hoping to meet up with a girl I met before who works for The Federation, overseeing the building of houses for poor coffee pickers.  
I'm pretty excited.  We'll have another Illuminati meeting when Isaiah and I return, and we'll tell you all about the trip.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Espresso Machines!

Hello!--this is Tara. This Thursday at Doubleshot, at 7 pm, we're going to have an event focusing on espresso machines--the La Marzocco company in particular. I returned from a trip to Italy a couple weeks ago, and the best thing about the trip was getting to visit the La Marzocco factory outside of Florence. So we are going to be talking about that, hopefully seeing some pictures of espresso machines-in-progress, and finally (!) Ely, who is a wonderful machine technician and has taken La Marzocco's class on machine maintenance, is going to open up the Doubleshot machine so we can all get an insider's view on what, from an electrical-technical perspective, is happening in order to produce your perfect espresso, latte, etc.

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

Hey everyone.  Or whoever reads this blog, anyway.  I know I've been a slacker lately, but I'm just so busy with this and that, I haven't made appropriate time to work the Illuminati group.  So.  I have asked Tara Bowen if she will help and she has accepted.  She's going to help plan events, get the word out, expand our coffee knowledge, and make sure you know about it all.  I've put her on the write-list for this blog, so she can post info about events and stuff we should know about coffee.  So thank you Tara for picking up the ball I dropped.  
The first event under Tara's new tutelage will be next Thursday June 11.  It'll be an informative session about espresso machines.  I'll let her tell you the details.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Another Trip to Colombia

I just bought tickets for Isaiah and I to fly to Colombia on June 16.  We'll come home the 23rd.  I originally planned to see Narino on this trip, but that doesn't seem so cut and dried.  So I decided to take Cristina Garces up on her generosity and kindness and go back to Medellin and Concordia.  I'm hoping we can take a short one-day trip to Jardin, where La Minita was building the mill.  It should be completed and it would be nice to see it in operation.  
This will be Isaiah's first trip to origin, so that's pretty exciting.  I think it will change the way he thinks about coffee.  I know it did for me.  And hopefully we'll both learn a lot during the trip.
I'll keep you posted.

Monday, April 27, 2009

New Coffees

Hopefully you've been able to taste Alfredo's San Rafael by now.  I roasted it twice last week.  Two different roast profiles.  Both results were good, but I think I can do better.  The coffee is outstanding.  I took some with me to a mountain bike race in Ardmore over the weekend and drank leftovers cold Sunday before the race.  Really complex coffee- subtle fruit, big body, some vegetal tastes round it out, and I think every time I've drunk it more flavors have come to me.
I'm drinking a cup of Yemen right now.  It tastes more nutty today than I remember.  The Yemen we have right now (half a bin full) is the end of the Mocca Sanani.  A lot of you have really enjoyed this coffee for its uniqueness, wildness, and sweetness.  So if you want to taste it again, you might give it a go right away.
On a brighter note, I just bought coffees from the many, many samples we have cupped recently.  In that order, I bought another Yemen.  This Yemen is from Anesi.  I've had trouble finding out much info about Anesi and this coffee in particular, but I'm hoping my broker (Anna from Cafe Imports) tells me more about it soon.  But I think Anesi is a small region within the Sanani region.  Regardless, the coffee cupped out beautifully.  The most dominating feature of the Anesi, to me, was a sweet (and sour) strawberry flavor.  Unfortunately this is a really expensive coffee.  From what I understand, Yemen doesn't produce that much coffee and their coffees are in high demand, especially in places that drink Turkish-style coffee.  Supposedly Saudi Arabia is a big buyer of Yemen coffee and they are willing to pay big bucks for it.  A lot of people in the Specialty industry in the U.S. consider Yemens to be too wild, fermented... basically defective coffee.  So that just goes to show you that different people like different stuff.  I think I'm going to sell the new Yemen for the same price as I sold the old Yemen ($17/lb).  I'll absorb the difference.  I keep doing that, and someday it's going to hurt us too bad to continue to do that.  The problem is, we keep tasting fantastic coffees and then find out they're expensive.  Oh well.  Just know you're getting a GREAT value at $17 on this coffee.
Other coffees I ordered from Cafe Imports include a Tanzania Peaberry Songea.  I know, I know.  You love it already.  Also a Brazil, "Fazenda Ambiental Fortaleza Lot 11 Pulped Natural Hamilton and Celso Families."  Ask for it by name.  This coffee is from the Mococa region in Sao Paulo.  Pulped natural is the processing method, like the Panama Hartmann Honey, where they take the skins off the cherries and dry the seeds with the mucilage still intact.  One reason this coffee is better than most Brazilians is the picking.  The farmers triple pick the farm, being careful to harvest ripe cherries only.  This is probably the most crucial step in producing great coffee.  The varietals in this coffee are Yellow Bourbon, Red Catuai, and Mundo Novo.  I've only had a Yellow Bourbon once, in another Brazil.  Catuai is a tricky varietal, the reds are better than the yellows, but it's a plant that La Minita is trying to cull out of their coffee at Rio Negro.  Mundo Novo is a varietal I don't know much about, but it's some sort of hybrid.  
Another coffee I bought is a Kenya AA.  Not a lot of info about this coffee yet either.  It's a small lot that came out of the auction in Kenya.  Scored really high in cuppings at Cafe Imports.  Here are their cupping notes:  "Floral, red currant, clean acidity, grapefruit, coconut, caramel, creamy body, long sweet aftertaste."  Sometimes these coffees come and go so fast that I don't have the opportunity to get samples, roast, cup, and decide before they are gone.  So this time I took a chance on the professionals' advice.  
Anyway, we're looking forward to new variety in coffees around here.  It's tough, when I'm looking for something superb, to weed through a lot of sub-par coffees.  Hopefully we've done a satisfactory job.

By the way, I've started using twitter, so some info I want to share that's too short for a blog, I'm going to put up there.  If you want to follow that stream, you can find my page here:  http://twitter.com/thedoubleshot

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

San Rafael

This is the day we've been waiting for since early December. Yesterday we got the shipment of coffee from Colombia. It's San Rafael- the coffee that Alfredo Correa produced. Every time we've cupped this coffee, it has blown away everything on the table. I roasted it for the first time last night. And I just drank a press of it. It's really good. I think you're really going to like it.

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.
The new sample roaster (1925 Jabez Burns) is up and running.  Jason and I have been practicing and learning and it's not easy.  The roaster works like our big roaster (1953 Vittoria) with a perforated drum tumbling the beans as a gas flame roasts the coffee.  On the Vittoria the flame is constant.  The variables we change are the amount of coffee in the drum and a vent and damper.  With the Jabez Burns, we can change the amount of coffee in the drums and the amount of flame.  It's a different way of roasting so we're having to learn to control these different variables to achieve the desired roast.  And it's easy to mess it up.

We've been getting more samples than usual, because we're working with different brokers.  With the new sample roasting setup it's easier to get samples roasted and ready for cupping.  So we're refining our cupping protocol.  We've found it's easiest to cup 4-6 samples at a time.  And we usually try the coffees in a presspot the following day.  We have a sample of La Magnolia from Costa Rica- I know that was a favorite of some of you, so if it cups out good maybe we'll offer it again.  We're waiting on a sample of the Rio Negro coffee- from the farm I visited on my last trip to Costa Rica.  We have several samples from a broker called Cafe Imports.  Specifically we're going to try a couple different Yemens, some coffees from Burundi, more Ethiopians, and a couple other origins.  An importer called Zephyr sent us a few Ethiopians, a Brazil and a Panama.  We also have the coffee from San Rafael- Alfredo Correa's farm in Concordia, Colombia.  Lots to look forward to if things pan out.  

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Ethiopia

Ethiopia has become even more of a strange and mysterious place from which to get coffee.  A lot has occurred in the past couple years.  As you probably know, I think the Ethiopian government is taking missteps if they think they're going to improve their coffee economy.  The regional trademarking of Yirgacheffe, Sidamo, and Harrar... how will this affect us?  Will it limit the coffees we can get?
Here is some more news out of Ethiopia:

Ethiopia Update - Aricha and Beloya to Take Final Flights to Roasters around the World
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.
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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.
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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.
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Ethiopian Government Urges Japan to Lift Ban on Coffee Imports
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.”

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

CR Learnin's

Just a few notes from my trip last week.

Hacienda Rio Negro is a farm that La Minita's parent company bought three years ago.  It's Rainforest Alliance Certified.  Normally that wouldn't mean jack to me, but it was cool to actually be in a rainforest where coffee is growing amongst big trees.  Shade-grown, for real.  

When I was in Guatemala last year an agronomist told me that the varietal Yellow Catuai has a lot more pulp in the cherry, so the farmers like it but the mills do not like it (because the farmers sell their coffee to the mill by weight).  In Costa Rica I learned that Yellow Catuai also don't taste very good.  Sergio (Master Cupper at La Minita) told me he was able to separate the different varieties of coffee at La Minita and cup each one separately.  He said the Yellow Catuai are flat and not good.  That's great info.  He also told me the variety Catimor is a high-yield coffee but tastes terrible.

The coffee from Rio Negro was good.  It had a really big body and huge dark chocolate taste.  It didn't have the sweetness that the La Minita brings.  I tasted more stuff like cinnamon and whatnot in the Rio Negro, but I guess the most interesting thing was that it lacked sweetness.  
When I was riding around with Sergio in his car, I asked him how coffee had changed over the course of his 15- or 20-year career as a cupper.  He said the cupping ritual has remained the same but coffee is changing.  He said consumer demand has caused the producers to make changes in their processing.  Apparently during the years of high production and low quality, a lot of mills took out their washing channels and put in aquapulpers.  The aquapulper spins rapidly and takes the mucilage off the beans.  The traditional way of getting the mucilage off in wet-processed coffee is to put the coffee in a fermentation tank overnight and then run it down a washing channel to get the mucilage off.  Sergio told me the result of using an aquapulper is that the coffee doesn't have the sweetness of a traditionally fermented coffee.
Then it hit me.  Rio Negro has aquapulpers.  It's partially cleaned in the aquapulper and then fermented in tanks for 8 hours to finish the cleaning process.  THAT's why it's not as sweet.

Much interesting information.

Just wanted to drop that in while it's fresh on my mind.

One other thing.  I noticed that the kids down there didn't really have much to play with or things to play on.  I was thinking maybe it would be nice if we (The DoubleShot) could ask the farm to put in swingsets if we would pay for them.  I'm not sure if that's a good idea or not- or how much it would cost.  But while I was talking to Paul and Janette McEntire today, they mentioned that they take soccer balls to give to the kids.  I think that's a great idea.  So I'm thinking about (selfishly) getting some soccer balls printed with the DoubleShot logo and taking several on my next origin trip to give to the kids.  I don't know if this is something any of you have interest in helping with or not.  But I thought I'd let you know what I'm thinking...

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Pulped Natural

The new Panamanian coffee (Hartmann Honey - micro-lot #7) is unique.  In fact, in our five years of business we've never had a coffee like this.  Part of its uniqueness is due to the processing of the coffee at origin.  We've talked extensively about washed coffees (wet-processed) and naturals (dry-processed), but there are other methods that lie somewhere in between.  This coffee is processed using the "pulped natural" method.  

The processing of coffee that I'm referring to is necessary to get the coffee from cherry to seed.  Coffee beans are the seeds of coffee cherries.  These cherries grow on trees and for the most part, people pick them by hand when they are ripe.  The cherries consist of skin (which is a bit fibrous), a fairly thin layer of pulp (or mucilage), a shell around the seed (called parchment skin), silverskin (a very thin layer around the seed, like the skin on a peanut), and finally the seed (or bean) itself.  All these layers must be removed at some point in order to get to the coffee beans I buy and sell to you.

In the pulped natural method, the skins are removed from the cherries as soon as they get to the mill.  This is usually done with a machine called a pulper, which is the common method used in wet processing.  It squeezes the cherries between two metal, pebbled rollers, popping the slimy seeds out of the tough skins.  At this point, in wet processing, the seeds with mucilage on them would usually go into a fermentation tank or a desmucilaginadora (demucilager).  But in pulped natural, they are laid out to dry.  I suppose many places (e.g. Brazil) lay the slimy seeds out on patios, but at the Hartmann estate they put them on raised beds to dry.  This method requires a lot of attention and turning of the beans to avoid mold.  Drying them on raised beds allows for air-flow above and below the coffee, and produces a much higher-quality coffee.

After the mucilage is fully dry, it is run through a huller, which takes off the dried mucilage and parchment.  Then the coffee is bagged and shipped to us for roasting.

The Hartmann Honey has a darker, uneven color to the beans.  This is caused by the processing.  The pulped natural method generally exudes a sweeter, slightly fruitier taste to the coffee, and this is the case with the Hartmann.  They tend to have some characteristics of a natural coffee, but cleaner.  The coloration of the beans tells me that the coffee has been "over-fermented."  It must have more of the sugars from the fruit on the bean.  And when I roast it, the beans turn a much darker color early in the roast, even though they're not fully roasted on the inside.  I wonder if this is from sugar browning on the outside of the beans.  Another interesting characteristic of the coffee is that it has a lot of honeyed flavors; and if I light-roast it, even though it doesn't taste green, the grounds sink straight to the bottom of a cup.  From what I understand, these are characteristics of a coffee that is "under-fermented."  Hmm.  What a contradiction.  Could this coffee be over- and under-fermented at the same time?  I'm sure, according to the specialty coffee industry, it could.  

I've roasted the coffee twice now, and I think I could still tweak the roast next time.  But the coffee is great this week.  It's a pulped natural.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Coffee Tasting Event

NEXT Thursday 1/29 (not this Thursday), we're having a coffee tasting at the DoubleShot.  This won't be a formal cupping, though at some point in the future we will do that with you guys.  This will simply be an event in which you can come and taste several of our coffees side-by-side.  Sip one, sip the next, sip another...  It's a good way to taste the subtle flavor variations, differences in body and acidity.  I'll describe each of the coffees you'll be tasting to the best of my ability and you can form your own opinions.  Figure out why you like (or don't like) Ethiopians so much.  Finally distinguish the Costa Rica from the Guatemala.  Ask questions.  And I'll try to answer.

The coffee tasting event will be from 7-8p NEXT Thursday.

I'm roasting the first batch (of 3) of the Finca La Estrella tonight- Rafael Herrera's coffee from La Concordia Colombia.  Remember I only have 54 pounds green.  That's only about 46 pounds roasted.  So you'll want to try it soon.  It will be for sale by the pound for $25 ($23 on Tuesday).  And I'm sure we'll brew it sometime this week.  Or get a jump-start by ordering a presspot.

February is going to be a busy month for us.  I've been invited to go to Costa Rica, and I've accepted.  So I'll be flying down there on Saturday, Feb 7 and will return on the 14th.  Not only will I be visiting Hacienda La Minita, but I'm also very much looking forward to seeing a recent acquisition of La Minita, called Finca Rio Negro.  Rio Negro is in the south part of Costa Rica, near the Panama border.  The coffee they produce is called La Sonrisa (which means "The Smile"), and I'm really excited to try it.  I'll bring some back for you to try.

Upon my return on the 14th, I'll only be home for a couple days - long enough to roast.  And then I'll be taking a trip I've been wanting to take for a long time.  I'm planning to drive to Kansas City and catch the train to my hometown, Galesburg Illinois.  I haven't been there in years.  Since before the DoubleShot opened, so at least 5 years.  I'll spend a couple days there, hopefully running into a bunch of people I grew up with.  Then I'll hop back on the train to Chicago.  Feb 20-22 is CoffeeFest Chicago.  Remember CoffeeFest Seattle?  It's just like that, except cooler.  Isaiah will once again compete in the latte art competition.  And I'm sure we'll come home with some ridiculous stories (and hopefully a first place trophy).  

Tulsa Opera has an art show up on the walls of the DoubleShot right now.  We are having a party for them here on Friday, Feb 6 from 6-730p.  The opera singers will perform and we'll have coffee, wine, and snacks for your enjoyment.  Make sure you come for this.  It's a short period of time on a Friday night and I really want to show support for the Tulsa Opera.  If you haven't been to an opera here, you should go.  It's amazing.  I love it.  Sitting in the audience, I am amazed at the talent these people have and the amount of practice and dedication that has gone into the production- from the sets to the costumes to the orchestra to the performance itself (not to mention the amount of money it takes to put on one three-day performance).  The next Tulsa Opera production is "Hansel & Gretel" February 21, 27, and March 1.  You should go.

Recap:
Coffee Tasting 1/29 @ 7p
Colombia La Estrella available TOMORROW
Tulsa Opera party at DoubleShot 2/6 @ 630p
Hansel & Gretel 2/21, 27 and 3/1
Me in Costa Rica (presentation to follow)
Isaiah competing in Chicago (he'll be the best, but will they declare him the winner?)

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Three New Coffees





I just bought three new coffees.  I bought two of them through Ninety Plus, which is the company that brought us the Aricha and Beloya coffees.  

One of them is a Colombian from Finca La Aurora.  La Aurora is one of the Garces' farms in La Concordia.  Cristina (Garces) is taking the coffee from this farm and milling it in her new specialty mill.  We visited this mill while we were in Concordia.  It is immaculately clean and they boast the only mechanical drier in the country, which creates a cleaner, more consistent coffee (than the other drying methods being used in Colombia).  La Aurora is planted with Caturra, Catuai, and Colombian Variety.  It's obviously a wet-processed coffee, like virtually all coffee from Colombia, and the fruit flavors are very subdued.  Also, like all coffees from the Concordia region of Colombia, this coffee is very high-grown.  At 6,400 feet elevation, the coffee beans develop more slowly, creating a better-tasting coffee and very dense beans.  The coffee is stored in parchment for a few months before it is dry-milled and exported.  I'm not positive of the effects this rest has on the coffee, but I've been told storing coffee in parchment preserves the coffee better than storing it green, and the acidity of the coffee will lessen some over that resting period.  That rest and resulting drop in acidity can be good with a coffee that is so acidic that it tastes sharp, which is entirely possible with a coffee that is grown at such high elevations and wet processed.  I thought the La Aurora had a nice nutty, chocolaty flavor with some soft, melon fruitiness lingering in the background.  Cristina describes the coffee as such:  "The cup is very balanced and rich of flavor. The chocolate, the spices, the tropical fruits and vanilla notes are present from hot to cold. The citric acidity and the lemon finish is very atractive."  I think you're really going to like this coffee.

Another coffee I just bought is from the Huehuetenango region of Guatemala.  The farm is called Finca Villaure.  It is in a neighboring area to Finca Vista Hermosa, which you might remember from almost a year ago when their manager and his son were shot and killed.  After that incident, I began corresponding with Edwin Martinez, whose father owns Vista Hermosa.  He has been sending me coffee samples and we have been discussing details.  He is representing Finca Villaure in the United States, and that is how I came to buy this outstanding coffee.  Here you can read an article from Roast Magazine about Edwin's experiences with bringing coffee to the U.S.  

Finca Villaure was started in 1986 by the Villatoro family.  They are entering their 3rd generation as premium coffee producers in the Hoja Blanca region of Cuilco in Huehuetenango, Guatemala. The growing operation is headed by Aurelio Villatoro, one of eight brothers, who together with their parents, spouses and children (more than 70 in all) cultivate approximately 40 acres of rugged, shade covered mountain slopes. 
The Hoja Blanca region is one of the last to harvest each year in Guatemala due its high elevation and heavily shaded slopes. These two factors combine to slow the development of the coffee cherries resulting in an extremely dense and more chemically complex bean.  In 2002 Finca Villaure was selected in the Cup of Excellence competition as one of the top 33 coffees in Guatemala.  The farm was also selected by Illycafe as the best producer of coffee in Guatemala in 2003.  
Edwin describes the Villaure as having "Candied grapefruit taste with jasmine fragrance and a sweet, crisp finish."  In my cupping of the coffee, I definitely found it to be pleasantly acidic, with very clean, sweet, grapefruit-type flavors and a super-clean, delicious finish.  I bought two different lots of this coffee.  One has spent a few months resting in parchment form, like the La Aurora.  The other lot is the more recent harvest, and will have more cinnamon in the aroma and a bigger acidity.  It will be interesting to compare these two lots of the "same" coffee.  It is supposed to be delivered TODAY, so needless to say I'm pretty damned excited.

The third coffee is the other one I bought from Ninety Plus.  It's a coffee from Panama.  The last Panama we had was from the Boquete region.  This one is from another region called Volcan.  The coffee is from Finca Hartmann, which was founded in 1940 by a man named Ratibor Hartmann Troetsch.  He and his family (5 children) work on the farm, producing some excellent coffees.  I looked back at the results from the "Best of Panama" competition from the last two years.  In 2006 Hartmann had two coffees in the top 16 and last year they had one.  
Some info from Ninety Plus:  "Some of the hardest-working and most environmentally committed coffee producers in the world, the three generations currently represented at Finca Hartmann all have a hand in daily operations. Much of the family’s land is primary forest and rests contiguous with the enormous Parque Nacional La Amistad, Central America’s largest national park. Despite uncountable offers to cut the forest for large monetary gain over decades, the Hartmanns remain committed to a future of coffee in balance with nature. The Hartmanns have a cupping lab on site and are leaders in coffee production for quality. Their expertise has been enjoyed beyond their own farm as they act as consultants for many Panamanian and other Latin American coffee producers."
In fact, our friend Cristina Garces (who produced the La Aurora) is friends with Ratibor Jr, who worked for the Garces family as a consultant for 6 years in Colombia.  It's a small world after all.  
This is a really interesting coffee.  It's called Hartmann Honey - micro-lot #7.  I picked it out of a few different lots as the most interesting of their offerings.  The "honey" refers to the processing method used with the coffee.  Instead of depulping the coffee, fermenting, washing off the mucilage, and drying the parchment, the Hartmann family used a "pulp natural" method.  The coffee is run through a depulper to take the skins off the cherries, but instead of sitting in a fermentation tank to loosen up the mucilage so it can be washed, the coffee was laid out on raised drying beds where it was dried with the mucilage still intact.  The picture at the top of this blog is the Hartmann Honey drying on raised beds.  After drying, the coffee was cleaned and the parchment removed.  This unusual processing method creates an unusual coffee.  It seems that there are sugars on the outside of the coffee bean, so they roast a bit weird, deceiving.  The outside of the bean isn't necessarily indicative of what's happening on the inside of the bean during roasting.  The farm is located around 5,500 feet elevation, which is still pretty high for coffee, so the beans are dense and flavorful.  The Ninety Plus cupping notes say "This cup has intense grapefruit acidity, dried black-currant aroma, and gentle fresh coffee berry notes. Honey processing can also add fruit characteristics that remind of Ethiopia naturals but are usually more restrained. They are also commonly laden with a refined nuttiness in the aftertaste which grows stronger as the cup cools."  I thought the coffee was a lighter cup with some sour melon and yeasty smells in the aroma and maybe a bit of tea, then a lot going on in the flavor- fruits, malt, sweet honey, chocolate, and nuttiness.  It's striking really.  Not what you'd expect in a coffee.  
More from Ninety Plus:  "Finca Hartmann, our coffee development partners in Panama, have a history of strong relationships with the workers on their farm, largely seasonal employees of the indigenous Gnobe tribe of Panama. Workers are well-compensated and enjoy some of the most beautiful housing in Panama, some of which is nestled right in the heart of the cloud forests at Ojo de Agua. As coffee prices are improved for Finca Hartmann, additional monies will be available to further improve facilities and pay for seasonal workers.
With hundreds of species of birds, mammals, and reptiles co-existing with coffee at Finca Hartmann, this farm is truly one of the finest examples in the world of healthy integration of coffee and nature. The subject of studies by the Smithsonian Institute and other wildlife organizations, Finca Hartmann has been embracing and protecting biodiversity on its land for many decades."

Three new coffees.  Each one is unique and delicious.  I'm excited, and I think you're going to like all of them.

I feel like I've read volumes about these coffees and where they came from, and I still know very little and can express even less in this blog.  So I hope, when you drink them, there is enough info here for you to understand a little about and appreciate the coffees and to appreciate the people who have worked hard bringing these coffees to your cup.