The Espresso Vein is moving to a Wordpress site! You can find further posts at www.theespressovein.wordpress.com. I decided to move the blog over there because Wordpress has more options and a more professional appearance. See you over there!
A systematic investigation into every aspect of coffee: farms and beans to the machinery and drinks. There is no plan, just knowledge. This is pure coffee enlightenment.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Photos of my Coffee Life
Not much by way of text needed here. The little boy is my son, Levi. The three coffees are Java, Kenya, and El Salvador- all of which I roasted. I'm just getting you caught up on my life with coffee, spanning the last couple of months. Enjoy.
Monday, September 19, 2011
Alive and Well
I know, you thought I had died. Well, I haven't died and frankly, I'm a little offended you didn't even consider calling to console my assumed widow. Joking aside, I've made quite a few changes to my life since my last post.
I'm in Cincinnati now, working for the first specialty coffee shop to open in the city, Rohs Street Cafe. It's fun, but really only a hobby on the side. I'm attending Cincinnati Christian University working on earning a Masters of Divinity (MDiv, an all-purpose ministry degree, which I am chronicling at www.mdivhighlights.wordpress.com). In addition, I'm working to plant a new church near the city called Sunset Christian Church. In case you're interested, the church's website is sunsetchristIanchurch.org. So, yeah, I've been busy with a couple of things for the last couple of months, sorry for neglecting you.
Here's a quick pic of my current home coffee bar setup below...
I hope I can keep up a little better with coffee posts than I have, but no guarantees. If you like, you can keep tabs on photos related to my coffee passion on my instagram page, just search for "baristapreacher".
I'll post again soon, God willing.
I'm in Cincinnati now, working for the first specialty coffee shop to open in the city, Rohs Street Cafe. It's fun, but really only a hobby on the side. I'm attending Cincinnati Christian University working on earning a Masters of Divinity (MDiv, an all-purpose ministry degree, which I am chronicling at www.mdivhighlights.wordpress.com). In addition, I'm working to plant a new church near the city called Sunset Christian Church. In case you're interested, the church's website is sunsetchristIanchurch.org. So, yeah, I've been busy with a couple of things for the last couple of months, sorry for neglecting you.
Here's a quick pic of my current home coffee bar setup below...
I hope I can keep up a little better with coffee posts than I have, but no guarantees. If you like, you can keep tabs on photos related to my coffee passion on my instagram page, just search for "baristapreacher".
I'll post again soon, God willing.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Ignoring the Obvious
I should have known this. Starbucks sells its coffee everywhere- seriously, this stuff has infiltrated just about every settlement in America (and is working abroad) with over 20K people. Retail stores line our interstates and fill our bookstores. Starbucks will even sell their coffee through stores that are not Starbucks (another obvious statement). The three local HyVees (regional grocery store), Patricia's (local grocer), three Walmarts, and numerous no-name coffee stops all sell this larger-than-life "specialty" coffee brand. Brand is exactly what it is.
By force of brand, Starbucks has produced an instant coffee called "Via," which is touted as being exactly the same as Starbucks' whole bean flagship product.
Can this claim even possibly be true? Well, no.
After reading the Coffee Review's article regarding Via, I felt compelled to forward the information; I felt the need to share one point in particular. It is not often that I read something about the coffee industry that is simply brand new to me. When discussing large companies and their practices in marketing, the phenomenon of finding something new is even more rare. Today it has happened while reading the Coffee Review's article:
It was this last line that really took me aback. I should have known this! Of course the best coffees are reserved from Starbucks' own stores! This, if noticed by the average consumer, would drive the buyer directly to the retail outlet to buy their coffee, which in turn, would provide Starbucks Corp. with a greater slice of the profits. This is because when Starbucks sells its coffee bulk to grocers and the like, they must sell at wholesale discount- this allows for the middle-man company to profit in selling the outside product. Duh!
What I think is the saddest part of this story is that over the years, I have not been able to distinguish the "good" Starbucks coffee via its retail stores from the "less-good" Starbucks coffee via third-party outlets. Again, the statement that even the best of Starbucks is usually mediocre is obvious.
It seems like I rant and bash Starbucks quite a bit. I do. It is important to point out the beginning of the Coffee Review's article:
I like this point of view. Honestly, I just have not had a cup of coffee from Starbucks that has been any good. Seriously, I cannot point to a time when I have been truly pleased. This is why I have an intrinsic disdain for their coffee. The ball is in their court, I suppose.
Lord, help me. Deliver me from snobbish behavior and mindsets, not just in regard to coffee, but in all areas of my life. Help me to be all things to all men so that I might save some. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
By force of brand, Starbucks has produced an instant coffee called "Via," which is touted as being exactly the same as Starbucks' whole bean flagship product.
Can this claim even possibly be true? Well, no.
After reading the Coffee Review's article regarding Via, I felt compelled to forward the information; I felt the need to share one point in particular. It is not often that I read something about the coffee industry that is simply brand new to me. When discussing large companies and their practices in marketing, the phenomenon of finding something new is even more rare. Today it has happened while reading the Coffee Review's article:
Unfortunately, [none of Starbucks' touted instant-coffee] innovation appeared to help much in significantly differentiating the Starbucks VIA products from the best of the competing instants... these Starbucks offerings and the instant VIA versions is, of course, plainly mistaken.
This claim must be a great if secret embarrassment for many of the dedicated coffee professionals at Starbucks. Perhaps the marketing people put something in Howard Schultz’s drink. Naturally we purchased whole-bean versions of the Starbucks Colombia and Italian Roast and tested them against the VIA versions. Whole bean Colombia 84; VIA Colombia 78. Whole bean Italian Roast 80, VIA Italian Roast 68. Ratings aside, the blunt sensory differences between the VIA instants and their whole-bean counterparts were inescapable. We used supermarket versions of the whole bean Colombia and Italian Roast for our comparisons, by the way. Coffees sold at Starbucks stores are usually produced from higher quality green beans and could stand out even more dramatically compared to their VIA counterparts. (my emphasis added)
It was this last line that really took me aback. I should have known this! Of course the best coffees are reserved from Starbucks' own stores! This, if noticed by the average consumer, would drive the buyer directly to the retail outlet to buy their coffee, which in turn, would provide Starbucks Corp. with a greater slice of the profits. This is because when Starbucks sells its coffee bulk to grocers and the like, they must sell at wholesale discount- this allows for the middle-man company to profit in selling the outside product. Duh!
What I think is the saddest part of this story is that over the years, I have not been able to distinguish the "good" Starbucks coffee via its retail stores from the "less-good" Starbucks coffee via third-party outlets. Again, the statement that even the best of Starbucks is usually mediocre is obvious.
It seems like I rant and bash Starbucks quite a bit. I do. It is important to point out the beginning of the Coffee Review's article:
Snobs are people who make judgments for non-intrinsic reasons. Like brands for example (Starbucks is great, Starbucks sucks), or market ideologies (corporate coffee is bad, coffee from tiny stores with a roaster in the back are good), or on the basis of various other untested assumptions. We try to be anti-snob at Coffee Review by tasting coffees blind and honestly reporting on our findings, even when the findings run counter to assumptions among some of our readers or preferences of long-time drinkers of certain kinds of coffee. We may not be right, of course, because last I checked there is no god certifying cupping results, but we’re honest and try to be transparent.
I like this point of view. Honestly, I just have not had a cup of coffee from Starbucks that has been any good. Seriously, I cannot point to a time when I have been truly pleased. This is why I have an intrinsic disdain for their coffee. The ball is in their court, I suppose.
Lord, help me. Deliver me from snobbish behavior and mindsets, not just in regard to coffee, but in all areas of my life. Help me to be all things to all men so that I might save some. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Another "I told me so" Moment
I called it again. Crap retail coffee prices soared this week. Giant roasters like Maxwell House, Folgers, Nescafe, and the like are feeling the pressure of increased coffee prices lately, and their retail prices exhibit this inflammation. Take this excerpt from Reuters for example:
Abandon that junk. Make the switch to decent brews. Check the side bar "The Best I've Had" for some places to start looking for better coffee. Want to know how much my coffee shop has raised it's prices since October 2010? Zero. I'll be back soon to talk more.
Lord, thank You for the kick in the pants every so often. Obvious signs help. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
I really should take my own advice every now and then. Maybe buy some stock and sell it high before the next ridiculously large price increase for nasty coffee? How much more is the American populace going to tolerate before they begin to experiment with specialty grade coffee priced (by now) only marginally higher than the ugly stuff?
(Reuters) - Kraft Foods (KFT.N) said on Thursday it upped the U.S. prices for many of its coffees this week, raising Maxwell House by 22 percent, the biggest of four hikes in the past year as roasters face soaring markets.
The increase follows a February hike of 10 percent by rival J.M. Smucker Co (SJM.N), which owns Folgers, and will test consumers' willingness to pay ever-higher prices for their java.
Kraft has raised prices by roughly 56 percent since May 2010.
Retail price increases can help lift futures as sellers believe companies will be willing to pay higher rates. However, many in the coffee industry do not expect price gains to affect demand as the popular drink is still considered an affordable luxury, equating to an increase of mere cents per cup.
Kraft's latest price hikes took effect on Wednesday and came after arabica coffee futures fell from a 34-year high this month.
Abandon that junk. Make the switch to decent brews. Check the side bar "The Best I've Had" for some places to start looking for better coffee. Want to know how much my coffee shop has raised it's prices since October 2010? Zero. I'll be back soon to talk more.
Not any more... even the cruddy stuff. |
Saturday, March 5, 2011
33 Coffees
What a fantastic idea! I've been using much less efficient methods of tracking my coffee consumption for years; I've used spiral notebooks, my iPhone, computer note-taking program, this blog, etc, etc, etc. Nothing has really worked effectively. 33 Coffees may have the answer for me.
Keeping track of coffees we consume is a very simple idea, but has many varied applications. We can see what we think we like to drink and what we actually do like. We can see where we buy our coffee, how much we buy, and what preparation methods we like to use. Tracking our consumption can show us what time of the day we drink coffee. Taking detailed not of harvest date, roast date, varietal, country, region, and farm will make us much sharper tasters. It can also provide a handy format for keeping cupping forms on us at nearly all times.
I was turned onto this little booklet by cleanhotdry.com, who is affiliated with Crema Coffee Bar. Very solid product at only $4 a pop. If you worried about shipping, it's about $2 extra. I highly recommend this product for any coffee lover drinking hand-crafted beverages or multiple varieties of coffee a week (or if you know someone like this... it's a great cheap gift option).
Lord, thank You for curiosity and the inherent desire to know. Keep this alive in me for many years to come. Keep me humble and interested in Your will in my life.
Keeping track of coffees we consume is a very simple idea, but has many varied applications. We can see what we think we like to drink and what we actually do like. We can see where we buy our coffee, how much we buy, and what preparation methods we like to use. Tracking our consumption can show us what time of the day we drink coffee. Taking detailed not of harvest date, roast date, varietal, country, region, and farm will make us much sharper tasters. It can also provide a handy format for keeping cupping forms on us at nearly all times.
I was turned onto this little booklet by cleanhotdry.com, who is affiliated with Crema Coffee Bar. Very solid product at only $4 a pop. If you worried about shipping, it's about $2 extra. I highly recommend this product for any coffee lover drinking hand-crafted beverages or multiple varieties of coffee a week (or if you know someone like this... it's a great cheap gift option).
Lord, thank You for curiosity and the inherent desire to know. Keep this alive in me for many years to come. Keep me humble and interested in Your will in my life.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
It's a Roaster's Life
Maybe you have and maybe you have not heard that coffee prices are soaring. They are. Mucho dinero is being paid for specialty grade coffee nowadays. In many cases, specialty roasters have absorbed the price increase to protect their customers. At the current rate of increase though, roasters will have to let some cost pass to you, the consumer, in the near future.
Prices for Fair Trade certified coffees have a base floor at $1.31 per pound. Today's market price for "c grade" (coffee that is high enough quality to be considered specialty) $2.5225 per pound. Wow. Here's a chart on coffee's price flux over the past year:
For Hasbean, the coffee pinch has caused a need to explain to its customers:
So a scenario today the market is at 2.54 (which at time of writing it is). I want to buy a contact for coffee today then I will pay 2.54. But should I want to protect myself against what I think its a rising market I can buy coffee for a premium to the market, for this case we will say 7 cents, that will cover the costs of insurance and keeping it in the warehouse so paying $2.61.
If the market drops I get left with coffee contract costing 2.61, but have protected themselves against swings so can offer a stable price to customers. But should the market rise, I can either use that contract still or sell it and make a profit.
The specifics for fluctuating coffee prices can be found on CNN's Money Watch. Most of us aren't coffee roasters, at least not commercially. We don't track coffee's price by the pound. We can, however notice price increases every 2 weeks-month, or however often we return to the coffee aisle at the grocery store. My argument for buying specialty right now is found in an unlikely place:
So, in this [coffee] tight economy, you may just be better of buying premium beans. The cheap stuff is getting pricier anyway. Lord, thank You for the interconnectedness of life and people. It's an amazing thing to see just how significant other people's lives are to our own. I pray we take this reality to heart and live it out daily, placing others at the front, since their lives are integral to ours. Keep me head deflated and on straight.
The ripple effect: As retailers start paying more, the coffee you drop into your shopping cart may very soon start costing you more at the register.Supermarket chain Publix said it has left some coffee prices unchanged to remain competitive. But the grocer has boosted prices on some brands, including a container of Folgers Classic Aroma Coffee, which used to cost $8.99 and is now being sold for $9.99.One bright spot: While you may be paying more at the grocery store, your daily cup of joe at the corner coffee shop may be spared because pricing decisions are made by each shop individually.
Monday, January 31, 2011
What Goes Up...
As the price of specialty coffee rises and hovers around $2.40 per pound, some coffee consumers tighten their belts... or perhaps more fittingly, shrink their morning consumption. Bloomberg's latest report on the subject was enlightening:
In times like these, many feel that preparing for the lean seasons during times of bounty would help mitigate high prices in times of shortage- like the epic Biblical tale of Joseph in Egypt storing up grain. I doubt they're suggesting we somehow store up green coffee seeds for 7+ years. They say, would it not make more sense to create a system within the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) that buffered the price? Set the price of coffee at a reasonable level for stable buying and selling. In bountiful years, the regulated price would be overly kind to the farmers, since high production brings with it increased supply, and normally, lower prices due to lower demand pressure. In lean years, the regulated price would protect buyers from painfully high purchase prices- almost the level we are achieving now. Regulated prices would also keep speculators out of the market, and therefore make coffee only about the growers, roasters, and consumers. Sounds good, right?
Nope. Won't work. Here's the rub: When a farmer works his butt off and grows a truly fantastic crop, he should be rewarded with a fantastic price for his beans. Organizations like Cup of Excellence exist solely to determine the best coffees from each origin in each season. This reward system, paying more for better coffee, is the only way to motivate a farmer to produce better crops. Think about it, if you were to get paid the exact same amount every year for every pound of coffee you produce, would you not produce more and sacrifice quality to obtain higher production? The whole system is idealist and unrealistic.
Instead, times of bountiful production that leave farmers underpaid (nobody delights in poverty-level pricing, thus enters Fair Trade pricing) are buffeted by times like the present- those of lean harvests and record-setting prices. As a reference, the TransFairUS base price for coffee is $1.26 per pound. Coffee has been hovering around $2.50 for a while now as is described here by Bloomberg:
Recently, Kenya's government bailed out some of its coffee farmers from massive debts. "Co-operatives minister Joseph Nyaga says cabinet has agreed to waive the debt which has continued to bog down coffee farmers in the country in order to give them a fresh lease of life." This news combined with the fact that "The $2.50 area seems to be a level where people are willing to take a little profit" and sell, Kenyan growers should see a pretty profit coming their way to get this new life rolling.
I think the life lesson here is that when times are good, we should enjoy it, but be saving for the tough times to come- because they will. Prices are high now, but they'll return and probably sooner rather than later. After all, what goes up, must come down.
Lord, thank You for change. A static and unchanging life would be boring. Help us to enjoy the changes, knowing You will be there with us all the while. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Coffee rose to the highest price since 1997 in New York and reached a 28-month high in London on signs that supplies will fail to keep up with demand.
“The market expects a reduced mid-crop in Colombia due to rain in 2010, and now rainstorms in Brazil that may impact production are being focused on,” said Keith Flury, an analyst with Rabobank in London. “With outlook tight, any potential reduction in the harvest is likely to result in notable price movements, and the increases in the last couple of sessions reflect this.”This sort of rise and fall of production, and correspondingly, of prices, is perfectly natural and expected. There are those out there who blow their "climate change" whistles too loudly and proclaim that our precious morning brew is in imminent danger, citing rainier seasons in producing countries as proof. Reality check: it rains heavier some years than others. Just like everything else in this fickle world, coffee production changes frequently.
In times like these, many feel that preparing for the lean seasons during times of bounty would help mitigate high prices in times of shortage- like the epic Biblical tale of Joseph in Egypt storing up grain. I doubt they're suggesting we somehow store up green coffee seeds for 7+ years. They say, would it not make more sense to create a system within the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) that buffered the price? Set the price of coffee at a reasonable level for stable buying and selling. In bountiful years, the regulated price would be overly kind to the farmers, since high production brings with it increased supply, and normally, lower prices due to lower demand pressure. In lean years, the regulated price would protect buyers from painfully high purchase prices- almost the level we are achieving now. Regulated prices would also keep speculators out of the market, and therefore make coffee only about the growers, roasters, and consumers. Sounds good, right?
Nope. Won't work. Here's the rub: When a farmer works his butt off and grows a truly fantastic crop, he should be rewarded with a fantastic price for his beans. Organizations like Cup of Excellence exist solely to determine the best coffees from each origin in each season. This reward system, paying more for better coffee, is the only way to motivate a farmer to produce better crops. Think about it, if you were to get paid the exact same amount every year for every pound of coffee you produce, would you not produce more and sacrifice quality to obtain higher production? The whole system is idealist and unrealistic.
Instead, times of bountiful production that leave farmers underpaid (nobody delights in poverty-level pricing, thus enters Fair Trade pricing) are buffeted by times like the present- those of lean harvests and record-setting prices. As a reference, the TransFairUS base price for coffee is $1.26 per pound. Coffee has been hovering around $2.50 for a while now as is described here by Bloomberg:
Arabica coffee for March delivery advanced 5.35 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $2.5035 a pound at 8:24 a.m. on ICE Futures U.S. in New York after reaching $2.5075, the highest level since June 1997. Robusta coffee for March delivery climbed $58, or 2.7 percent, to $2,187 a metric ton on NYSE Liffe in London after touching $2,204, the highest price since Sept. 25, 2008.Though there are some unsavory elements to the system, such as speculators that in large part, merely drive prices for purchasers upward, the system is inherently logical and realistic. The plight of farmers is not easy, and I think through organizations like TransFair and through direct trade relationships that some roasters make with farmers (paying higher than market price for higher than average quality beans), the living standard for coffee farmers can increase.
Recently, Kenya's government bailed out some of its coffee farmers from massive debts. "Co-operatives minister Joseph Nyaga says cabinet has agreed to waive the debt which has continued to bog down coffee farmers in the country in order to give them a fresh lease of life." This news combined with the fact that "The $2.50 area seems to be a level where people are willing to take a little profit" and sell, Kenyan growers should see a pretty profit coming their way to get this new life rolling.
I think the life lesson here is that when times are good, we should enjoy it, but be saving for the tough times to come- because they will. Prices are high now, but they'll return and probably sooner rather than later. After all, what goes up, must come down.
Lord, thank You for change. A static and unchanging life would be boring. Help us to enjoy the changes, knowing You will be there with us all the while. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Use it or Lose it?
I've noticed that when it comes to fine skills, if you do not use them, you will soon lose them. This principle definitely translates to the preparation of great coffees, too.
A year ago, when I stopped working as a barista at Kaldi's Coffee Roasters, I began work on starting a new coffee shop on the University of Missouri's campus in Columbia, Missouri. After nine months of footwork and ground-breaking, Vida Coffee Co was born. This endeavor created in me many new skills through experiences I had not had prior.
When Vida opened at the beginning of the 2010-2011 school year in August, I took the position of Head Trainer and coffee orderer (Vida is supplied by Northwest Coffee Roasters in Saint Louis). I got back behind the bar for the first time in a year. I expected to pick up a portafilter, grind, dose, and tamp just like I had used to do. I thought unconciously, "I know how to grind perfectly, dose precisely 19-20 grams of espresso (for a double shot pull), and tamp at exactly 20 pounds body weight." These are all actions essential to pulling great shots of espresso- and this is all before you even have any water meet the ground coffee! I had assumed that since I had been able to do these actions hundreds of times, identically, and without fail, thanks to Kaldi's impressive training methods, I would be able to recall this same training a year later. I was wrong.
Not only was it surprisingly difficult to replicate what I had used to be able to do easily, I could not perform other tasks that I had always considered simple- such as steaming milk or manual pouring the correct amounts of water into a Chemex Drip Coffee Carafe - 6 Cup. You would think that the lesson would have become clear then- if you do not use your skill, you will lose it- even in specialty coffee preparation.
On Tuesday, I received a new popcorn popper in the mail for roasting coffee at home. The last one I bought was super-charged or something. It took good grean means and burnt them into charcoal, or worse, Italian roast, in two minutes flat. My replacement works better. The problem with insanely fast roast times is that the beans do not have a chance to roast thoroughly all the way through. They become "tipped" and undrinkable.
It is significantly less-amazing. The beans looked a bit yellower than they had a few months ago, so I chalked that up to their added age. I began the roasting process and noticed at once that the beans were not behaving in the same way as they had previous. First crack almost never came. Months ago, first crack came at about 3 minutes in, then second at around 4 minutes and 15 seconds. I used to stop the roast at 3'55". This round had to last clear into 6 minutes. Even then, the coffee looked under-roasted. And let me tell you, it definitely tastes like it too! It was terribly astringent through my chemex. After another two days of aging, I tried it through my mokka pot. It was a bit better, but not dramatically. This morning, as a last ditch attempt, I brewed the Marcala through the French Press- my least favorite method. It worked the best yet, salvageable. "Salvageable" is not what I want what was my favorite coffee EVER to measure up to. Embarrassing.
Honestly, I think that the age of the coffee had something to do with the outcome. The change in popper could play a part in the slew of variables as well. Nevertheless, I feel that my two months out of the roasting game bore negative effects on the product as well. So, again, if you fail to use your fine skills, you could very well lose them. Fear not though, I have worked through my "roasters-block" and produced a very nice Tanzanian coffee, again, sourced through Sweet Maria's.
A great program idea that many specialty roasters are starting up is coffee education events. These are short tutorials or brewing exposes for both their baristas and interested customers. The Roasterie in Kansas City and Kaldi's in St. Louis held similar events just last night. Here's a graphic for Kaldi's event:
And The Roasterie's event:
I encourage you to attend events like these if you wish to develop and maintain a strong skill of tasting and/or preparing specialty coffee yourself. If you're in Columbia, stop by Vida Coffee Co, or give me a call and we'll do something similar.
Lord, thank You for the ability to learn, especially from our mistakes. Please help me to learn more every day and sharpen my skill to use it, somehow, for Your glory. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
A year ago, when I stopped working as a barista at Kaldi's Coffee Roasters, I began work on starting a new coffee shop on the University of Missouri's campus in Columbia, Missouri. After nine months of footwork and ground-breaking, Vida Coffee Co was born. This endeavor created in me many new skills through experiences I had not had prior.
When Vida opened at the beginning of the 2010-2011 school year in August, I took the position of Head Trainer and coffee orderer (Vida is supplied by Northwest Coffee Roasters in Saint Louis). I got back behind the bar for the first time in a year. I expected to pick up a portafilter, grind, dose, and tamp just like I had used to do. I thought unconciously, "I know how to grind perfectly, dose precisely 19-20 grams of espresso (for a double shot pull), and tamp at exactly 20 pounds body weight." These are all actions essential to pulling great shots of espresso- and this is all before you even have any water meet the ground coffee! I had assumed that since I had been able to do these actions hundreds of times, identically, and without fail, thanks to Kaldi's impressive training methods, I would be able to recall this same training a year later. I was wrong.
Not only was it surprisingly difficult to replicate what I had used to be able to do easily, I could not perform other tasks that I had always considered simple- such as steaming milk or manual pouring the correct amounts of water into a Chemex Drip Coffee Carafe - 6 Cup. You would think that the lesson would have become clear then- if you do not use your skill, you will lose it- even in specialty coffee preparation.
On Tuesday, I received a new popcorn popper in the mail for roasting coffee at home. The last one I bought was super-charged or something. It took good grean means and burnt them into charcoal, or worse, Italian roast, in two minutes flat. My replacement works better. The problem with insanely fast roast times is that the beans do not have a chance to roast thoroughly all the way through. They become "tipped" and undrinkable.
So, with my new roaster, I felt invincible again. I roasted a practice batch of machine-harvested Brazilian coffee to make sure that the popper performed. Since it did, I switched to my favorite coffee of all time, Organic Honduras Marcala. I picked it up through Sweet Maria's. I had about a pound and a half left from September- right on the edge of it's lifetime- so, I roasted what was left.
It is significantly less-amazing. The beans looked a bit yellower than they had a few months ago, so I chalked that up to their added age. I began the roasting process and noticed at once that the beans were not behaving in the same way as they had previous. First crack almost never came. Months ago, first crack came at about 3 minutes in, then second at around 4 minutes and 15 seconds. I used to stop the roast at 3'55". This round had to last clear into 6 minutes. Even then, the coffee looked under-roasted. And let me tell you, it definitely tastes like it too! It was terribly astringent through my chemex. After another two days of aging, I tried it through my mokka pot. It was a bit better, but not dramatically. This morning, as a last ditch attempt, I brewed the Marcala through the French Press- my least favorite method. It worked the best yet, salvageable. "Salvageable" is not what I want what was my favorite coffee EVER to measure up to. Embarrassing.
Honestly, I think that the age of the coffee had something to do with the outcome. The change in popper could play a part in the slew of variables as well. Nevertheless, I feel that my two months out of the roasting game bore negative effects on the product as well. So, again, if you fail to use your fine skills, you could very well lose them. Fear not though, I have worked through my "roasters-block" and produced a very nice Tanzanian coffee, again, sourced through Sweet Maria's.
A great program idea that many specialty roasters are starting up is coffee education events. These are short tutorials or brewing exposes for both their baristas and interested customers. The Roasterie in Kansas City and Kaldi's in St. Louis held similar events just last night. Here's a graphic for Kaldi's event:
And The Roasterie's event:
I encourage you to attend events like these if you wish to develop and maintain a strong skill of tasting and/or preparing specialty coffee yourself. If you're in Columbia, stop by Vida Coffee Co, or give me a call and we'll do something similar.
Lord, thank You for the ability to learn, especially from our mistakes. Please help me to learn more every day and sharpen my skill to use it, somehow, for Your glory. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
My Body is Just a Filter
I don't usually do this, but the perfection of what I have run across causes me to act outside of the norm. I searched for "coffee comics" and came up with a lot of not very funny crap, with a few exceptions. There was one that stuck out in particular, though. This comic isn't necessarily hilarious, but fits me perfectly. I AM this comic strip. I do not know what other stuff this particular writer has, but this comic stands alone. Enjoy:
There were a few other decent ones out there:
And so that you haven't looked through this entire post without some tidbit of meaningful prose, here's this last image... Since it is somewhat intelligent, it isn't a comic, sorry.
Lord, thank You for humor and art. I pray You bless baristas with both. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
There were a few other decent ones out there:
Lord, thank You for humor and art. I pray You bless baristas with both. Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
My Review of Ethiopia Koke Yirgacheffe
I decided it was time for a good, old-fashioned coffee review. It just so happens that Kaldi's Coffee Roasters recently had a new coffee reviewed at the Coffee Review. Being that I am a verified reviewer for the CR, I targeted it as well. If you're close the the St. Louis area (or a city in Missouri for that matter), find one of their cafes and check this coffee out. Enjoy.
Originally submitted at Coffee Review
Originally submitted at Coffee Review
An Ideal Yirgacheffe
By The Espresso Vein from Columbia, MO on 1/12/2011
4out of 5
Pros: Thick body, Attractive aftertaste, clean, Balanced Acidity, Roasted nut palate aromaCons: Not best total immersion, A tad too dark
Best Uses: Chemex, V60
After trying this coffee French Pressed, Chemexed, through a V60, and AeroPressed, I concluded that this coffee performs the best when contact with water is the most limited- the V60's product was what I described in my review. The Koke brewed through the Chemex was also good, but not quite as good as the V60- the body in the V60 was a little heavier than the Chemex, more like a nice whole milk rather than 2%. The heavier body added an unusual complexity to the Koke that I noticed and missed in the Chemex. The French Press produced an ugly, astringent cup. The AeroPress did not produce a desirable aftertaste with this coffee- it left me thinking that I didn't really NEED another sip. Overall though, with pour-overs, this was a very good cup. I agree with the rating.
(legalese)
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Missions & Coffeevangelism, Unite!
My AeroPress and Hario Mini Mill performed well! I took them with me to Villa Union, Coahuila, Mexico for the last 6 days. I had no idea if I would be able to even make coffee on this year's Mizzou Christian Campus House mission trip. I had weaned myself completely off of coffee in preparation- I wanted to be of some use while there if pure water/ means for boiling were not available. When we arrived, I saw a mountain of purified water stacked against a small cinder-block shed awaiting us; necessito numero uno, el checko. The next miracle appeared shortly thereafter. I saw a fully functional propane powered stove WITH a small pot in the sleeping quarters (hallelujah). Ten minutes into our week-long mission, I knew large-scale success was inevitable- Where there is coffee (and the Lord), there is a way.
Every morning I busted out my AeroPress at 7am, and ground my Costa Rican coffee, from the Helsar de Zarcero farm, from Kaldi's Coffee Roasters. I became known as "Hombre del Cafe," the "Coffee Man." The ladies from the church there at the Villa Union Iglesia de Cristo asked me to prepare a cup for them on the last day, which was a big honor (they thought the coffee was "muy fuerte" or "very strong" and tasted divine).
During the 25 (or so) hour drive back to Columbia, Missouri, we stopped at several gas stations and McDonald's restaurants. As one of the few drivers on this expedition, I thought staying awake was a priority; staying alert was not a job for something as insignificant as gas station or fast food coffee. Around 6:30 this morning, I asked the gas station attendants at one Oklahoma truck stop if I could simply use a styrofoam cup and hot water to make my own coffee. They told me it'd cost 49 cents. This was a rip-off, but a sale nonetheless. Around 10am, I bought a number two at Mickey D's on the Kansas Turnpike, near the godforsaken cesspool known as Lawrence, Kansas. Instead of taking the standard 'coffee' with the meal, I opted for a different beverage- no, not the $1.30 extra charge orange juice either. Rather, I asked for hot water. I whipped out the grinder and AeroPress again and made my own brew right then and there at the soda fountain counter. I caused a scene at both locations, but specialty coffee can do that sometimes. I'm sure most thought I was acting out a bit, being a tad dramatic, and overly zealous about coffee. I see it differently.
I am committed deeply to very few things. My faith, my family, my employer(s), and great coffee. I was on a mission trip of two kinds: Christian service and charity as well as Coffeevangelism. I would like to think I effectively practiced both on that trip, and hope to continue the practice daily hereafter.
I'm bummed I didn't take any pictures now that I'm blogging about it, but I'm more of a man of action, rather than detailed notation. Surely somebody on Facebook took a picture at some point. If so, I'll link to it.
Traveling? Get yourself a Hario Mini Mill Hand Grinder as well as an AeroPress. While you're at it, think about buying some solid coffee to take with you. There are many great specialty roasters out there (check the right side of my page if you don't know where to get started). Personally, if I had been able to roast my own (I couldn't since the last popper I bought was a dud) coffee, I would have.
This mission trip wasn't my first with coffee and I hope it isn't my last either. Coffee seems to be a cross-cultural bonding mechanism that nearly everyone can appreciate. It certainly gave me an inroad with the people we were serving in Villa Union. I think that most people who work in coffee would second my experiences- coffee unites.
Lord, thank You for the safe and successful journey to Villa Union. I pray the church there can fill the new sanctuary we build as well as use the baptistry that is now in place. Also Lord, I thank You for creating such an awesome drink that assists in the process of meeting people as well as keeping travelers safely alert (if not in need of more restroom breaks). Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Every morning I busted out my AeroPress at 7am, and ground my Costa Rican coffee, from the Helsar de Zarcero farm, from Kaldi's Coffee Roasters. I became known as "Hombre del Cafe," the "Coffee Man." The ladies from the church there at the Villa Union Iglesia de Cristo asked me to prepare a cup for them on the last day, which was a big honor (they thought the coffee was "muy fuerte" or "very strong" and tasted divine).
During the 25 (or so) hour drive back to Columbia, Missouri, we stopped at several gas stations and McDonald's restaurants. As one of the few drivers on this expedition, I thought staying awake was a priority; staying alert was not a job for something as insignificant as gas station or fast food coffee. Around 6:30 this morning, I asked the gas station attendants at one Oklahoma truck stop if I could simply use a styrofoam cup and hot water to make my own coffee. They told me it'd cost 49 cents. This was a rip-off, but a sale nonetheless. Around 10am, I bought a number two at Mickey D's on the Kansas Turnpike, near the godforsaken cesspool known as Lawrence, Kansas. Instead of taking the standard 'coffee' with the meal, I opted for a different beverage- no, not the $1.30 extra charge orange juice either. Rather, I asked for hot water. I whipped out the grinder and AeroPress again and made my own brew right then and there at the soda fountain counter. I caused a scene at both locations, but specialty coffee can do that sometimes. I'm sure most thought I was acting out a bit, being a tad dramatic, and overly zealous about coffee. I see it differently.
I am committed deeply to very few things. My faith, my family, my employer(s), and great coffee. I was on a mission trip of two kinds: Christian service and charity as well as Coffeevangelism. I would like to think I effectively practiced both on that trip, and hope to continue the practice daily hereafter.
I'm bummed I didn't take any pictures now that I'm blogging about it, but I'm more of a man of action, rather than detailed notation. Surely somebody on Facebook took a picture at some point. If so, I'll link to it.
Traveling? Get yourself a Hario Mini Mill Hand Grinder as well as an AeroPress. While you're at it, think about buying some solid coffee to take with you. There are many great specialty roasters out there (check the right side of my page if you don't know where to get started). Personally, if I had been able to roast my own (I couldn't since the last popper I bought was a dud) coffee, I would have.
This mission trip wasn't my first with coffee and I hope it isn't my last either. Coffee seems to be a cross-cultural bonding mechanism that nearly everyone can appreciate. It certainly gave me an inroad with the people we were serving in Villa Union. I think that most people who work in coffee would second my experiences- coffee unites.
Lord, thank You for the safe and successful journey to Villa Union. I pray the church there can fill the new sanctuary we build as well as use the baptistry that is now in place. Also Lord, I thank You for creating such an awesome drink that assists in the process of meeting people as well as keeping travelers safely alert (if not in need of more restroom breaks). Keep my head deflated and on straight.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)