This is the absolute fastest way to make French press iced coffee. Just forget about cold brew concentrate – with this Quick French Press Iced Coffee Recipe you can have your iced coffee ready in 5 – 6 minutes. Who doesn’t like the French press?! It’s...
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
I Tested Keurig K Compact – Here’s Everything You Need To Know
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The coffee rose for assessing Anaerobic coffee
I just came across this really neat tool to assess anaerobic coffees. I haven't used it for cupping yet. I'm not sure I will like it either because the idea of lowering the score of the coffee just because it tastes has some thyme flavors. At the same time I...
Three US Coffee Championship Events Are Heading To Rancho Cucamonga
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. The 2024 US Barista Championship, Brewers Cup, and Cup Tasters will take place March 15-17 at Klatch Coffee Roasters in Rancho Cucamonga, California.
The Origin Story of Turtle Island Coffee in Vancouver, B.C.
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Get Ready for The Barista League’s 2024 Season
The Barista League has announced 12 competitions across four continents. BY J. MARIE CARLANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of The Barista League When The Barista…
Get Ready for The Barista League’s 2024 Season
The Barista League has announced 12 competitions across four continents. BY J. MARIE CARLANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of The Barista League When The Barista…
Get Ready for The Barista League’s 2024 Season
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Weekly Coffee News: EUDR and Africa + More Celebrity Coffee
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Do Higher Coffee Prices Mean More Money For Farmers? A Story From Sumatra Shows It’s Complicated
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. Since coffee costs more now than ever, do those coffee prices impact the amount of money earned by coffee farmers?
Coffee News Recap, 2 Feb: Applications open for Australia’s Richest Barista 2024, De’Longhi reports 4.6% revenue increase after La Marzocco move & other stories
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Watch The 8 Best Coffee Videos Vying For Sprudgie Awards
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. The best coffee videos from 2023 featuring Cafe Imports, Aramse, Nguyen Coffee Supply, Wildly, Mirror Coffee Roasters, Alto Stories, Quek Shio, and Cafe Retiro.
Robusta is great and has untapped potential
I live in the US and my typical choice of coffee is lightly roasted Ethiopian pour overs. I generally love acidity and fruit flavors in my coffee. My experience with Robusta has often been poor. Very dark, roasty and maybe chocolatey. I participated in the Hoffman...
Design Details: Brewing Reinvented at ULA Café in Melbourne
Welcome to Design Details, an ongoing editorial feature in Daily Coffee News focused on individual examples of coffee shop architecture, interior design, packaging design or branding. If you are a coffee...
Robert Downey Jr.’s New “Happy Coffee” Is Really Depressing
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. Robert Downey Jr. and Craig Dubitsky team up for Happy Coffee.
Out Now: The February + March 2024 Issue of Barista Magazine!
In our new issue we feature Lisa Lawson from Glasgow, Scotland, take a look at the newest grinders, explore spring drink inspiration, see how more women are getting involved in coffee tech, and much more! BY SARAH ALLENBARISTA MAGAZINE We’re stoked to announce the...
The coffee industry’s biggest competition: The story of the World Barista Championship
Every year, the global coffee industry gears up for one of its most exciting and groundbreaking competitions: the World Barista Championship. For more than two decades, the WBC has been one of the biggest catalysts for change and innovation in specialty coffee, and...
The 2023 Specialty Coffee Transaction Guide Has Landed
The 2023 edition of the Specialty Coffee Transaction Guide (SCTG) guide went live today, providing actors throughout the coffee chain a data-driven tool for green coffee price discovery. The full...
Espro great until I needed replacement filter ☹️
I've had an Espro P7 for nearly four years after seeing glowing praise on this sub (to which I later contributed). Before I bought the P7 I looked at the replacement parts available and they seemed like a solid company in that they sold e.g. replacement filters...
New Bill Requires More Kona In Your Kona Coffee
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. Currently a coffee only need to be 10% Kona to be labeled as such.
What’s the best and worst part about owning and running a coffee shop?
I'm not interested in getting into it myself, as I have no experience in the service industry, no real appetite for risk and no desire to run a business in general. But sometimes I think about it and I wonder what's the most enjoyable thing about it and...
minimum dose size?
I use the Hario switch to brew my coffee and am trying to reduce my caffeine consumption. Hence I would like to brew smaller cups of coffee. I am currently using 10g of coffee with 160g of water. (1:16 Ratio) I am wondering if there is a minimum amount of coffee...
[CAFE OWNERS] Background before starting a shop?
I’ve worked in coffee for 6 yrs as a barista and shift supervisor and have passion for it. I’ve decided that I want to open my own place in the future and so I’ve been doing the research to make a business plan. Lately, however, I’ve begun to realize just how many...
Highlights from the 2017 SCA Expo, Seattle
Thursday & Friday Roasting Masterclasses
On Thursday and Friday I taught three roasting masterclasses at Ada’s Technical Books, a throwback independent, charming bookstore. In an age when we all too often order books online by default, Ada’s is the kind of place where you can curl up on a couch and get lost in fascinating books for hours in a warm, intellectual atmosphere.
I was thrilled by the level of student participation at the classes, which all sold out. I introduced several exciting new ideas about roasting and roast-curve-data interpretation, and the students asked many great questions. The vibes were fantastic– so much so that I plan to offer the same class in Budapest in June just before the World of Coffee.
Before the classes we drank some lovely Elixir made from 2014 Kenya Karatu (thanks to the legendary George Howell for supplying me with the frozen green!) and some delicious Colombian Guanacas from Color Roasters, sourced from Red Fox Coffee Merchants, brewed as both Elixir and Chemex.
I even almost enjoyed brewing some Chemexes for the classes, as that was the only option I had available. But come on, Chemex lovers, what’s with the ridiculous filters? They’re three-layered on one side, single-layered on the other, reek of chlorine, and if not rinsed for several minutes, they make coffee taste like cardboard. And how about the way the filters often sag into the Chemex spout, slowing the drawdown? Are we supposed to accept those flaws because the Chemex is pretty? I already make that mistake in my dating life — I don’t need to make it in coffee, too :). I know there are workarounds (chopsticks in the spout, rinse the %&$I# out of the filter), but I still have trouble taking that brewer seriously. That said, adding the Rao Spin has made Chemex brewing worlds easier and better.


Thank you to all of you who came to the classes— I sincerely hope you enjoyed them and took home many ideas that help your roasting. I’m grateful as well to Lee Safar for supplying the Elixir and for her help in brewing and cleaning, and to Lorrie Mahieu and Ada’s for the flawless organization and execution. If you attended the classes and would like to offer any feedback, I’m all ears. Feel free to leave a comment here. Thanks.
The Expo Floor
The highlights of the show for me each year are catching up with old friends and seeing new, exciting coffee equipment. Among the most interesting machines were the Vortx EcoFilter and the Ground Control Brewer. I’ve mentioned the Vortx before, and I hope and expect the Vortx will negate the need for afterburners for those using roasters smaller than 15kg. I can’t wait to test drive one soon.
I’m excited about the Ground Control, as it’s the most innovative brewer to appear in years. It’s essentially a batch brewer that chops up a single brew into 1-4 discrete cycles. For example, if you brew a 4-liter batch, you could program the machine to brew 4 one-liter cycles. The machine will dispense one liter of water, agitate the slurry for a programmed amount of time, drain the slurry by vacuum pressure, and then repeat the process three times. Draining the slurry completely and beginning each cycle with fresh water allows for a much higher extraction than is possible with a typical batch brewer. The Ground Control folks were serving 26%—27% extractions throughout the Expo while using a Guatemala grinder with modestly sharp burrs. I can only assume a sharp, properly-aligned EK would have brought the extractions to above 28%.


Some of the brews were lovely: soft and sweet with little hint of overextraction. However, after tasting about 12 batches, it was clear that the brewer was inconsistent… often as much as 10% of the grounds would end up high and dry on the filter wall, the water delivery into the coffee bed was poorly designed for even extraction, and the agitation of the slurry often left the coffee bed quite lumpy during the drawdowns, causing channeling. If the Ground Control folks fix those flaws, the machine will rightly take over the coffee world. Even if they don’t fix those flaws, the machine still produces better coffee than the majority of batch brewers, and the cost savings of 26%+ extractions are compelling. (NB: I brought up all of these points and more to the GC crew last year and decided to wait a year to review the machine, as I didn’t want to be critical without offering them a fair chance to improve the machine first.)
This year the GC crew was more open to feedback than they had been last year, so I’m optimistic they will continue to improve the machine. The bottom line is it’s already an impressive machine, and hopefully will be even better in the future. I was pleased when one of the GC folks noted that two of the best brews they made at the show had been roasted by clients of mine: a Colombian Paraiso from Merit Roasters and Colombian Guanacas from Color Roasters. Those two Colombians were easily the best coffees I tasted at the show as well.
One of the most surprising and ironic things about the Expo each year is how difficult it can be to find delicious coffee. I’m not alone in that opinion— at least 20 people echoed that sentiment to me personally this weekend. I tasted plenty of burnt, underdeveloped, and baked coffees on the show floor. Some of them may have been 88+ point coffees, but their roasting and extraction left much to be desired. None of us are perfect, myself included, but we certainly have a long way to go as an industry.














