Monthly Archives

November 2018

What To Do At The Los Angeles Coffee Festival This Weekend

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Los Angeles, are you ready for the LA Coffee Festival? I sure hope so, because it gets going today, November 9th. And like with all the Allegra Events-created shindigs that follow the general naming convention “[city] Coffee Festival,” the three-day bash descending upon LA is going to be chockablock with all manner of coffee good times. We’ve rounded up a few of the can’t-miss happenings going on this weekend; if you are in the City of Angels over the next few days, these are the things you need to check out.

The centerpiece for these coffee festivals is always a competition and the LA Coffee Festival is no different. This year’s event is the Coffee Mixologists, where teams of two—one barista and one mixologist—work together to see who can come up with the best coffee cocktail using mystery ingredients provided to them that day. And a fun twist for this year, baristas and mixologists will be doing daily takeovers of the Latte Art Stage for Coffee Mixologists LA Allstars, where teams will be making drinks on the fly THAT YOU’LL BE ABLE TO DRINK.

That’s not the only way to get your fill. New for this year, the LA Coffee Festival has added The Kitchen, a casual dining experience featuring “fiery demos, workshops and talks headed up by culinary legends” from the LA food scene. Look for features like “One Way to Have Your Eggs” by Go Get Em Tiger’s Marilei Denila as well as “Fine Dining Meets Specialty Coffee” with Joseph Geiskopf of TRINITI and Maya Alber of Devocion.

And lest you think it’s all about whatever you can shove down your gullet (which to be honest, is still a pretty great way to experience these festivals), there’s learning aplenty to be had at The Lab when you are recovering from your over-caffeinated food coma. Many of the discussions taking place are on hot button topics within the coffee community: sustainability, colonialism, and women in coffee. It’s kinda like food, but it’s food for thought.

But then it’s back to more flavorful goodies, including a tasting room, a street vendor market, and the True Artisan Cafe, La Marzocco’s rotating coffee concept that will feature over 30 different cafes taking over their space throughout the course of the festival, including G&B Coffee, Stumptown, Cartel, Counter Culture, Intelligentsia, and so many more.

Tickets are still on sale for the Los Angeles Coffee Festival and range from $27 to $100 for single-day passes and Super VIP three-day access. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit the Los Angeles Coffee Festival’s official website. See you there!

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

Top image via the Los Angeles Coffee Festival

The post What To Do At The Los Angeles Coffee Festival This Weekend appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Melbourne Cafes Are Running Out Of Ideas? Well, Duh.

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A recent examination of Melbourne cafes by Broadsheet editor, Nick Connellan, asks an honest question: do the city’s cafes have what it takes to continue influencing cafe culture globally? Can they still be unique enough from each other locally to survive? And is the era of Melbourne cafe as international cultural symbol beginning to fade?

With hundreds of cafes in the Melbourne CBD alone, and hundreds more in the surrounding suburbs, the market appears to have reached what any reasonable person might define as saturation. Even with the Instagrammable build-outs, inventive restaurant-quality menus, and coffee offerings scaling from your basic $4 cappuccino to a $10 cup of an anaerobic process coffee from Central America, Melbourne may have “backed itself into a corner”, as per Connellan. Because these cafes are all starting to feel the same.  

From Broadsheet:

Our autumn 2015 cover story, “The Design Question”, asked why so many cafes were starting to look the same: polished timber, white subway tiles and Edison light bulbs. Since then, the similarities have become more pervasive than just aesthetics. Many of our cafes have begun to feel the same, too. It’s like everyone’s read the same basic manual on how to open a “Melbourne cafe”. “It’s become a very fashionable industry, and the barrier to get in is very low – you just need an apron and a beard and you’re in,” jokes Al Keating, a partner at Coffee Supreme, one of Melbourne’s earliest specialty roasters.

From the outside looking in, it’s interesting to read Melbourne roasters and cafe owners talk openly about the faults of cafes. Some of these faults include six-figure investments at least in design, branding, marketing, on top of building a kitchen and coffee program. Cafes today are spending big on making everything look good, and using influencer marketing quite regularly to drive a fickle local customer base with endless options. And that’s just to keep up.

I’m a self-proclaimed coffee culturalist particularly interested in the roles cafes and coffee shops play in everyday life in different places. As an temporary migrant to Melbourne (who also works in the coffee industry), it looks to me like observing the first results of a shift in priorities for cafes and coffee shops globally. In other words, rising investment costs and a marble pour-over bar aren’t the only things everyone is doing the same. Al Keating’s joke to Broadsheet has some truth to it: everyone doing it also looks the same.

We’re seeing stagnation of a coffee culture due to a lack of diversity in real time.

Melbourne has had a number of things that’s allowed it to set the standard to be a successful coffee city. The general public have a basic understanding of what specialty coffee is, what’s good, and where to find it. Most cafes serve coffee well enough to be considered “good” with still a fair amount achieving “exceptionally good” and “downright delicious.” Add those to the list along with food dishes that look like they’re out of Masterchef Australia against the backdrop of an indoor concrete greenhouse. Melbourne can be a coffee lover’s dream.

But what’s real is this: white men dominate cafes, especially in upper management and ownership. This is true so many places around the world, but it is very obviously most evidently true here in Australia, and in Melbourne especially. So it should come to no surprise that the same bunch of white men who created the template are out of ideas to innovate it. If Melbourne business leaders and cafe investors want to solve the city’s cafe diversity problem, they should start by investing in diverse business owners. This is the real next wave of coffee, and something Melbourne must consider if it wants to remain at the forefront of cafe culture globally.

Michelle Johnson is a news contributor at Sprudge Media Network, and the founder and publisher of The Chocolate BaristaRead more Michelle Johnson on Sprudge.

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Source: Coffee News

Happy Curbsgiving!

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So much has happened in the few years that we’ve been around, both for us, and for our customers. Connections, both big and small have occurred. Once upon a time there were two customers who met at their favorite coffeeshop. They put together a barbecue and invited us. A year or so later they traveled together on a road trip. Several years have passed and they are now married with their first child.

I feel so much gratitude for every single connection that I have seen made in the space that we serve coffee. It’s humbling and encouraging to create such a space. I’ve always been a fan of places where the staff seems to care about you – what you’re doing and where you’re going. The outside world can often seem like a large and intimidating place, especially when news reports are always breaking and situations are ever-changing. It is reassuring to be in a coffeeshop. A place where civility is upheld and conversations are happy. A place where you can feel cozy, talk to others, or enter a flow state and get work done.

As we approach the holiday season of 2018 we are so happy to announce that we will be hosting a Curbsgiving on November 18. This is a community potluck that all are invited to attend. If you intend to bring food, please sign up at the shop and let us know what you’re bringing. We’re really looking forward to sharing more good times and good coffee with all of you.

<3
The Curb Kaimuki

Should Coffee Sales Have A Minimum Age Requirement?

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As a newly minted old person, I now find myself enjoying several of the tried and true old person pastimes: going to bed early, not drinking too much, taking it as a compliment every time I get ID’ed. And now, one coffee company is allowing the younger generation to experience the thrill of old person flattery. Costa Coffee, the world’s second-largest cafe chain, has enacted a policy that allows employees to ID teenagers, and deny them sales if they don’t meet a minimum age requirement.

According to Grub Street, the company’s new policy allows “stores to refuse drinks to anyone under the age of 16.” A Costa spokesperson tells the Manchester Evening News that they do “not encourage the sale of caffeine to children,” which apparently makes the next logical step to allow baristas to “interrogate customers they suspect are too young.”

Grub Street notes that while the policy has been in place since the end of summer and stores are given discretion on when to implement it, the new rule has drawn more attention lately after a 12-year-old was denied a coffee.

Some of you might think this sounds like a great idea—the hepped-up early teens of this world have enough to be excited about, what with their apps and their Post Malone fandom. But in my opinion, this is a dumb rule. Should you maybe keep a pre-teen from ordering their 10th orange mocha Frappuccino? In an ideal world where everyone looks out for one another, probably. But that ain’t this world. You’re not that kid’s parent. Let ‘em enjoy their caffeinated sugar rush. Why is a 12-year-old alone in a coffee shop anyway? Shouldn’t they have a guardian? What are they even looking at on that phone they stare at all day long? And if they don’t and they are out there in the real world taking care of themselves, then they damn well deserve a coffee or how many ever they decide to order and are able to pay for. I don’t need some visor-wearing barista playing caramel police.

So smooth move, Costa, you just created an open invitation for everyone under the age of 16 to come camp in your stores, not buy a damn thing, and waste your wifi downloading the latest posthumous release by Lil Peep or somesuch similar artist. This all could have been avoided by simply giving a child caffeine. It’s your loss.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

Top image via Superbad.

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Source: Coffee News

2018 New York Coffee Masters Champ Remy Molina: The Sprudge Interview

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It had to be Remy! Remy Molina, a barista from Costa Rica, has won the 2018 Coffee Masters tournament at New York Coffee Festival, completing a stunning run to glory. It was a huge moment for the young coffee professional, who took home a prize and cash package valued at $15,000. It’s also one of the most prominent international coffee wins ever for the nation of Costa Rica, whose coffee producing culture has long been among the best in the world, but whose international barista and cafe culture is fast becoming a major player. “I was able to represent my country and to represent the great job all my fellow baristas in Costa Rica are doing,” Molina tells Sprudge. Truly it was a historic and inspiring moment for the competition.

To learn more, Sprudge co-founder and Coffee Masters co-host Jordan Michelman sat down with Remy Molina to discuss his big win and learn more about what’s next for this enterprising young champion. Read on!

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. 

Hey Remy! Congratulations on your big win! By way of introduction, what do you do professionally in the coffee industry in Costa Rica?

Hi Jordan! Thank you very much for this opportunity and for your words. I appreciate it a lot!

Right now, I work for the Specialty Coffee Association of Costa Rica (SCACR). I am a consultant and a trainer. Mainly my work is to develop most of the coffee festivals AND competitions here in Costa Rica.

I also have my own personal projects, a coffee to-go bar and a brand of roasted coffee. I’m still trying to develop the concept but my goal is to have my own coffee shop and micro-roastery.

You’ve just won $5,000 cash from the Coffee Masters, plus your very own Slayer single group and Mahlkönig grinder. What will you do with these prizes?

First of all this is my dream come true. Since I started in the coffee, I wanted to have my own Slayer and of course with the best grinder to complement it.

I want to start a little project were I want to work with TWO of the things I like the most and unite them. The idea is to have a place where coffee and mixology can merge. Also, part of the money I earned I am going to donate so I can help people that may need it more than I do.

Talk us through your signature drink creation for the Coffee Masters, and tell us more about the inspiration behind this drink.

My signature drink was inspired and resembles the traditional and famous cocktail, the Old Fashioned. This is one of my favorite drinks and the idea was to give it a twist with some coffee. The concept was called “First Impressions”—this is because I’ve never before been to New York City and I always heard that it is the city of huge buildings and lights—”The city that never sleeps.” So I can imagine at night, people always like to go for a drink.

I like to travel and I like to go to different countries. So I wanted to bring to NY that first impression of my beloved homeland. The first thing that people think about in Costa Rica is beaches and coffee, right? I wanted to mix both of them and make a really good impression. First impressions, in a drink and in serving people, are very important. Making a good first impression can be so decisive in making your client have an experience that will never forget and want to come back.

All of this came to my mind after trying for the first time the coffee that I was using. It is a natural processed anaerobic fermentation coffee, and the varieties are Caturra and Villa Sarchi. This coffee is very complex and unique and its flavor profile reminds me of an apple pie, with a juicy acidity and flavor notes of cinnamon, green apples, and sweet notes like sugar cane. Also, this coffee has a winey aftertaste, clean, pleasant, and lingering.

So I wanted to highlight its complexity and combine them with other ingredients that I prepared myself. The result of my signature drink was tropical flavors such as mandarine, peach, and vanilla combined with sugar cane. It had a silky texture and a juicy acidity like the apples used for pie.

Does winning Coffee Masters feel like a major moment in your coffee career?

I always think that every day you learn something new. This competition is something that I always wanted to participate since I started in coffee. I learned about this competition when they launched its first edition in London because a friend of mine told me. At that moment I didn’t feel prepared so I didn’t apply. Last year I applied at London but I did not pass the first round. So this year just making the finals was extraordinary for me, and it was a huge surprise I was crowned as the Champion.

This for me is a moment that I will never forget but I think I still have a lot to learn, so I will keep the good work and the passion I have for this career. As a person that comes from a producing country, my dream is to travel to more consuming countries and learn more about their way of preparing coffees.

Costa Rica has long been famous for growing coffee, but the country’s cafe scene is also exploding. What are some of your favorite cafes there right now? Where should people visit?

The cafe scene is growing fast and the past few years I’ve seen a lot of good coffee shops open. I think this is a good thing for Costa Rica because we are creating coffee culture. My favorite places to go and have a good cup of coffee are, Cafeoteca (where I used to work), Underground Brew Cafe, and Franco. But these are not the only places people should visit when they come to Costa Rica. Right now, I’m working with a friend on a Video blog, where we interviewed the owners of the 10 cafes and they told us everything about their coffee shops. You can follow our work here. 

What’s something about competing in Coffee Masters that new competitors might not know? What have you found surprising about the tournament?

Coffee Masters is a fast-paced competition and I think new competitors have to try to accomplish most of the disciplines (doing their best in each one of them) so they can score the most points. For me, Coffee Masters tests you on how well you can manage a bar scene and how well you can serve the coffee for your clients. Sincerely, I know I wasn’t the fastest or most skilled barista on stage but I always tried to do my best and served the best cup of coffee to my judges. I think that’s the most important part because even though it’s just a competition, we as baristas have to do our best. Our job is to serve the cup of coffee people deserve.

I can give you an example about that. In the “Order” discipline (in which competitors are asked to make 10 drinks in nine minutes), I only served seven drinks total to the judges. But actually, I got really high scores on those seven drinks, while some of my opponents got more drinks down in total, but scored less than me. What was most important was the quality of the drinks.

For me at Coffee Masters everything was absolutely great, the organization, the judges and the baristas. This year was very special because I could feel the fellowship from all of the competitors and it felt like we were supporting each one of us. The level of difficulty this year was really high because I know all of the baristas competing were really skilled and talented.

Describe the moment of victory in your own words—what did it feel like?

Until this day, I still can’t believe it. I am really happy with the result and with the experience too.

At the beginning I felt a lot of joy inside of me, because all the hard work and all the time I’ve spent learning and improving myself has paid off. And I felt grateful because I know this is a blessing for my life and I know I made my family proud too.

It was something I always dreamed about it. I think this is not only me winning, but a lot of people behind me winning too. So I’m glad I made them proud of all the work we have done. That day I felt a bit nostalgic because I wanted to celebrate it with my friends and family in Costa Rica, but I made a lot of friends in this trip, so I celebrated it with them and that helped me feel a little bit better.

I felt like Costa Rica made a good presentation and that everyone was happy about that. I’m glad that I was able to represent my country and to represent the great job all my fellow baristas in Costa Rica are doing. I hope this will motivate other baristas to try to accomplish whatever they set as a goal and that they can make it, if they believe in themselves.

Is there anyone you’d like to thank?

As I told you before, this couldn’t be possible without the help and support of a lot of people. I want to thank everyone that always believed in me like my colleagues and friends. To Victor and Pablo for roasting my coffee. To my family and girlfriend for all the support and love they gave me. And I want to thank Issac and Wally, my two trainers. Without the help of these guys I couldn’t accomplish this. I learned a lot from them. Wally hosted me in New York for almost nine days, and these days he taught me not only about coffee. He taught me how to live a good life with the people you love and by doing what you love the most. I will treasure all his advice for the rest of my life.

Thank you Remy, and congratulations from all of us at Sprudge! 

Jordan Michelman (@suitcasewine) is a co-founder and editor at Sprudge Media Network, a contributor to Portland Monthly and Willamette Week, and co-author of The New Rules of Coffee. Read more Jordan Michelman on Sprudge

Sprudge is an official media partner of the Coffee Masters Tournament and the New York Coffee Festival. 

Read all Coffee Masters coverage on Sprudge.

The post 2018 New York Coffee Masters Champ Remy Molina: The Sprudge Interview appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

The 2019 Good Food Awards Finalized Have Been Announced

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The Good Food Awards are back for a ninth year and they have just announced their finalists. The yearly celebration of American-made consumables with a focus on sustainability has narrowed down the 401 products making it to the last leg from a field of over 2,000. Among the 27 finalists in the coffee category, there a handful of familiar names as well as a few new ones. And it’s not all Ethiopian coffees this year; it’s only mostly Ethiopian coffees.

The 2019 Good Food Awards coffee finalists are:

Bard Coffee, Organic Costa Rica La Mirella, Maine
Bird Rock Coffee Roasters, Geisha XO & KIUNYU Coffee Factory – Peaberry, California
Broadsheet Coffee Roasters, Special Prep Ethiopia Natural Bombe, Bensa Sidama, Massachusetts
Caffe Ladro, Ethiopia Limu Organic, Washington
Catalyst Coffee Consulting, Ethiopia Keramo, Oregon
Commonwealth Coffee Roasters,Carmen Estate Washed Geisha, Colorado
Crimson Cup Coffee & Tea, Kossa Kebena, Ohio
Drink Coffee Do Stuff, Ethiopia Guji Hambela Wamena, California
Elixr Coffee, El Injerto Pacamara, Pennsylvania
Equator Coffees & Teas, Ethiopia Gedeb 1 Organic Gotiti Lot 143, California
Folly Coffee Roasters, House Bean – Ethiopia Guji, Minnesota
Intelligentsia, Organic Ethiopia Kurimi, Illinois
Linea, Ethiopia Suke Quto, California
Noble Coffee Roasting, Ethiopian ‘Buku Sayisa’, Oregon
Noble Coyote Coffee Roasters, Guji Highlands, Ethiopia – Natural Process, Organic, Texas
Oak Cliff Coffee Roasters, Girma Eshetu, Texas
Onyx Coffee Lab, Colombia Granja La Esperanza, Arkansas
PERC Coffee Roasters, Ethiopia Kayon Mountain, Georgia
Red Rooster Coffee Roaster, Kayon Mountain, Virginia
Royal Mile Coffee Roasters, Ethiopia Kayon Mountain Taaroo & Kenya Ichamama Peaberry Washed, New Jersey
Spyhouse Coffee Roasting Co, Duromina/Ethiopia, Minnesota
Still Vibrato, Ethiopia Shantawene, Oregon
Thanksgiving Coffee Company, Upsetter Espresso, California
Vashon Coffee Company, Organic Ethiopia Sidamo Guji Hambela Buku, Washington
Vibrant Coffee Roasters, Ethiopia Idido Washed, Pennsylvania

But coffee isn’t just in the coffee category anymore; it’s being utilized as an ingredient in multiple categories, including:

Beer:
Rolling Meadows Brewery, Coffee Break, Illinois

Chocolate:
Dark Forest Chocolate, Gimme Coffee & Dark Chocolate, New York

Confections: 
COCOPOD, Coffee Cocoa Chocolate Hazelnut, North Carolina
Garcia Nevett Chocolatier de Miami, Cafe de Hacienda, Florida
Vermont Amber Organic Toffee, Percolator Toffee, Vermont

Elixirs:
Sightglass Coffee and Shrub & Co.,Coffee Cascara Shrub, California

Snacks:
Hot Mama Salsa, Smoky Coffee Chili Oil, Oregon

Sprits:
Elixir, Caffe’ Corretto Liqueur, Oregon
Griffo Distillery, Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur, California

Winners of the 2019 Good Food Awards will crowned on Friday, January 11th at the GFA Gala in San Francisco. For more information about the Good Food Awards or for tickets to attend the awards show, visit their official website.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

Top image via the Good Food Awards

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Source: Coffee News

Employee Retention: Why Workers Stay Long Term

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No matter the industry, employee turnover comes with major costs, some more obvious than others. Between the costs of recruiting, onboarding, training, offboarding, and burnout, employee turnover can cost as much as four to 12 months’ worth of the lost employee’s salary—a number which is steep to begin with and gets steeper the more highly placed the employee is in the business. For all those reasons and more, employee retention is crucial to keeping costs under control as well as maintaining positive and consistent service and operations from the cafe upward. Leading human resource experts have different opinions on what a great retention strategy looks like, but one of the best ways to learn about retention is to talk to long-term employees that continue to be excited about and engaged in their jobs. In this piece, I talk to five coffee workers in varied positions who have been with their companies for five years or more about why they’re still excited to show up for work every day.

Pay and Benefits

Maybe the most obvious factor in long-term retention is pay and benefits. However, almost all of the folks interviewed acknowledged that while pay is important, they could probably make more elsewhere and don’t stick around primarily for pay.

Kailyn Fulmer, who has worked at Monocacy Coffee Company for 13 years and currently occupies a manager and lead barista role, listed competitive pay and employee incentives as key retention factors, but also acknowledged that she wouldn’t be in her job if cash were the number one factor. “Let’s be honest—it’s definitely not because of the money. I think what it boils down to is the love of the craft, the love of our industry.”  

Emily Davis has worked at Counter Culture Coffee (full disclosure, my former employer) for six years and currently inhabits the role of Director of Education. For Davis, staying in her job has been more about growth and fulfillment than pay. But, like Fulmer, Davis also lists salary and benefits as key to retention. “Companies should do what they can to demonstrate employee value by way of salary, bonuses, or benefits. I think that acknowledging value and demonstrating it are two very separate things and that both are necessary to retain employees.”

Jackson O’Brien, head barista and educator at Peace Coffee, has been with his company for six years and is more committed to his company’s fair pay policies for all than his own pay specifically. “The thing that initially made me want to work with the company has also made me want to stick around: the fact that the company endeavors to treat every employee fairly. Aside from competitive wages, we make sure that every employee including starting baristas and warehouse production assistants gets paid vacation and sick time, 401k benefits, yearly guaranteed cost of living raises, and full health and dental plans. Not only do I feel like I’m fairly treated, I feel like all of my colleagues are.”

O’Brien added that when money is tight, transparency around pay helps to cover the gap. “When it’s transparently communicated that times are tight, people might not be happy about their pay and responsibilities, but they’ll understand.”

Basic Fit and Growth

Perhaps also obvious, all of the long-term engaged employees I spoke to enjoy the basic work of their jobs and have found themselves able to grow and learn within them.

Davis found that fit and growth were the key factors in her own longevity. Starting as a customer relations representative and growing into her current director of education role kept her challenged and engaged. “I felt like I had learned the company well enough to take on a new layer of responsibility. The familiarity I had gained made me feel more deeply connected to the company, and that familiarity gave my influence a power and efficacy that I valued. That’s why I stick around—I believe I have helped the company grow as much as the company has helped me grow.”

Maciej Kasperowicz, the director of coffee at Gregory’s Coffee, has been with his company for eight years; fit and growth are the main reasons why he’s been happy long-term. His position has evolved significantly over time, allowing him to grow with the company and stay engaged and fulfilled.

Christy Greenwald, cafe manager at Ritual Coffee Roasters, has been with her company for 10 years, growing from barista to manager at the company’s flagship cafe. She too cited “opportunities for personal growth, job position and otherwise,” as a key factor in her own longevity.

Communication, Expectations, and Feedback

Healthy communication, clear expectations, and the ability to give and receive feedback also played an important role in retention for everyone I spoke to.

“Setting clear expectations for employees and delivering on them is key,” said O’Brien. “This shouldn’t be anything that is in any way innovative or out of the ordinary and yet I feel like so many employers don’t do it.”

Greenwald agrees and sees feedback as a two-way street. “Receiving direct feedback and encouragement really builds trust in employees, as does encouraging and heeding all employee input.”

Appreciation and Human Connection

According to all five of the workers I spoke with, the people involved matter. Being appreciated, seen as a whole person, and having a human connection with coworkers were all important in long-term engagement and employment.

Kasperowicz credited top-to-bottom team fit for a huge portion of his job satisfaction. “I get to work with people I really respect and care about: from our shops to our roastery, our education department, our boss, and even the people I get to buy coffee from. When I think about what I’d miss most about my job and what makes me care about my company, working with those people is towards the top of the list.”

Greenwald cited not only her team but her company’s female owner as important in happiness and shared values, while Fulmer emphasized the importance of providing a safe and positive working environment.

O’Brien talked about demonstrating care through treating workers as humans. “Understand that employees are not cogs in a machine but rather human beings with basic human needs. Again, it shouldn’t be out of the ordinary but somehow is.” For instance, O’Brien feels that to truly treat employees as people, employers not only need to provide paid sick leave but also compassion and support when an employee is sick. Rather than asking employees to get their own shift covered or interrogating whether or not they’re truly sick, employers should encourage workers to get the rest they need, treating them as whole people.

The Complexity of Feeling Valued

The factors that help workers feel valued and engaged long-term can seem complex and varied, but ultimately, they might not be that surprising. According to the long-term engaged employees I talked to, people care about being able to live and work in safety and relative comfort, as well as access to growth opportunities as they get older and grow; they care about connecting with the people around them and growing as a larger team. These things may not be easy to provide in equal measure at all times, but treating people as humans and taking the time to appreciate them as best you can seems to be the underlying factor in keeping workers happy and present.

RJ Joseph (@RJ_Sproseph) is a Sprudge staff writer, publisher of Queer Cup, and coffee professional based in the Bay Area. Read more RJ Joseph on Sprudge Media Network.

The post Employee Retention: Why Workers Stay Long Term appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Is Hot Coffee Better For You Than Cold Brew?

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Good news for people who derive some sort of satisfaction from claiming that cold brew stinks (and bad news for literally everyone else): science seems to show that hot coffee is better for you. A new study published recently in Scientific Reports titled Acidity and Antioxidant Activity of Cold Brew Coffee finds that hot brewed coffee is similar in pH and higher in antioxidants than the cold brewed version of the same coffee.

As reported by Health.com, the study was co-authored by assistant and associate professors of chemistry at Thomas Jefferson University Dr. Megan Fuller and Dr. Niny Rao, respectively. Using five different commercially available pre-ground coffees—Ethiopia Ardi, Ethiopia YirgZ (shout out to Keffa Coffee), Brazil, Colombia, and Myanmar—between a light and medium roast, the researchers brewed hot and cold coffees using the “same ratio of water volume to grind weight,” per the study.

Fuller and Rao (but not that Rao) found that, ostensibly contrary to general sentiment that cold brew is less acidic than hot coffee, the two had similar pH’s: cold brew ranging from 4.96 to 5.13 (YirgZ being the lowest and Myanmar the highest) and hot coffee 4.85 to 5.10 (Ardi and Brazil). However, the go on to note that hot coffee contained “larger measures of titratable acidity, indicating higher concentrations of extracted acids and/or additional acidic compounds not found in the cold brew,” and that it is this acidic complexity in hot coffee that may be the cause (or be a better indicator than pH) of the higher acidity, perceived or actual.

via Acidity and Antioxidant Activity of Cold Brew Coffee

In terms of antioxidant activity, the thing associated with most of coffee’s health benefits, hot coffee was found to have higher concentrations of total caffeoylquinic acids (CQAs). CQAs are believed to play a significant role in coffee’s antioxidative benefits, and indeed this study finds higher antioxidant activity in hot coffee than cold brew. But it also found that while CQAs were a good indicator of antioxidant activity in cold brew, it was less so in hot coffee. This means that, as Fuller and Rao put it in the most badass way imaginable, hot coffee may also have “additional radical-scavenging compounds” that are boosting the antioxidant activity.

Now, seeing how I can’t let the anti-cold brew bad guys win, let me grasp at a few straws here. Without any sort of TDS reading, we don’t know that these coffees were comparably extracted and perhaps this leads to the lower antioxidant levels in cold brew. Perhaps grind size played a factor; the same grind is presumably not ideal for both brew methods, which may contribute to the results.

I dunno, I’m not a scientists, I’m just a guy who doesn’t really drink cold brew that will fight for you right to do so unshamed. And so what? Maybe hot coffee has more antioxidant activity. Nothing a handful of blueberries can’t make up for.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas. Read more Zac Cadwalader on Sprudge.

The post Is Hot Coffee Better For You Than Cold Brew? appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Employee Retention: Why Workers Leave

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Employee retention is good for business. While not all employers look at the costs of turnover in their organizations, leading HR group the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) estimated that the loss of a salaried employee can cost a business an average of four to nine months of that employee’s salary. Other estimates put that cost even higher, and those costs get steeper and steeper the more highly placed an employee is in an organization. High employee turnover can also create a vicious cycle of burnout of remaining staff and further turnover, which can place tremendous social and financial strain on businesses.

While retention is crucial to employers’ well-being, there’s a growing body of evidence that shows that staying with a company isn’t always in workers’ best interests—and, in fact, can be just the opposite. There are real drawbacks to unconditional employee loyalty: fiscal costs, professional costs, and emotional costs.

Salary and Benefits

According to a 2014 article in Forbes, employees who stayed in their jobs for more than two years could expect to make 50% less over their lifetimes. Specifically, employees could expect an average yearly raise of 3%; on the other hand, employees who leave for new positions receive an average raise of 10-20%.

Tom Baker, who has worked in coffee for 15 years and held a variety of positions from cafe manager to wholesale trainer, now coordinates operations for in-house cafes and event spaces within the Salesforce corporation. With his tenure in the coffee industry, Baker sees these numbers as a very real reason to be discerning about how long you should stay with a given company. “In food service, most employers don’t offer a pension plan, and wages or salaries for entry and mid-level positions are so low that workers can’t set aside much to contribution plans even if they’re available. If the goal is to get with a company that I can stay with for a long time—one that will take care of me now and after I retire—it might be a long road to get there. That said, I probably don’t want to spend more time than I need to at any stop along the way.”

Baker adds that given the raise workers can get from having the chance to negotiate a new base salary with a different company, if workers aren’t making what they need to meet their goals, “staying with their employer is not going to get them there.”

Typically, the best avenue to significantly increase wages and professional growth without moving companies is through getting promotions, which can remain elusive for a variety of reasons. Rob Rodriguez, head roaster at George Howell Coffee, points out that not only are many companies unable to offer those opportunities because of their structures, it’s also harder for people of color and people from other marginalized groups to access them. “In the past, I’ve had to take a backseat to cisgender white coworkers when it came to promotions,” Rodriguez says. Because of the well-documented barriers to mobility people of color face, Rodriguez points out that leaving is often a more effective way to move up professionally than waiting in line for scarce promotions.

In addition, different workers have different needs benefits-wise in order to achieve long-term stability. For instance, employees who want to have children may be unable to if their company isn’t flexible on developing parental leave programs for longer-term employees, or employees with certain medical needs may need to find jobs that meet their specific healthcare needs, and so on.

Professional and Personal Growth

While the fiscal impacts of long-term employment within a company are significant, most of the coffee workers I interviewed for this piece placed professional growth above pay as the biggest reason to leave one’s job.

Barista Guild Executive Council member Adam JacksonBey (who’s worked at DC cafe The Potter’s House for two years now) feels that baristas sometimes benefit from changing jobs even if they aren’t moving up and to the right in terms of position. “I personally think you become a much better barista even after changing jobs once. In general, you learn a different way of doing the thing you’ve been doing for however long you’ve been doing it. Being in a new environment challenges or reinforces what you’ve learned before and makes you adapt.”

Equator Coffees’ Specialty Sales and Account Manager Mark Dias feels that not only is this kind of growth important for individuals as professionals, it’s actually helpful to companies as well. “One benefit of moving from job to job is the ability to see how different companies are structured and how they operate. You’re able to pick up different pieces and adapt better to different work environments in the long term.” This means that organizations that gain a new hire also get an employee who has learned a variety of organizational schema and is better equipped to recognize and solve deep organizational issues that can often be invisible or feel insurmountable from the inside.

Rodriguez points out that stagnation within a position can have negative mental health impacts for both workers themselves and those around them. “It’s a dangerous place to allow yourself to fall into in your professional development, but mainly for your mental health and how it impacts your workplace,” he says—an effect which can devastate productivity and happiness. “You can easily start doubting your own abilities. It can skew your perception of self and the people around you significantly.”

Growing Within Your Organization, or Without It

In what is perhaps an indicator of how much the specialty coffee industry does value employee loyalty, most of the veteran coffee professionals I interviewed for this piece offered advice on how to stay happy and engaged without leaving, even when an employer isn’t necessarily meeting your growth needs; however, they all noted that it’s important to recognize your needs and find happiness and security, even if that does mean leaving.

“Reach out to your community, regional and national, and see if there are outside educational opportunities for you,” JacksonBey encourages. He also recommends talking to friends from other shops, or making some if you don’t yet have any. And, lastly, “talk to your direct manager about how you feel and if there’s anything more you can do.” If all else fails, he encourages workers to move on—but, he says, there’s potentially a lot you can do even within an organization.

“Start seeking avenues of growth elsewhere. Full stop. This doesn’t necessarily mean leaving the company you work for in any way,” says Rodriguez, who himself has found effective growth through moving laterally within companies. “But, if it comes down to it and the place you’re working for doesn’t cut it, then it may be time to seek out employment for a company that can value your work ethic and your drive for self and workplace improvement.”

Retention Matters, and Engagement Does Too

There are many ways employers can provide growth and engagement for employees, and many reasons beyond money and promotions that many workers stay happy in their positions long-term, especially in a passion-driven industry like specialty coffee. By developing a solid retention plan that allows workers to grow, learn, and continue to earn, companies can avoid the lose-lose situation of poor morale or high turnover costs due to a lack of engagement and dissatisfaction. Ultimately, most coffee employees work at will, which means that their contract with their employer lasts as long as both parties decide to continue it. Employers have more power in the equation, but employment is a two-way street, and both parties have an equal right to prioritize their needs.

RJ Joseph (@RJ_Sproseph) is a Sprudge staff writer, publisher of Queer Cup, and coffee professional based in the Bay Area. Read more RJ Joseph on Sprudge Media Network.

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Source: Coffee News

Buy Our Book! The New Rules of Coffee Is Out Now On Ten Speed Press

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Welcome to Sprudge Shop Spotlights, a new weekend series in which we highlight our very favorite items currently available in the ever-changing, fast-moving, utterly bespoke Sprudge Shop. Now shipping worldwide, featuring unique artist and brand collaborations from around the planet. Enjoy! 

Buy my book! Buy my book! Jay Sherman had it right—you should buy our book, by which we mean The New Rules of Coffee, out now on Ten Speed Press and available wherever books are sold, but especially at fine cafes and book stores across the country.

Individual copies of The New Rules of Coffee are available now from the Sprudge Shop. They ship signed from the authors (Sprudge founders Jordan Michelman and Zachary Carlsen) and come with little swag surprises—a thank-you from us for picking up a copy or two.

Of course if you’re a cafe or bookseller, we’d love to see you stock wholesale copies of our book for your customers. Wholesale stockiest discounts are available by emailing books@sprudge.com—email operators are standing by. If your bookstore or cafe already has an account with Penguin Random House, ordering is as easy as contacting your local representative.

And right now you can pick up copies of our book at these fine bookshops across the country. Please note this is a selected list—if you don’t see a bookseller near you, ask them to stock it!

An Unlikely Story (Plainville, MA)

Avid Bookshop (Athens, GA)

Baker & Taylor (national distributor)

Barnes & Noble (national distributor)

Belmont Books (Belmont, MA)

Book Passage (Multiple Bay Area locations)

Book Shop Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, Ca)

Brookline Booksmith (Brookline, MA)

Brown University (Providence, Rhode Island)

Buck’s Books (national distributor)

Chicago Comics (Chicago, IL)

Curious Iguana (Frederick, MD)

East Bay Booksellers (Oakland, CA)

King’s Books (Tacoma, WA)

The Book Larder (Seattle, WA)

Literatti (Ann Arbor, MI)

Magic City Books (Tulsa, OK)

Mercenary General Store (Santa Monica, CA)

Now Serving (Los Angeles, CA)

Omnivore Books (San Francisco, CA)

Paper Store Inc. (national distributor)

Papyrus (national distributor)

Politics & Prose (Washington, D.C.)

Powell’s (Portland, OR)

Solid State Books (Washington, D.C.)

Stock Providence (Providence, RI)

Tender Loving Empire (Portland, OR)

Third Place Books (Seattle, WA)

University Bookstore (Seattle, WA)

We also are thrilled to have our book stocked in these fine coffee bars across the United States. This is a partial and ever-growing list—if you don’t see your cafe, get in touch!

Stumptown Coffee Roasters (PDX, NYC, LA, Seattle)

All Day (Miami)

Joe Coffee (NYC)

Olympia Coffee Roasting Company

Indaba Coffee (Spokane, WA)

Elixr Coffee (Philadelphia, PA)

Narrative Coffee (Everett, WA)

Saint Frank (San Francisco, CA)

Mill City Coffee Roasters (Minneapolis, MN)

Gimme! Coffee (New York State)

Case Coffee (Ashland, OR)

Reanimator Coffee (Philadelphia, PA)

Snowy Owl Coffee Roasters (Brewster, MA)

We’ve been overwhelmed by support and love for The New Rules all across America on our book tour, coming soon to a city near you, with upcoming dates across California and the midwest. If you’re interested in hosting us for an upcoming book tour stop, kindly give a holler. 

Are you selling our book? Reach out to us! 

Want to sell our book in your quality cafe? Give us a shout! 

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Source: Coffee News