cupping

June 30, 2008

These Cherries are Not Ripe . . .Yet!

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Radio silence ended! Coffee Scholars has been moving its world headquarters for the last week or so, culminating with two days of madness Sunday and Monday. Thank goodness that is over. It even caused me to miss a great event...

Check out what Anne and Neil did on Sunday! Coffee at the New Amsterdam Market near the Seaport! To raise money for the market and for Bikes to Rwanda! Plus a cupping at a new (to the NYCS) spot on the same day!

And their report on the last NYCS cupping before that! Amazing stuff.

In the process of moving our offices and warehouse space, I realized just how many green samples I have laying around. The quantity isn't that mind-blowing (nothing that an addict like me couldn't put away in a couple of months), but there's a huge variety. I'm always complaining to people that I don't get enough green... well, I guess it's paid off without me even noticing. This calls for a cupping, and soon! It's time to give Anne a break, since she and Neil have been doing all the work round these parts lately.

I haven't done anything in BK lately, other than our little brunch shindig. Perhaps we shall do something at a café in my neighborhood for a change.

June 17, 2008

Coffee Erotica

I've been compiling all the cupping data from the final round of March's Ethiopia Limited competition in Addis Ababa. This involves going through the score sheets of specific judges one by one and recording any notes they made on each individual coffee. Then we pass along this information to bidders so they have a little more cupping data beyond the raw scores.

Sounded like dull work when I started it, but it's turned out to be a lot of fun. Reading back through these score sheets, it's remarkable how distinct my memories of these coffees are. I'm just getting over a cold, too, and my inability to taste or smell anything in my immediate environment is probably contributing to my crystal clear recollections of the aromatics from three months ago.

If you've ever seen one of these auction offerings sheets, you may have been (as I remember being) a bit confused by the proliferation of descriptors. Some get repeated over and over. For instance, "sweet," is on just about every sheet. Well, for coffees that are scoring in the high 80's and 90's, I should hope so! Then you have your outliers that only one person noted (I will proudly own up to the mentions of "pineapple" you will see on this year's auction sheet).

Reading these is like reading coffee erotica. As distinct from espresso porn, which is an entirely visual arousal. This is the literary version.

Here's the entry for a typical sun-dried natural coffee, the #9-ranked Sidamo from Adam Bedane: berries, ripe cherries, sweet, vanilla, fresh butter, dark chocolate, oranges, tangerine, great snap, finishes smooth, citrus, sweet and fat

I leave off all the negative comments. They are few and far between, but they do pop up from time to time... with the washed coffees it's usually a hint of astringency or "youth" in the coffee; with the naturals it's usually a hesitant question about uniformity. Suffice to say these are outlier remarks too: if more than one judge detected something like this, the coffee wouldn't have scored high enough to make the finals.

I also, regrettably, must leave off most of the truly creative descriptors. So my note of "astonishing!!!" for the natural Korate from SMS is not on the list. Nor is Tracy Allen's note of "preacher's daughter," on Yitbarek Tilahun's washed coffee from Aleta Wondo.

So , while sloppiness in descriptors can make me cranky, let the court record show that I admit it's impossible not to find joy in things like the flavor of mango in a coffee. For the truly dorky, I'm transcribing every single descriptor from this list after the jump.

Continue reading "Coffee Erotica" »

June 04, 2008

Is Public Cupping Even Legit?

I have spotted a few interesting comment threads here and there in the corners of los internet the past couple of days having to do with cupping. Long fingers of the Gray Lady and all that.

It's sooooo hard to stay out of internet debates sometimes. But they can be so darned interesting. So even though I just spent all day cupping and roasting and then drinking wine and talking about the possibility of leasing land in the west of Ethiopia to grow geisha in the land of its birth (verdict: possible! but difficult!), I still just finished writing and re-writing a response to a great thread that's been going on for a few days at slashfood. I am dumb.

You can read the whole thing at the above link, but here's a summary. Slashfood links the article and asks their readers what they think. A few pretty knowledgeable people chime in with "actually, coffee's really varied and interesting!" a few people chime in with "bah, sounds like a bunch of wannabe snobs making things up" and "their killing the joy!" (This last one really hurts... there's really no reason to do what I do other than the joy... Why would I ever want to kill it?!? But sigh I do understand why people, sadly, suspect this.)

Anyway, in the process of a pretty standard series-of-tubes debate, there began an interesting back-and-forth between Peter Lynagh of Terroir, Nick Cho, and Greg Sherwin who seems like a really nice and knowledgeable guy. His website (Bay Area-centered appropriately enough for this week!) is here. (He shares my taste in top SF cafés, ergo, he must be smart.) Seriously, though, the debate arose because Greg wanted to point out that cuppings, traditionally have been done by green buyers looking to spot defects before they buy coffee. He's absolutely right about this, of course. The debate arose when he seemed to assert that this somehow means that the term "cupping" cannot apply to less formal settings, like cafés or private homes. Nick and Peter begged to differ. Needless to say I'm on Nick and Peter's side. The notion that cupping is limited to defect detection totally misguided. Nick says it best when he defines cupping as a method of evaluating coffee. Exactly. But again, Greg's windmill-tilting made for interesting debate, and I hope I can meet Greg who seems totally cool even if we disagree on this one (ultimately very minor) point.

Anyway, I spent like an hour writing this response and editing it to make sure it didn't sound snotty or retarded or anything, when I really should have been sleeping (we have about 30 coffees lined up for tomorrow, plus more roasting). So I figured I might as well post the highlights here. For a full look at the antecedent comments and my entire comment, you can go here. Or you can be a regular human and stop reading about such arcane topics.... up to you.

...I do understand the point you are making, Greg, about the difference between a purchasing cupping and a public cupping (and believe me, Nick and Peter understand this very, very well, too!). You are mistaken in assuming all commercial cupping is for defects, though. Certainly that's a key aspect, and usually the first stage in the process. But many, many cupping rounds at many, many different roasteries and importing companies (and even at exporters!) all over the world are done for subtlety, nuance, sweetness, and fragrance. To take an obvious example... in the final round of the Cup of Excellence Guatemala, with nothing but amazing, clean 85-plus coffees on the table, are the judges somehow no longer "cupping," but doing "comparative tasting"? I humbly submit that you may be misguided in saying that a "comparative tasting" that's NOT a purchasing cupping is therefore not really a cupping. A public cupping may be a new(ish) iteration of cupping, with less at stake and with slurps that are a little more tentative, but people are still literally cupping the coffee. ....... I share your concern about shoe-horning wine terms into coffee ...... but coffee, I promise you, honest-to-goodness is properly evaluated on sweetness, acidity, fragrance, aroma, balance, etc.... these are not imported from the practice of wine tasting, but rather simply happen to be the relevant categories when inspecting and grading coffee. And aroma notes like honey, jasmine, mandarin, caramel, blueberry, whatever are 100% legit, believe me (I'm not saying there's no BS out there, but cuppers have to be allowed this language because it's in the durn coffee dagnabbit!). ....... Perhaps the perception that coffee terms were stolen or cribbed from wine comes more from the chronological order in which most Americans first encounter the very concept of beverage tasting. Wine first, coffee later. I honestly don't know. Also, obviously, popular writers use the wine analogy because it's familiar to their readers and at least somewhat related. I can't really see the harm in this... should they be using lunar geology analogies, or Ukrainian political analogies? But thanks for your points... It's definitely a reminder to be clear with people about what the purpose of our little adventures are and the context in which cupping developed in the first place. Finally... I know what a wasteland of poorly conveyed sentiment the internet can be and I want to stress sincerely and in a friendly way that I'm being totally straight and not trying to sneak in any snark along the way! (Though sneaking snark can be fun).

A wasteland of something, at least... I'm off to bed!

June 03, 2008

Understanding Acidity in Coffee ... (The Goggles Do Nothing!)

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"Acidity" is a term that I am sometimes afraid to use at public cuppings. It carries a very negative connotation in many people's minds. Many people who do not like to drink coffee claim that it is "too acidic," and worry that it will upset their stomach. When I talk about acidity for the general public, I often use code words that sound a lot nicer, like "life," "brightness," or "snap."

But a coffee with great acidity is not the same thing as a very acidic coffee. Coffee has lower acidity, on a pH scale, than most colas and diet colas and lower, in fact, than apple juice. It's simply not that acidic of a beverage, regardless of how it tastes.

But the perception remains, and there's a reason for it. The reason is this: bad coffee has bad acidity.

By "bad acidity" I mean, very simply, acidity that tastes bad. Of course, it gets very complicated very fast on a molecular level. There are many, many, many different acids present in a cup of coffee, each with its own distinct molecular composition and each with a distinct taste. But you don't have to know them all to begin to make sense of acidity.

Two major categories are organic acids and chlorogenic acids. Organic acids are our friends. Some common organic acids in the flavor of coffee include citric acid (think citrus fruits), malic acid (apples), lactic acids (often buttery flavors), and acetic acids (the major component acid of vinegar, actually). All by themselves these acids are way too intense. But mixed in with the innate sugars and other carbohydrates in roasted coffee, they provide a pleasing punch to the cup, or a refreshing kick.

Chlorogenic acids are not so great. They are present in any cup of coffee, though in what mix and in what proportion varies greatly. Generally, they are more intense in robusta than arabica, just like caffeine. Caffeic acid and quinic acid are two major chlorogenic acids. These taste pretty foul: bitter, harsh, and often metallic. Quinic acid is related to quinine, which is what gives tonic water its distinct taste. Think about the metallic punch in a gin-and-tonic and now relate that flavor to the taste of some terrible diner coffee you once had, the kind that's been sitting on a hotplate all morning... can you make the connection in your mind between those two tastes? That's quinic acid.

This latter category of acids is usually what makes people scowl when they hear the term "acidity" in relation to coffee. But, as I said, it doesn't have to be like this. Acidity can be lovely. Think of fresh squeezed orange juice, the really sweet kind; or the wonderful snappy taste of biting into a tree-ripe apple. Acidity at its best blends seamlessly with the sweetness of coffee to give you a pleasing sensation beyond the sum of its parts. When coffee judges score coffees on acidity, they are ranking the quality of the acidity, not the intensity. A very subtle, delicate acidity can score very high, just as an overpowering, sour acidity scores very low. Usually, the highest scores go to coffees that have acidity that is both salient and refined.

Organic acids are present in green coffee before it is roasted, but much of the acidity that ends up in the cup is created early on in the roasting process. But once sugars begin to caramelize, the acidity slowly goes down. As a rule of thumb, acidity goes down as coffee is roasted darker. This is a good thing if you have low-quality green coffee: you can basically cook off much of the offensive acidity. But with high-grade green, it's completely unnecessary: these coffees have a natural sweetness and are well-roasted enough to give caramel or chocolatey flavors, and only benefit from having a little citrus or apple-like snap in the cup. As the quality of green coffee arriving on the shores of the United States slowly creeps up the yumminess scale, you see more and more roasters taking their coffees a little lighter and more and more people buying these coffees. Dark roast is, of course, still exceedingly popular, but it's not the only way of dealing with "bad acidity" anymore... another solution is even more elegant: coffee with naturally good acidity!

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There's lots more to say about acidity, but this is just a primer, not a paper for a chemistry journal. Here are a few more interesting things to know about acidity in coffee...

--The higher the elevation at which the coffee was grown, the more acidity it has. Speaking very generally.

--East Africa is probably the region most associated with incredible acidity, and especially Kenya.

--Astringent, or clinging soury acidity in coffee is often associated with coffee that was picked before the cherries were ripe. Cuppers often call these coffees "greeny" or "greenish."

--The anti-oxidant health benefit of drinking coffee is actually tied to the not-so-nice-tasting chlorogenic acids, and is more prevalent in ugly robusta than lovely arabica. But don't worry... there are still plenty of anti-oxidants in coffees with subtler chlorogenics. Any body-health benefit to robusta is offset by the price you pay in soul-health by drinking it.

If you want to train yourself to better evaluate acidity, here's a great activity: go to the supermarket and buy as many different kinds of apples as they have. Then take these home and cut them up and make a little chart. Try each apple and rank it in order of sweetness and tartness (a different rank for each category). Notice how the two can balance one another. This is very similar to how sweetness and acidity interact in a cup of coffee.

Another good training tool is mix lemon juice, sugar and water in different concentrations using a blind coding system and see if you can guess which is which (like in Q-grader training)

Of course, the best training tool is just to drink coffee and to slow down and notice carefully the sensations in your mouth and your mind as you taste it. Great coffee will always reward you for this activity with pleasure. As for less-than-great coffee... who needs it, right?

May 14, 2008

Entropy is Not Freedom

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(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...

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(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...

April 24, 2008

Special Event in New York: May 8th

Tri-state area coffee people are invited to an event at the new BODUM USA headquarters in Manhattan, Thursday, May 8, at 6 pm.

We'll be cupping and pressing some of the top coffees from this years Ethiopia Limited auction. For those of you who wanted to attend the April 10th event but couldn't make it, here's your chance. And for anyone who's going to Minnesota for SCAA, this should leave you enough time to get home, get some sleep, and get back out there and cup with some fellow New Yorkers!

The coffees are outstanding; you have my guarantee on that. Also, this is a chance to rub elbows with some international coffee judges, including Andrew Barnett of Ecco Caffé and Daniel Mulu, one of Africa's most famous cuppers.

The event is courtesy of yours truly and ...

BODUM USA

Edible Manhattan and....

Boot Coffee

A special invitation to roasters and green buyers. Space is extremely limited, so please write to me if you want to come... I expect that we will unfortunately have to turn some people away. RSVP here. Hope to see you there!

April 23, 2008

How Much Coffee Schnapps Do YOU Have?

2429281902_a0f1beb6bb_2 Last Friday, Anne and Neil organized a New York Coffee Society cupping at the beautiful El Beit in Williamsburg. It was a lot of fun. Anne does a great job with these! We had a couple of Moka Javas, one from Barrington and one from Gimme!, plus a beauty Kenya peaberry from Kownta Kultchah. It was my first time to El Beit, despite the fact that I have many friends there, like Danger Dan Griffin.

My camera's broke, so thanks Anne Nylander for letting me steal your photo without asking permission.

Afterward we went to Spuyten Duyvil for all kinds of strange beers from Belgium and beyond. (And some crazy meat, and the mostest bitterest chocolate ever). Duane Sorenson was there. I guess I was the last person to hear that he's moved to New York City. Look out, NY. Here comes Stumptown to take over your entire operation.

Also Bob Peyton, who works for Stumptown in Portland now.

But the best part of the night was that Matija brought me a freaking bottle of freaking coffee schnapps from freaking Croatia!!!

April 11, 2008

Ethiopia Cupping Report

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Yesterday's cupping at the Cupping Room Tasting Room (maybe they should change the name...) was a blast. We had a great cross-section of people there, including green buyers from coffee roasting companies and importers, cafe owners, baristas, and discerning coffee drinking customers from all over New York City. Matija, a barista from Croatia, came with his girlfriend, Mare. Hannah Wallace came, from the New York Times. And so did photographer Chester Higgins. Chester has done photography in Ethiopia, and he brought prints of a beautiful photo of his of the famous rock-hewn church at Lalibela, which he graciously handed out to our participants.

Also, a little Ethiopian saxaphone music to set the mood. (Off the topic of coffee... the music in Ethiopia was something I was not prepared for. It's almost impossible to describe for me. Here's one of the prettiest songs I have ever heard. Breaks my heart, the title alone...Mulatu Astatqe's "Baby, My Unforgettable Remembrance")

The coffee was outstanding, as expected. Everything was good, of course. But what really stood out for me yesterday was, among the washed coffees, the coffee from Lensemo Lamisso from Aleta Wondo, and among the natural coffees, the Idido from S. A. Bagersh.

I'm getting more and more excited about this auction. I've been excited about these coffees since I tasted them in Addis Ababa, but the auction itself is getting closer and closer... all the work will have been worth it if people bid on these coffees. If you are in any way connected with the coffee industry, make sure you spread the word about this event. (Info here.) If you don't actually work in coffee, but only drink it, ask your favorite roaster or coffee shop if they plan to participate. The coffee is so outstanding, and the proceeds go directly to the farmers, helping them build a better life and further ensuring more quality coffee down the line.

I want to thank everyone who came. I also want to thank Cory Magamoll for helping everything to go so smoothly. Thanks Cory. Birr!! Also, as always, the fantastic folks at the Tasting Room. They get no money or anything for doing these events. They're just dedicated to really wonderful-tasting things. Awesome.


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April 09, 2008

Haitian Vert (et Maron)

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This is some dirty green. My friend Rachel — a filmmaker and lover of coffee I have known since the Victrola days when she used to come in and study while I worked — brought this back from her last trip to Haiti. Rachel's documentary on the U.N. intervention in Cité Soleil, a slum Port-au-Prince, is in the post-production phase. Insane woman that she is, one gigantic project not being enough, she's been toying with the idea of a big coffee project, too.

I can't say exactly the form this project is taking, since we don't really know yet ourselves. But at the very least, we'd be following the coffee all the way from the trees to the cup, enlisting some help from a third party for importing and roasting in between. But before we can even get started on all that... we had to see what we had on our hands.

Rachel brought me this completely unsorted, natural-process coffee when we met for lunch last week. Needless to say, it needed a little cleaning up. I like sorting coffee... so this was the fun part. You can see here what I took out with just one cursory run-through of a 300 gram sample.

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I saw a lot of "full blacks" in this sample, which worried me. Usually a defect of this kind will ruin an entire cup. If I was seeing them in abundance, there was a chance this coffee might never be clean enough to be nice. There was some severe insect damage here and there, but overall not that much considering this sample had never once been sorted. Rachel asked her friends in Haiti to get her some coffee... they went to a warehouse where dry cherries were being stored, the hulled them on the spot with a mortar and pestle and sifted out what you see here. That's it.

So after a bit of labor, I was left with this...


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Keep in mind this is natural coffee. The goal isn't 100% uniformity in color. Those orangey looking beans are just beans with the silverskin still on, turned red from being dried next to the fruit. The important thing is I threw out all the leftover hulls and full blacks and full sours and the like.

Still, I wasn't sure how this would taste. I roasted up two samples, one to a "cupping roast" and the other to about a Full City Plus. I took it over to Rachel's place off Central Park West and we had a little cupping session (after she showed me the first ten minutes of her film, which she said was full of flaws but it looked great to me... guess I'll stick to evaluating coffee). To make things even harder on this coffee, I brought the only other fresh-roasted natural-process coffee I had around, which just happened to be the SMS Korate Sidamo which just won first place over all in the Ethiopia Limited competition and which I scored a 94 in Addis.

So how did it do? I won't lie and say it performed better than the Korate. But it was surprisingly good. Good overall sweetness. No problems with fermentation or vegetal tastes or phenol. It was a touch woody, but only a touch. And there were nice chocolate and fruit aromatics. It's good coffee! It's clearly mostly ripe cherries, properly dried. This was a huge relief. It's one thing to take on a huge, complicated multi-year project. It's another thing to do it when you are starting at scratch with no quality.

Incidentally, I noticed from a little poking around that the main response to the drive for quality in Haiti has been to introduce wet processing mills in a country where 90% of the coffee is sundried natural. There is a definite equation out there that says: sundried = inferior. I saw this in Ethiopia too. Another thing that I have seen is that with proper care, sundried = dynamite. The washing-station projects are awesome. My friends and benefactors at USAID did an amazing thing with the creation and marketing of "Haitian Bleu"... check out some great reports here and here. But all I am saying is that this is clearly not the only way to go. Haiti has a unique tradition. It needs improving, but no sense in throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

Who knows what will come of the project? Rachel needs to finish her film first. In the meantime, we've got six more pounds of green if anyone else wants to try this.