Monthly Archives

November 2018

The Coffee Sprudgecast: Live From Indaba Coffee In Spokane, WA

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This week’s episode of the Coffee Sprudgecast is coming to you live from Spokane, Washington! That’s “Spoh-can“, not “Spoh-kane” for those of you in the rest of the country. You don’t pronounce the “e”, we assure you.

We’re here at Indaba Coffee on the latest stop of The New Rules of Coffee book tour, a rousing, multi-city multi-state set of engagements that has taken us from Manhattan to Washington, D.C. to the thriving coffee scene here in Spokane, with many more stops coming along the way. Interested in bringing our tour to your town? Get in touch! 

Check out The Coffee Sprudgecast on iTunes or download the episode hereThe Coffee Sprudgecast is sponsored by  Oxo, Urnex Brands, Hario, and Swiss Water Decaf

On this week’s episode co-founder co-hosts Jordan Michelman and Zachary Carlsen can hardly contain their excitement for the impending LA Coffee Festival, kicking off one week from today at The Reef in Downtown Los Angeles. That’s happening the very same weekend as RAW Wine LA—it’s going to be a wild couple of days in the sunshine for sure. Meanwhile our @Sprudge and @SprudgeWine Instagram channels are being taken over left and right, including dispatches from RAW Wine Montreal produced by Grape Witches, impending RAW Wine NYC takeover grams from Jenny Eagleton, and a stunning tour of Guadalajara cafes produced by Angel Medina of Kiosko Coffee and Smalltime Roasters.

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Hola Friends! My name is Angel Medina, I am one of the owners of KIOSKO Coffee and Smalltime Roasters, out in Portland, Oregon. Today is the start of "Dia de los Muertos" a very special holiday for us Mexicans (and everyone of Mexican descent living in foreign lands.) For those of you that are not familiar with this holiday, Dia de los Muertos is a day in which we celebrate the life of loved ones who have departed and a time in which we recognize death as a beautiful part of the human experience. During these days we eat traditional foods, drink wonderful drinks, and sing songs that we love. So you must be wondering, what does this have to do with coffee? In our culture, coffee is something that brings us together. If you've grown up in a Mexican household you have most certainly heard the adults ask the question "¿gustas un cafecito?" If you haven't grown up this lucky, find yourself a good Mexican family that will take you in (I'm happy to take you in.) Coffee certainly played a major role in my upbringing, which now as an adult it is everything that encompasses the ultimate act of hospitality. It just so happens that I am currently in Guadalajara, Jalisco, a city where I grew up many years ago. In honor of "La Perla Tapatia", I will share with you some of my favorite places for great coffee and introduce to some of the people that make it incredible. I hope to capture some of what I love so much about it all. Feliz dia de los Muertos! Angel

A post shared by Sprudge (@sprudge) on Nov 1, 2018 at 8:02am PDT

We also sit down to learn more about Indaba Coffee roasters with founder Bobby Enslow. Bobby dishes on Indaba’s new Riverside cafe location here in downtown Spokane, as we talk toast, coffee, urban planning and kimchi. All this and much more on this week’s episode of the Coffee Sprudgecast. Thanks for listening and come see us over the next few weekends in California!

Bobby Enslow of Indaba Coffee.

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Download the episode here.

The post The Coffee Sprudgecast: Live From Indaba Coffee In Spokane, WA appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Bye-aletti: The Death Of The Moka Pot?

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Sometimes real life is scarier than fiction. The Moka Pot, arguably one of the most iconic pieces of coffee equipment to be created in the last century, is in danger of being no more.

According to EuroNews, the stovetop coffee maker—your grandparents’ favorite coffeemaker that they love to bring up when they find out you are into coffee—from Italian manufacturer Bialetti is facing a decline in sales as consumers are making the switch to the convenience of capsule machines. The company recently announced measures to “tackle a €68 million debt amid ‘significant doubts’ about its ‘business continuity.’” The company admits to a €15.3 million loss over the first half of the year due to declining sales both in Italy and abroad.

And it’s not that people are drinking less coffee, they are just switching how they make it.

“When it comes to large-scale distribution, sales of the capsules are growing rapidly while sales of ground coffee for the moka are declining, even here in Italy where 70% of families have a moka in their home,” said Francesca Arcuri, communications director for Italian coffee company Filicori Zecchini.

Sales of the Moka Pot saw 5% decrease during 2017, the same timeframe where capsules had a 16.8% jump in sales.

Will this be the end of the Moka Pot, and with it the end of stovetop coffee itself? [EDITORS NOTE: SPRUDGE COFOUNDER ZACHARY CARLSEN WOULD LIKE TO ONCE AND FOR ALL DISPEL THE MISCONCEPTION THAT MOKA POTS ARE PERCOLATORS. “DIFFERENT BREW MECHANICS ENTIRELY,” CARLSEN TELLS SPRUDGE] Will these sturdy and once ubiquitous brewers go quietly into that good night, becoming actual coffee heirlooms and not just coffee junk you find at antique stores? And for what? Capsules? Now that’s truly terrifying.

But we want to know, do you have feelings about this news? Sound off in the comments below.

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 Goombanomics

The post Bye-aletti: The Death Of The Moka Pot? appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Camber Is Popping Up At Coffee Hall During The LA Coffee Festival

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We are just one short week away from the start of the Los Angeles Coffee Festival (and the RAW WINE Fair LA, which will be covered by our sister site Sprudge Wine; the Sprudge Media Network is going to be in a full-on beverage frenzy). And like any coffee festival worth its salt, there are going to be fun, non-festival happenings outside the 100,000-square-foot Magic Box convention center. One such event that Sprudge is proud to be a part of is bringing some great tastes from the Pacific Northwest to the City of Angels. Taking place Saturday, November 10th, Bellingham’s Camber Coffee is taking over Coffee Hall Chinatown for a full-day pop-up of doughnuts, competition, and a splash or two of natural wine.

The day kicks off at 10:00am with a little help from Seattle’s General Porpoise, who will be providing the “doughnut” portion of Camber’s Coffee + Doughnut (and ping-pong) festivities. With a little help from a few Dayglow baristas, Camber will be offering pairings of a rose cardamom iced latte and vanilla custard doughnut as well as a mulled spice latte with lemon curd doughnut.

Then at 5:00pm, the gloves are coming off and the spoons are coming out for a Guess The TDS cupping. For a $5 buy-in, attendees will be able to participate in the triangulation cupping competition where they will have to pick out which cup of each set of three has a slightly different TDS than the rest. The grand prize for the Guess The TDS cupping is a Ratio Eight brewer, with other prizes including a gold Acaia Pearl scale, a Baratza Virtuoso grinder, a matte white Fellow Stagg EKG kettle, and a ton of goodies from Camber.

Once all the dust has settled from the rip-roaring, sip-slurping action, things are going to get considerable more chill with a natural wine happy hour. Starting at 7:00pm, a donation wine bar featuring a nice list from Amy Atwood Selections—provided by Oatly—will take over the space. Wines include Swick Wine‘s WB Pinot Noir, Holden’s Pretty Things Rosé, Chateau Barouillet’s Splash!, and Dufaitre’s Prémices 2017. All proceeds from the wine bar will go to Ground for Health, a non-profit organization working to treat and prevent cervical cancer in coffee origins.

After you’ve tied on one or two, join up with Portland’s Deadstock Coffee at 9:00pm for a little karaoke.

There are going to be so many cool things happening the weekend of November 10th in LA, but make sure you stop by Camber’s pop-up at Coffee Hall and have a splash with your friends at Sprudge. Because if there’s coffee and natural wine, you know we’ll be there.

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 Camber Is Popping Up At Coffee Hall During The LA Coffee Festival appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

In Brasília, Casa Quilha Is A Space For Makers

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casa quilha brasilia

casa quilha brasilia

Casa Quilha is a place to come and linger with a coffee—or beer. Whether you want to read a book, meet a friend, or have a gathering, the great atmosphere and the cheery founders welcome you. Partners Luciana Araújo (former partner at Objeto Encontrado), Ricardo Theodoro, Kauê Blass, and Bruno Terra undeniably gave life to the somewhat uncharted part of Brasilia their cafe calls home.

“We wanted it to be a home, for us, our customers, and our projects,” Araújo says. She is in charge of the kitchen and the coffee bar. She has a passion for coffee, but now is also giving room to other passions, such as cooking—many of the cafe’s recipes are hers—and soon, possibly, sewing. Yes, sewing—Casa Quilha is meant to host its partners’ “makers” projects. The below-ground floor houses Theodoro’s woodwork atelier, showcasing beautiful Imbuia pieces, and the second floor will soon be used as Araújo’s atelier. The idea is to focus on sewing, but that might change too, following Casa Quilha’s natural pace. Araújo prefers to keep the mystery.

Casa Quilha is located in an area where there are many mechanic workshops, but no cozy cafes.

casa quilha brasilia

“It was just perfect,” says Araújo. “In the end of the street you suddenly bump into a cafe heaven, you see dogs, bikes, children running outside. It doesn’t resemble other cafes in the capital.” In fact, Casa Quilha doesn’t look like Brasília at all. Being a modernist planned city, all of Brasília’s commercial locations sort of look the same. It’s very difficult to make a place feel unique. But Casa Quilha figured it out naturally, with a public square acting as its backyard. “Everything felt just right, plus the rent prices here were way more affordable,” Araújo says. Casa Quilha’s is a mixed block, where there are houses and local commerces antithetical to the capital’s original planning.

Everything served at the cafe is made in-house. Don’t dare leave without trying their dark and white chocolate cookie, perhaps the best in Brazil, and the lime and almond cake, a recipe by Blass. Casa Quilha serves a salt smoked with Imbuia wood offcuts—courtesy of Theodoro—which is used to smoke salmon that tops bruschetta. Theodoro’s woodwork is everywhere, from the benches to the balcony to the storefront, and many of his pieces are for sale. In fact, demand has been so high he can’t keep up. “It’s been really amazing, people come for coffee and end up taking a piece of art home,” Araújo says.

casa quilha brasilia

Although the cookies and the cake are already the house’s signatures, Casa Quilha’s menu will change seasonally. They are listening to their customers’ needs and will adapt however feels natural for them and for their community. The menu will grow and change as Casa Quilha’s partners grow and change as well.

“We have a backbone menu that is fixed, which are the hot drinks, cakes, sandwiches, and cookies, and the rest will evolve and change with time,” Araújo says. This is in part because Casa Quilha is a place made of connections—with suppliers and customers. The coffee used is sourced by Aha! Cafés, the first quality-focused micro-roastery in Brasilia. João Pedro Freitas, one of Aha! Cafés’ partners, even authored a drink recipe to be served at Casa Quilha: the Zest Brew. It’s a double shot of espresso, lemon juice, ginger syrup, gin, and lime zest, and has already become part of the fixed drinks menu.

casa quilha brasilia

casa quilha brasilia

“We do our best to follow our suppliers and respect their timing. Some things that we serve are cyclical, such as our kombucha, ceramics, and coffee. Everything must follow its seasonality, and will change accordingly. That’s the beauty of it,” Araújo says. The goods sold at Casa Quilha rotate too. At any given time, you’ll find them selling anything from preserves to natural cosmetics to ceramics to tiles, all made by local “makers” who are close to Quilha’s founders. 

“It’s not that we specifically chose to sell this jewelry here, for example,” Araújo says. “It’s the supplier’s philosophy that matched ours, therefore making it a fit to be sold here.” As for Casa Quilha’s in-house ceramics, they’re made by Araújo’s mom, and each piece is slightly different from the last.

casa quilha brasilia

casa quilha brasilia

Araújo doesn’t own a car, and only rides her bike in the capital. Casa Quilha encourages customers to do the same: they offer a free espresso—or cookies, depending on the day—for customers who come riding their bikes. Fellow partner Terra is also “pro-bike,” and works with issues of urban mobility. Casa Quilha’s bike rewards are intended to be a small solution for Brazil’s dependence on fossil fuels, as well as its frequent economic and political-based fuel shortages.

“We need to rethink our transportation options, and by offering an espresso we are trying, little by little, to incentivize that,” Araújo says.

Once a week, Casa Quilha promotes a Happy Hour celebration and stays open until 10pm. You come for the coffee and stay for the beer, and the vibe. And the incredible cookies. Don’t forget the cookies.

Casa Quilha is located at SCLRN 716, Bloco F, loja 4. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Juliana Ganan is a Brazilian coffee professional and journalist. Read more Juliana Ganan on Sprudge.

Photos by Ricardo Theodoro.

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Source: Coffee News