« April 2008 | Main | June 2008 »

May 2008

May 31, 2008

Ain't She Pretty?

Today was Day Three of our cupping and roasting course here in Northern California. All the students have been very eager and dedicated, asking lots of questions, staying late at the end of the day to inspect green coffee and watch Willem run batches on the sample roasters.

Ah, the beauties....

The Orange Machine (design by Marty Curtis)

While they roasted away (this was nine students working on four machines), I set up a cupping of nine different Panama coffees. Actually, technically this was seven different Panamas, since three of them were just different roasts of the same coffee (Elida Estates, if you are wondering). It was good to do an exercise like this with new coffees. It's been a while. We had a caturra, a typica, and a geisha all from neighboring farms (read: same microclimates and soil). All in all, a great cupping. Of course, the geisha won... always singing the most beautiful song on the table when she shows up.

IpodGeisha

Today's other star was a Grade 1 Sidamo brought back from our last trip to Ethiopia. Willem roasted it up espresso style (nice long, slow roast-development time) and I pulled shots of it unblended on his little David Schomer Special 1-group La Marzocco. The espresso was really nice! Fruity, sweet, mild, and friendly. This made for a great pick-me-up on a Friday afternoon after three days of classes when it was beautiful and sunny outside.

I'm collecting some great samples to take back to New York. And not just Panamas... but Ethiopias, Kenyas, El Sals, you name it! This weekend looks like I may head into San Francisco and drop by Ritual and Blue Bottle for a little West Coast espresso love.

In other news, the universe is the same as when I was a child... the sun continues to rise in the east and set in the west.

May 29, 2008

Fearsome Whales Off the Port Bow

Amazing

What can anyone say that hasn't already been covered either by Milton, Sebald, or Bethlehem Shoals.

Anne is cooking up the next New York Coffee Society get-together as we speak. Should be something fun and informal. Stay tuned to your friendly neighborhood coffee blog for an announcement.

But the nonsense has got to stop at some point. Time to break out the score sheets. No more cinnamon toast barbecue. This gold is raining down from on high: flavor, aftertaste, acidity, mouthfeel. And the aroma's not the same thing as the damn fragrance. 

If you would like to learn some serious pirate battle tactics kind of shit (I'm looking at you, Andrey), send an email to the NYCS. We've got the hot water and the serious coffee. And some actual legit descriptors. Bring a pen cause people are always stealing that kind of thing.

The flag flies black over the valley June 11th. I'll keep it all up front here.

(PS: Welcome to NY Times readers... keep reading here or send an email if you want to learn more. Professional assistance here)

May 28, 2008

Coffee Pairing Brunch in Brooklyn

Oh snap, NYC. Bobbie Marchand and I are doing it again.

Saturday, June 21st, 10:30-ish a.m: another coffee and food pairing in Brooklyn! The last one was all nighttime and rooftops and dinner; this one will be all late morning and backyard and brunch. Once again, Bobbie's handling the food end of the things. Coffee by yours truly. 

What's going to be on the menu depends on what I find on my current adventure out West. At Willem Boot's lab in California where I am this week, I have access to some excellent El Salvadors, Panamas, and Kenyas. And there may finally be some big batches of sample material arriving from Addis Ababa from the Ethiopia Limited project. 

What a dreamy time of year to do this, too. All the Central Americans are fresh off the boat bursting with sweetness and sparkling with life; spring foods are fresh and in-season. I can't wait to see how Bobbie works her magic this time. I can tell you the coffee will rock (we'll do at least four or five... small portions as always). 

Cost is $25 to cover Bobbie's food ingredients. Location is a beautiful backyard patio in Carroll Garden (to be revealed to people who RSVP in time). Menu and coffee choices will be disclosed as soon as they are settled on. Space is very, very limited. 

E-mail me (newyorkcoffeesociety and then an at sign and then a gmail.com) if you are interested!

What Does Coffee Blossom Smell Like?

I am in California right now, helping to teach a class in sensory evaluation. As I write this, the students are playing with the Nez du Cafe kit, finding wayward pairs of vials of aromatic essentials. Quote just overheard: "My nose isn't working anymore!" 


As I wrote before, the aromatic tests can be very difficult. It's a bit unfair to ask people to identify the smell of coffee blossoms if they have never been to a coffee farm. 


Part of the problem is that it seems arbitrary if you are in a foul mood. It's not arbitrary of course. But everyone has a different physiognomy, and everyone has different experiences with different aromatic compounds. Picking out black pepper and cedar is a breeze for me, whereas the difference between fresh butter and caramel is every-shifting in my mind. It took me four tries to get this right! The Salvadorans I took this test with, almost to a one, had the opposite problem. The temptation is to throw up your hands and say, "Well, it's all subjective." 


Preference is subjective. The factors that make up the cup about which you have a preference are not subjective. They are organic compounds that are in the cup in specific quantities. It's very, very hard work to pick them out, to learn how they manifest in the cup, to learn the provenance of each one (varietal, soil, process, roast, etc). But this difficult work becomes impossible work if you go in with the attitude of "it's all subjective."


Precision and care are the necessary ingredients. Plus coffee.


Long ago, on my old blog, I talked about this.



May 23, 2008

Rise, Rise Young Man

Been a bit of a free-floating particle this last week, or perhaps a particularly far-flung amplitude flow in configuration space. I've switched from NYC, where the rain was coming down in great, sticky sheets, to Seattle, where it drifts down like an afterthought from chilly gods. 
Right now a bit hand-tied using coffee shop internet to compose these thoughts. Too pudgy and slow to link some pretty and/or baffling photos for illustrative purposes. I'm here helping family move casitas, and to attend the wedding of a dear one. I'll be on the West coast till early-mid-June, going to California for a couple of roasting and cupping seminars, plus a couple dozen hours of unpacking sacks of coffee and repackaging them to make samples for bidders in the Ethiopia Limited auction. Then it's back to Seattle for a cupping at Atlas. Then back to New York.

I did stop in at the new/old/new Victrola on Pike Street. Of course, Victrola was sold back in February to Whidbey's Coffee of Whidbey Island. The name remains the same, and they are still roasting coffee in the back room. I didn't recognize the baristas (kinda sad for old man me). The espresso was similar to the last one I had there in january... very short pull and thickly extracted. Spicy, a tad fruity, and bitter.

I'll be picking up some beanerinos from Stumptown a little later today and posting a review once I've had some to drink from the barren Mercer Island castle I'm sleeping at over the weekend. The relative radio silence of the last two weeks is broken, and I have coffe-and-food pairing brunches to tell you about (New York style, natch), plus a coffee-centric benefit for typhoon victims in Burma, plus some interesting coffees to roast and cup, plus cupping and discussion of all the upcoming CoE auctions plus the Ethiopia auction. Many beans must be counted ere the day is done. So stay tuned.

Incidentally, for those of you who asked about my next column at Divine Caroline... it's still on the way. i'm half tempted to just post it here, but the editors assure me it'll be up very soon. In the meantime, I drink coffee.

May 14, 2008

Entropy is Not Freedom

2478836776_7eca8fb9d8_o
(photo by these guys)

Daniel Mulu took the train up from Baltimore (where he is visiting family before his return to Addis Ababa). We missed Andrew Barnett's Brazilian coffee event at Grumpy, which was a major bummer. Daniel got off the train in Jersey instead of Penn Station. I predict I will not stop making fun of him until mid-2015 at the earliest.

But we did manage to make it our own coffee event in time, the next day. It was freaking great! We took the A-train out to Ozone Park where John Moore of Dallis Coffee set us up on their sweet two-barrel Probat sample roaster. We roasted up 12 delicious samples from the Ethiopia auction and then trained it back into town just in time to pick up some cupping supplies from Gimme! and head up to the BODUM headquarters.

Andrew Barnett came, and Oren from Oren's Daily Roast, Genevieve Kappler of international cupping fame (France, US, Ethiopia, Colombia), a delegation from the Ethiopian permanent mission at the UN. Plus Koji from Japan, Matija and Mare from Croatia, and assorted Mannahattoes and Breukleiners...

Dnasp_2

2478836898_d6c111437d_o

2478836582_7689a983a0

(thanks Koji, Anne and Neil for the photos... and Anne and Neil I swear I am getting a new camera and will stop stealing your pics).

THANK YOU BODUM.

THANK YOU EDIBLE MANHATTAN.

Much coffee was cupped. The space is beautiful. Afterward, much meat and beer with Anne and Neil and Andrew (what a terrible Buddhist I am), and I took Daniel to SoHo to see the pretty girls and the bright lights.

Perhaps some Cup of Excellence events there in the near future? Raise your hand if you like this idea...

May 07, 2008

Which Coffee Person is Most Beautiful?

I don't have any photos of my own from SCAA Minneapolis. But here are a few very nice shots by the lovely and talented Liz Clayton.

Cupping pavilion...
2461999363_33c429fd1c

The Champ...
2471359046_97a183e6b1

USBC audience shot...
2471396688_06db4c17421

Scott Lucey...
2471396820_222c06b70b

Alterra gave out free t shirts (genius!)....
2471787675_f03182a688

Nick Cho with the japanese cold-brew folks (this shot by Mark Prince)....
2472610896_e1b448115d

Chris Deferio, one of the Northeast's finest...
2473295643_cdfbee4f03

Amber Fox...
2474112662_a1d764d27e

Intelly's souped up Mistral (looks like a Nissan Z to me)...
2474115306_fd83e78ff4

Search, Tonx, Barnett...
2473296149_f28c1d41dc

Check out more pretty pics on the flickr group that Mark organized and to which Liz contributed here.

May 06, 2008

What Does Sweet and Clean Get You?

The flight out of Minneapolis was delayed and bumpy. Once airborne I saw there were multiple bands of clouds of different formations. This I take to mean a convergence of conflicting weather systems .

There had been a summer-like humidity in the air on the ground as Daniel Mulu and I waited for our taxi to pick us up from our hotel, the exterior of which, incidentally, was decorate to look like some sort of French chateau. On Thursday and Friday, however, the Ethiopian delegation had been grumbling about the cold, and indeed, there had been chill blasts of wind up and down the streets of the city. Friday night I walked about 15 blocks to the the riverside to one of the big coffee parties (this one held by Volcafé, Clover, and Intelligentsia). It was streaming down a pretty steady cold rain. Except for the complete lack of elevation-change, I felt I could have been in the Jefferson-Jackson-4th-5th-6th area of Seattle.

Minneapolis has a classic-modern American downtown. By this I mean it consists mainly of tall steel and glass towers surrounded by lesser concrete structures, out of which pour white collar workers at five o'clock to populate the somewhat cookie-cutter bars and restaurants. Then these people leave, presumably for the suburbs or high up into the apartment towers where they remain until the morning. At night it's positively devoid of life, or even economic activity. I am sure that quite nearby there are some interesting neighborhoods with local flavor and culture and people walking; on my short stay I did not encounter them.

Many people remarked how this year's show seemed a little underattended. I noticed this too, but it was only my third show, so my data set is a little small for me to reach any sweeping conclusions. But even a smallish show has far, far too much content for one person to take in. I managed not to attend a single seminar when there were a dozen which appealed to me.

On the show floor I had some good coffee and some bad. There were plastic bags for sale, and equipment with which to fill them, and the roasters for sale to roast the coffee for the bags, the green coffee producers proclaiming the superiority of their countries' coffees for filling your roasting machine with, the importers who promised the best price and product and service in bringing you those green coffees, the magazines and information services, the consultants, the coffee shops, the baristas, the board members and board presidents, the fluorescent lights and packed grey carpet over the slick cement floor. At the refreshment stand Sunday afternoon where I stumbled caffeine-stricken and sleep-deprived, searching purely for calories without regard for other nutrients, I found I had insufficient cash for a coke and fries. Felicia behind the counter gave me fifty cents out of her own pocket so I could buy them.

Felicia, strangely, was also the name of the girl at the front desk of my erstwhile-chateau, who gave me several plastic laundry bags this morning when I checked out. I needed the bags to wrap up securely the coffee samples Daniel Mulu had brought to my room the night before. I am writing this on the airplane and hanging over my head in the overhead compartment (three feet above 37,000) are several kilos of washed coffee from Aleta Wondo via Lensemo Lamisso (official score: 91.3) and natural coffee from Biloya via S. A. Bagersh (official score: 90.5). These precious beans are to replenish my dwindling supply of green that I brought back from Ethiopia.

The supply is ever-dwindling because there has been a series of delays getting sample material air-freighted from Addis Ababa. The details are many and bureaucratic, and so I will spare you. Happily though, some colleagues were able to pin down the state minister and elicit a promise that the export letter will be forthcoming. Soon we will take delivery on the 600 kilos of samples at Dallis Coffee in New York (these people being the ones so kind and devoted to the industry that they are allowing us to use their facility for this project with no compensation or recognition other than the pittance I can offer on this blog). Then there will be much coffee, for a while at least. Someday, of course, it will all be gone.

An Ethiopian Yirgacheffe took the Roaster's Guild Coffee of the Year at the tasting pavilion. But for me the star coffee of the show was from Finca Matalapa in El Salvador.

We cupped about 30 different coffees at the El Salvador booth over the course of the weekend. I think I was the only one who cupped all of these coffees this weekend (many others, at the Consejo in San Salvador and during the Cup of Excellence competition, have of course cupped them all as well). The quality was thoroughgoing, consistent, and astonishing. Everything was so sweet and clean. The bourbons offered up orange and chocolate and caramel; the pacamaras were strange dark brews of sweetness, lemongrass and pipe tobacco.

Finca Matalapa did exceptionally well on the cupping table (it turned up twice), even among such elevated company. It's sweet and smooth, with a balanced acidity based around a sweet, sweet orange core. It was these characteristics that led Kyle Glanville to select it for use in competition as a single-origin espresso. I think I was the last person to understand that the same coffee I liked so much was the same coffee that my good friend and junior-senior-mentor-buddy was using in the championship. Intelligentsia bought this coffee and then rushed the delivery to Los Angeles so the fresh-crop could be roasted and developed for Kyle.

A single-origin Central American is a huge risk, but this coffee was up to the test; and this barista, too, was up to the test. Seeing Kyle win was the highlight of the show. I have been openly pulling for him since we first competed together under the Victrola banner in 2005. I make no secret of my partisanship, even though there are many other deserving baristas, and indeed many other good friends of mine who I would love to see win. But even my open and rampant pro-Kyle homerism had not prepared me for how nervous I felt as they announced the results yesterday. One by one James Hoffmann read off the names of the competitors... 6th place, 5th place. By the time it was down to three (Pete, Heather, Kyle), I felt a palpable buttefly sensation and when Heather was announced as 3rd place, I even said out loud, "He has to win."

Well, he did. There was much applause and cheering.

The Salvadorans are well-organized. Brett Walker is a nice guy and his competition blend from Zoka is quite tasty. The musicians the Ethiopians brought to the US to represent their culture went underground and have not been heard from since. The Roaster's Guild meeting was surprisingly tenderhearted and touching.

The BGA party on Saturday was a fully drunken affair. The Torani syrup people had a private booth with several bottles of Grey Goose going but by the time I made it there they were all gone. David Latourell was sweet and danced all night as usual. There was also the prettiest girl there I saw all weekend dressed in a pink minidress and she turned four heads at once at one point (I saw the heads turn). She was a waitress and not a coffee person, which surprised me a little, because the women who work in specialty coffee are usually the most beautiful women around.

Another spring, another SCAA show... now to wait for all those coffees to arrive on our shores in full force. The happy season is nearly upon us.

Shot from the Show

A little glimpse at this year's show as it comes to a close. Here's me leading a cupping at the El Salvador booth.

Dn2asp_3

May 05, 2008

Glanville Wins!

USBC Final Results:

1st Place: Kyle Glanville, Intelligentsia
2nd Place: Pete Licata, PT's
3rd Place: Heather Perry, Coffee Klatch

Kyle took the cake with his awesome single-origin espresso from Finca Matalapa in El Salvador. Now it's on to Copenhagen for the world championship for him. Will this be the year that an American finally wins this thing?

Congratulations, Kyle!