Monthly Archives

July 2018

Starbucks Vows To Suck Less By 2020

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In the latest news in the war on straws, Starbucks announced Monday its plan to eliminate the use of straws in its network of 28,000 cafes worldwide by 2020. The news was reported by NPR, CNN, The Wall Street Journal, and a host of other national news publications.

Here’s more from the official Starbucks release:

Today, Starbucks Coffee Company (NASDAQ: SBUX) announced it will eliminate single-use plastic straws from its more than 28,000 company operated and licensed stores by making a strawless lid or alternative-material straw options available, around the world. Starbucks, the largest food and beverage retailer to make such a global commitment, anticipates the move will eliminate more than one billion plastic straws per year from Starbucks stores.

Starbucks has designed, developed and manufactured a strawless lid, which will become the standard for all iced coffee, tea and espresso beverages. The lid is currently available in more than 8,000 stores in the U.S. and Canada for select beverages including Starbucks Draft Nitro and Cold Foam. The lid is also being piloted for Nitro beverages in additional markets including China, Japan, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. In addition, Starbucks will begin offering straws made from alternative materials – including paper or compostable plastic – for Frappuccino® blended beverages, and available by request for customers who prefer or need a straw.

“For our partners and customers, this is a significant milestone to achieve our global aspiration of sustainable coffee, served to our customers in more sustainable ways,” said Kevin Johnson, president and chief executive officer for Starbucks.

Customers in Seattle and Vancouver will be the first to see the strawless lids implemented, starting this fall, with phased rollouts within the U.S. and Canada to follow.

Read the full release here via Starbucks.

Plastic waste floating in water. Richard Carey / Adobe Stock

Who will be the first third wave coffee company to remove straws from its locations? Or has Starbucks successfully ret-con’d themselves into third wave status, inherently negating this question? For now at least, expect glares at your favorite coffee bar if you say yes to an offered straw, and don’t expect the option for long.

Straws are the new smoking.

 

The post Starbucks Vows To Suck Less By 2020 appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Coffee In Rome: The Sprudge Guide

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Rome is a city that runs on an excess of caffeine. Brought up from childhood on drops of dark Robusta roasts, Romans tend to demand coffee that is bitter, scalding hot, and made in a hurry.

It is no wonder that coffee shops offering 100% Arabica and modern brewing methods have been hesitant to take on a stubborn, espresso-centric coffee culture.

The concept of Slow Food was born in Rome, and after a significant wait, specialty coffee is finally being ushered onto the Italian capital’s gastronomic scene. Likening good coffee to quality olive oil or specialty wines, new bars are finding a customer base that understands and craves something other than household brand industrial roasts.  These new bars are offering unique coffees that can be hard to find outside of Italy, while simultaneously introducing Romans and visitors alike to specialty coffees from roasteries around Europe. While the drink-and-go culture of quick coffees and little chit chat still dominates, Rome’s modern cafes are also embracing the idea of ambiance—creating the small havens in the middle of a gorgeous, if chaotic, Italian city.

rome italy coffee guide

Pergamino Caffè

Located between St. Peter’s Square and the entrance to the Vatican Museums, Pergamino Caffè sits in one of the most heavily trafficked areas of Rome. Despite the endless stream of potential customers who are simply passing through and unlikely to return, the small shop has embraced a serious approach to specialty coffee. As in many Italian bars, prices vary depending on if the coffee is consumed at the bar or at a table. For this reason, as well as to ensure sufficient room for the gleaming La Marzocco Strada EP, the counter dominates the space.

rome italy coffee guide

Below a printed manifesto on the cafe’s use of specialty coffee (and organic milk from a local producer), Ceado and Mahlkönig grinders, multiple V60s, a siphon, and an AeroPress stand at the ready. After a day of pounding ancient cobblestones, the prettiest sight in the modern cafe is the nitro tap. Pergamino is the first bar in Italy to offer nitro coffee, and the resulting crisp and sweet cold brew is the perfect antidote to the Roman sun.

Regardless of the preparation method, Pergamino offers coffee from a rotating selection of Italian roasteries, including Lady Cafè, Gardelli, and Rinaldi. A monthly guest roast from London, Berlin, or Amsterdam is also usually available.

Pergamino Caffè is located at Piazza del Risorgimento 7. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

rome italy coffee guide

Roscioli Caffè Pasticceria

Roscioli is a name that is familiar in Rome food circles. The gourmet family owns a bakery, a modern pizzeria, a well-respected restaurant, and a wine school that all lie within a few minutes’ walk of each other in the historic center of the city. As a result, specialty coffee was a natural next frontier. The understated entrance of the cafe is easy to miss, but finding a spot along the bar can require patience and/or a well-placed assertive elbow nudge. The two-level counter runs the length of the narrow shop, allowing a ledge for coffee as well as a glassed-in view of Roscioli’s signature pastries. The entrance of the narrow bar is a difficult place to linger, but the shop also has a somewhat hidden and darkened back room with a communal table for 12. This is the best place to take a seat to enjoy specialty Italian coffee prepared via AeroPress or dripper. Roscioli serves coffee from Verona-based roastery Giamaica, but really draws crowds with their selection of traditional Roman sweets and savory panini to pair with espresso throughout the day.

Roscioli Caffè Pasticceria is located at Piazza Benedetto Cairoli, 16. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

rome italy coffee guide
Marjani Coffee Roaster

Marjani is a true one-man coffee show in the businessy EUR district outside of central Rome. Sharing a storefront with a popular sandwich counter, Alessandro Pau singlehandedly manages a glossy Della Corte DC Evo 2, Chemex, v60, and AeroPress. Pau sources artisan roasts from around Italy, but what makes the trip to his coffee counter truly unique for Rome is that Marjani also acts as a local micro-roastery. While most guest roasts are 100% Arabica single-origin coffees from Ethiopia and Central America, one of Marjani’s signature “Roman” roasts is a blend of 70/30 Arabica and Robusta that appeals to local tastes. The deep and acidic espresso blend offers a complexity that is impossible to find in the city’s standard coffee bars. However, Pau also turns out 100% Arabica roasts in small batches depending on the beans he has sourced recently.

Marjani’s tiny shared space is short on seating and atmosphere, so the trip to EUR is best between peak rush hours when you have time to sidle up to the bar to sample and chat about the current coffee selection.  Outdoor seating is also available along the street.

Marjani Coffee Roaster is located at Viale Beethoven 43-45. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

rome italy coffee guide

Faro – Luminari del Caffe

Having opened in December 2016, Faro – Luminari del Caffe is a welcome newcomer on the specialty coffee scene here. The laid-back coffee house is a short walk from the city’s main train station, but still falls a bit off the usual tourist map. Faro (which means “lighthouse” in Italian), tries to gently educate customers over every cup. The highly trained baristas encourage every guest to taste the coffee “senza zucchero”—without sugar. Co-founders Dario Fociani, Arturo Felicetta, and Dafne Spadavecchia always find the time to stop by and chat about the available roasts which change regularly. The house blend comes from Italy-based Gardelli, but Faro also offers a kind of tasting menu of single-origin coffees that comes complete with descriptions of the flavor notes. While the La Marzocco Strada EP and Mahlkönig EK43 setup is impressive, Faro really manages to distinguish itself on the Rome scene with ambiance. The spacious cafe is filled with natural light and plenty of seating. Inspired by his time in Melbourne, Fociani worked with his partners to create a sense of balance and an alternative to the slam-and-go Roman espresso culture that still reigns supreme in the city’s standard coffee shops.

Faro is located at Via Piave 55 in Rome, Italy. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

tram depot rome italy viteculture torrefazione lady cafe coffee sprudge

Tram Depot

A tiny kiosk on a busy intersection in Rome’s trendy Testaccio district, Tram Depot is one of the more unexpected specialty coffee stops in Rome. With a Wes Anderson palette of outdoor seats, the coffee cart is only open seasonally from April through October. The interior of the vintage tram car has been remodeled to turn out coffee throughout the day, and then transitions to cocktails through the wee hours of the morning. Tram Depot offers a rotating selection of coffee from Parma-based Lady Café, with most locals still opting to drink their coffee in a traditional espresso style. But keep in mind that the little cart also has filter and siphon options. You can read more Sprudge coverage on Tram Depot here.

Tram Depot is located at Via Marmorata 13. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Natalie Kennedy is a California-born, Italian-based travel writer and the publisher of An American In Rome. Read more Natalie Kennedy on Sprudge.

The post Coffee In Rome: The Sprudge Guide appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Coffee Just Raised $100,000 For The Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project

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Last month, over the weekend of June 22nd-24th, Sprudge Media Network banded together with a couple hundred of our favorite cafes and coffee brands across the United States in a fundraiser benefitting the Asylum Seekers Advocacy Project. We called the event Coffee For Families, and it’s part of the outpouring of support ASAP has received over the last few weeks.

With most of the reporting in, the coffee community has raised $100,000 and counting for Asylum Seekers Advocacy Project. There’s still a few more partners left to report and we’ll be adding to that donation total in the coming days. All donations were made directly to ASAP—and if you’re moved by this effort to get involved, you can donate directly to ASAP right here.

“ASAP is so grateful to Sprudge Media and all the businesses that participated in Coffee for Families for raising over $100,000,” says ASAP Co-Founder and Co-Director Dorothy Tegeler, “Throughout the country, business owners and coffee drinkers not only raised money, but helped to raise awareness about the challenges facing asylum-seekers who come to the United States fleeing persecution. It is incredible to see such an outpouring of support.”

Thank you to our fellow media companies who took the time to report out this story, including Chicago Tribune, Eater Austin, Eater Dallas, Easter Houston, Eater Portland, and Grub Street. And a huge thanks very much to everyone who participated, shared, donated, and made this effort part of your life over that weekend in June.

There’s so, so much work left to be done, but it’s heartening to know that coffee’s capacity for leadership and advocacy runs so deep. We’ll be back again this fall with our next bi-annual Night of 1000 Pours event. If you’d like to get involved in this fall’s event, please reach out here.

Here’s a complete list of all the participanting companies in this fundraiser. Thank you all so much!

1900 Barker Bakery and Cafe — Lawrence, KS
Amethyst Coffee — Denver, CO
Andytown Coffee Roasters — San Francisco, CA
Anelace Coffee — Minneapolis, MN
The Arbor Lodge / Tanager Coffee Roasters — Portland, OR
Ascension Coffee Roasters — Dallas, TX
Assembly Coffee Roasters — Pittsfield, MA
Atkinsons Coffee Roasters — Lancaster & Manchester, UK
BattleCat Coffee Bar — Asheville, NC
Beantween Coffee — Manhattan Beach, CA
Blacksmith — Houston, TX
Blackwood Coffee Bar — Los Angeles
Blue Bottle Coffee — Oakland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York City, Washington DC, Miami, Boston
Blue Copper Coffee — Salt Lake City
Blueprint Coffee — St. Louis, MO
Brandywine Coffee Roasters — Wilmington, DE
Cafe Integral — Chicago, New York, Los Angeles
Caffe Streets — Chicago, IL
Carrier Roasting Co. — Northfield, VT
Case Study Coffee — Portland, OR
Chattahoochee Coffee — Atlanta, GA
Chrome Yellow Trading Co. — Atlanta, GA
City & State — Memphis, TN
The Coffee Ethic — Springfield, Missouri
Coffee Party — El Paso, TX
Community Loaves — Jacksonville, Florida
Coral Sword — Houston, TX
Counter Culture Coffee — Asheville, Atlanta, Emeryville, Boston, Charleston, Chicago, Durham, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle, Washington D.C.
Cultivar Coffee — Dallas and Denton, TX
Dark Horse Coffee Roasters — San Diego, CA
Dichotomy Coffee & Spirits — Waco, TX
East One Coffee Roasters — Brooklyn, NY
Edorffeine — Los Angeles, CA
Either / Or — Portland, OR
Everyman Espresso — Manhattan and Brooklyn, NYC
Evocation Coffee — Amarillo, TX
First Village Coffee — Ossining, NY
Fleet Coffee — Austin, Texas
Flight Coffee Co — Bedford, NH
Foster Sundry — Brooklyn, NY
Four Letter Word — Chicago
FUTURO — Phoenix, AZ
Gelateria Gemelli — Austin, TX
Gimme! Coffee — Manhattan, Brooklyn, Upstate New York
Go Get Em Tiger, G&B Coffee — Los Angeles
Goat Hill Coffee & Soda — Kansas City, MO
Greater Goods Coffee Roasters — Austin, TX
Greenway Coffee — Houston, TX
Hal’s Office — Albany, CA
Heart Coffee Roasters — Portland, OR
Houndstooth Coffee — Austin and Dallas, TX
Hovey & Harrison — Edwards, CO
Hillside Coffee & Donut — El Paso, TX
Intelligentsia Coffee — Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, New York City, San Francisco
Kaladi Coffee Roasters — Denver & Englewood, CO
Kickapoo Coffee Roasters — Viroqua, WI
Kindness and Mischief Coffee — Highland Park, CA
KIOSKO/Smalltime Roasters — Portland, OR
La Colombe — Philadelphia, Washington DC, New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Diego
Lamplighter Coffee Roasters — Richmond, VA
Little Amps Coffee Roasters — Harrisburg, PA
Lupa’s Coffee — College Station, TX
Marigold Coffee — Portland, OR
Metric Coffee — Chicago, IL
Monarch Coffee — Kansas City, MO
Morningstar — Houston, TX
Mudhouse Coffee Roasters — Charlottesville, VA
New Gotham Coffee Community — Chicago, IL
No Booze on Sunday Podcast — El Paso, TX
Oatly
Oddly Correct — Kansas City, MO
Okay Yeah Co. — Oklahoma City, OK
Onyx Coffee Lab — Bentonville, Fayetteville, Springdale, and Rogers, AR
Ox Coffee — Philadelphia, PA
Palace Coffee Company — Amarillo, TX & Canyon, TX
Paperback Cafe — Mendocino County Covelo, CA
Parakeet Cafe — La Jolla, CA
Parlor Coffee — Brooklyn, NY
PennyCup Coffee Co. — Asheville, NC
Pentacle Coffee — San Francisco, CA
Philter — Kennett Square, PA
Phoenix Coffee — Cleveland, Ohio
Pleasant Pops — Washington, DC
Port of Mokha — Oakland, CA
Portland Roasting Coffee — Portland, Oregon
Posies Bakery & Cafe — Portland, OR
Post Coffee Company — Lees Summit, MO
The Potters House — Washington, D.C.
Presta Coffee Roasters – Tucson, Arizona
Public Square Coffee House — San Diego, CA
ReAnimator Coffee — Philadelphia, PA
Relax, It’s Just Coffee — Mansfield, OH
Rising Star Coffee Roasters — Cleveland, Ohio
Ritual Coffee Roasters — San Francisco and Napa, CA
Rock City Employee Cooperative — Rockland, ME
Rosalind Coffee — Garland, TX
Sip Stir Coffee House — Dallas, TX
The Society Hotel — Portland, OR
Sólo Espresso — New Orleans, LA
Stumptown Coffee Roasters — Portland, Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago, NYC
Sustainable Harvest — Portland, OR
Tartine Bakery & Coffee Manufactory — San Francisco
Three Brothers Coffee — Nashville, TN
Toby’s Estate Coffee Roasters — Brooklyn, Manhattan
Trade and Lore — Asheville and Charlotte, NC
Ultimo Coffee — Philadelphia, PA
Upper Left Roasters — Portland, OR
Vagabond Coffee Co. — Jacksonville, Florida
Verve Coffee Roasters —Santa Cruz, Los Angeles, San Francisco
Volta Coffee, Tea & Chocolate — Gainesville, FL
Water Avenue Coffee — Portland, OR

To learn more and donate directly to Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project, follow this link.

The post Coffee Just Raised $100,000 For The Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Booth Beat: Our 5 Favorite Booths From World Of Coffee Amsterdam

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world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Dutch winds blew chilly outside World of Coffee 2018, but inside, at the Amsterdam RAI convention center, June 20th to 23rd were hot-ticket days.

Breaking records this year, nearly 11,000 professionals registered for WOC, according to its organizing body, the Specialty Coffee Association. At a pre-ribbon-cutting press conference prior to the trade show’s official opening, SCA chief events officer Cindy Cohn cited a presence of 271 exhibitors and called it “the best-looking event we’ve put on.” Later, on the competition floor, Agnieszka Rojewska from Poland made history by becoming the first woman in the contest’s 18-year existence to win the title of World Barista Champion.

Visitors to Amsterdam sometimes joke that they can’t remember much from their trips to the famously live-and-let-live city, but these five WOC booths proved unforgettable.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Kees van der Westen

Nothing lights up a Dutch coffee event like the indigenous splendor of the Kees van der Westen brand, and everybody, from everywhere, was getting revved-up to see the debut of the Mirage Slim Jim. Presaged in a 2016 Sprudge interview with Kees van der Westen himself, this new espresso machine is “kind of a mixture” between others in the existing seQries, explained Yvette van der Westen, who oversees marketing for the company that her father heads. “Technically, visually, and price-wise, it will offer users an experience that falls somewhere between the Mirage and the Spirit.”

Unlike the Mirage, the Mirage Slim Jim is a multiple-boiler machine. Available in a Douette or a Triplette configuration, the groups have been given plenty of love and attention, each having its own two-stage progressive pre-infusion cylinder, a shot timer, a thermometer, and a pressure gauge. Other features include a dual hot water temperature knob and a dual volumetric lever.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

The Slim Jim Idrocompresso model shares many of the same specs as the standard Slim Jim, but its prominent lever group cylinders have been built to be fully encased in hot water. This produces “a water cushioning effect which takes off a bit of the pressure and it won’t hit you in the face,” said Yvette, explaining that the lever on previous Idrocompresso models was susceptible to shooting up if a barista forgot to load the portafilter.

All four prototypes showed unique details, including interchangeable legs, front and side panels, cup rails, awnings, and knobs, plus various colors and room for customized logos. Still, they all shared a nostalgic Americana automotive design sensibility, so much so that baristas might start pulling out their Pomade and poodle skirts.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Following WOC, the Van der Westen family—all members showed up, including Yvette’s two sisters, now also her colleagues—were due to cruise back to headquarters in Waalre. Their road map foresees a few more technical tweaks, a pre-production series, and finally, the Mirage Slim Jim’s availability by early 2019.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Qima Coffee

At WOC Amsterdam, the launch of Qima Coffee, a London-headquartered company sourcing specialty beans from Yemen, was bittersweet. “The Yemen Coffee Revolution Starts Here” read the slogan on the stand’s backdrop, a lively mocha- and gold-toned illustration of Sana’a’s ancient skyline. Helping lead that revolution is Faris Sheibani, a UK-born Yemeni who founded Qima in late 2016, seeking to do something for his parents’ country of origin, where civil war has killed, wounded, and displaced thousands of people since early 2015.

Booth-side, Sheibani and colleagues warmly received visitors, telling them about Qima’s debut collection. Some 800 smallholder farmers across northern and central Yemen produced about 250 coffee lots, which were cupped and scored by Dutchman-gone-Californian Willem Boot of Boot Coffee. For the expo, Cafe Keppler co-owner Kees Kraakman roasted sample beans and praised Sheibani, a former SCA course student of his, for “how he combines a moral cause with a commercial enterprise.” Some farmers can now earn 20 times more income working for Qima, said Brahim Boukadid, Qima’s commercial manager in the Netherlands. He reported that 10% of profits get reinvested in the farmers’ villages, supporting agriculture and education projects, though above all, he emphasized: “We want to give them hope with this coffee.”

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Attendees showed avid interest in Qima, suggesting its commercial prospects in Europe are real. Those glimmers of hope, however, were overshadowed by a conspicuous absence: that of four Yemeni farmers and a Yemeni NGO worker who were expected to be part of the company’s Amsterdam delegation. Their visa requests to visit the Netherlands were denied twice after what Sheibani described in an impassioned video message as an arduous, time-consuming, and humiliating application process filed via the Dutch embassy in Amman, Jordan. The visa denial made headlines and generated social media posts hashtagged #freeourfarmers. Qima has been outspoken about the decision’s unjustness and its irony. In the same video, Sheibani stated: “The Dutch East India Company took—smuggled—seedlings from Yemen, coffee seedlings from Yemen, to Amsterdam to plant them in the botanical gardens in Amsterdam, illegally. Four hundred two years later, we wanted to legally… together with the Dutch, celebrate coffee culture.” Qima has since published a follow-up video, captioned as a “message of hope and coexistence from the farmers of Yemen to the people of the Netherlands and the world!”

At the time of writing, three of the farmers remain in Amman, Sheibani told Sprudge in an email shortly after he returned to the UK. He said that he is helping the farmers apply to other global coffee exhibitions so they can personally represent their coffees. “If they go back empty-handed, it would be a devastating blow to thousands of farmers following the events from Yemen and a significant setback to the Yemeni coffee industry in general,” wrote Sheibani. (For the latest news, follow Qima on Facebook.)

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Department of Brewology

It was a sight for sore eyes and some salve for the soul to spot the Department of Brewology making their WOC debut. The dauntless design duo from Austin, Texas, was selling wearables and wall art featuring their Filter Coffee Not People slogan, among others.

“It’s been great, actually. We love coming to Europe,” said company operations manager Brett Cannon, when asked their reception outside the US. New items on show included two coffee blossom pins and mini-prints of their iconic illustrations commingling botanicals and barista tools. Company designer David Salinas also told Sprudge about a new campaign, expected to launch in the coming months. For it, the Department of Brewology is working with The Lucy Foundation, a New Zealand-based organization promoting greater visibility of people with disabilities in the coffee industry. In the same spirit that sees proceeds of the FCNP T-shirt going to the Refugee Services of Texas, the new initiative will help raise funds for The Lucy Foundation. These designs are a collaboration between Floridian illustrator Anna Coleman and Salinas, and will be anchored by their own slogan. Those words are not yet public, but the campaign is geared “to really advocate for coffees that do good as opposed to just coffees that taste good,” said Salinas.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Collezione Henk Langkemper

Not a booth but a veritable buffet table, the Collezione Henk Langkemper snaked its way along one side of the trade floor’s food court. On show were 25 vintage espresso machines and grinders manufactured between 1936 and 1972, and now belonging to Dutch coffee industry vet Henk Langkemper. His entire 110-piece collection of such relics is usually at Espresso Service West, his three-decade-old coffee import and distribution company in The Hague that has become synonymous with supporting Dutch baristas in national and world competitions.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Asked for his most cherished, Langkemper pointed to what he called “any collector’s favorite:” the Rondine, described as the first La Marzocco one-group ever made, in 1953. The journey to get the machines to Amsterdam was tumultuous, said their owner: the idea began hatching at last year’s WOC Budapest, was slowed down by uncertainty about where on the expo floor the display could be accommodated, got called off after Langkemper had a heart attack in November, and then by February, reignited when an ESW customer pledged to provide the display bars. Before long, friends of Langkemper, from Seattle to Hong Kong, pitched in to help restore the machines. And so there they—and their owner—stood, back in shiny working condition.

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Coffee Pixels

Winning this year’s Best New Product Competition in the category of food was Coffee Pixels Cascara, one of two edible coffee bars being sold by Latvian cousins Raivis, Andris, and Gundars Vaitekuns. Former specialty cafe owners in Riga, the trio today forms the company Solid Coffee, which started producing Coffee Pixels in 2017. Raivis described it as an idea born from necessity or, more precisely, withdrawal while traveling. Recounting instances when gas station or airplane coffee was their only option, he said they asked themselves “how we can take the quality of experience and the values that we have in specialty coffee truly on the go.”

The 10-gram bars are made from cocoa butter, Ethiopian coffee, coffee cherries, sugar, and salt. The “Milk” version contains 33 milligrams of caffeine and the winning “Cascara” contains 50 milligrams, the equivalent of approximately 30 milliliters of espresso. Sourced by Panama Varietals, the cascara comes from Nicaragua, and its choice as an ingredient reflects “the other part of the drive to build this product,” said Raivis, which is “to really tackle the waste produced in the coffee industry.”

world of coffee amsterdam netherlands

Raivis, Andris, and Gundars Vaitekuns, founders of Coffee Pixels.

Another edible coffee benefit is that it “will be micro-dosing itself within your body,” he said. Because the caffeine is in saturated fat, it takes longer for the body to absorb, with its effect lasting up to four hours, Raivis estimated. He also pointed out that cascara contains antioxidants, so “this clean boost” accompanies the caffeine kick. “It feels like you have more energy in the head.”

And no wonder WOC Amsterdam was full of superlative highs and yet, still so memorable.

Karina Hof is a Sprudge staff writer based in Amsterdam. Read more Karina Hof on Sprudge

The post Booth Beat: Our 5 Favorite Booths From World Of Coffee Amsterdam appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News