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Coffee

The New Rules Of Coffee On Tour

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The New Rules of Coffee—the very first book from Sprudge founders Jordan Michelman and Zachary Carlsen—comes out on Tuesday, September 25th on Ten Speed Press. Pre-order is available now wherever books are sold,  including AmazonBarnes & NobleIndiebound, and Powell’s. We can’t wait for you to read it!

To celebrate we’ll be partying with friends across the USA over the next few months, and today we can announce the first round of dates for our book tour. At each stop we’ll be chatting more about the book, signing copies available for sale, and drinking delicious coffee. Come join us at these events—and watch for more events to come in the following weeks!

Wednesday, September 26th in Olympia, Washington at Olympia Coffee Roasting Company

Thursday, September 27th in Tacoma, Washington at King’s Books

Friday, September 28th (daytime) in Everett, Washington at Narrative Coffee

Friday, September 28th (nighttime) in Seattle, Washington at La Marzocco Cafe at KEXP

Saturday, September 29th (daytime) in Portland, Oregon at Stumptown Coffee Roasters

Thursday, October 11th in New York City at Counter Culture Coffee in partnership with Taste Magazine (ticketed event—buy tickets here!)

Saturday, October 13th in New York City at New York Coffee Festival

Wednesday, October 17th in Brooklyn at Stumptown Coffee Cobble Hill

Sunday, October 21st in Washington DC with Smithsonian Associates at Ripley Center (ticketed event—buy tickets here!)

We’ve got much more coming for the months of November and December, including event dates in California, Texas, Illinois and Canada. If you’re interested in booking us for an event in your city, get in touch! Stay tuned for more events announced in the coming weeks, and we hope to see you at any or all of the above parties.

Order your copy today, don’t delay, hip hip hooray.

The post The New Rules Of Coffee On Tour appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

InterAmerican Wants To Talk About The Future Of Coffee

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Green importer InterAmerican Coffee has recently announced a $20,000 donation to Hanns R. Newmann Stiftung (HRNS), a coffee non-profit organization looking to create sustainable development in origin countries by treating “environmental, social, and economic factors in an integrated manner.” According to a press release, the money will go towards further HRNS’ Coffee Kids program as well as their Feed the Alliance for Resilient Coffee program. This all sounds great, but what does it all mean? How will the money actually be used?

If these are the sort of questions you have when hearing about a sizable donation, InterAmerican want to invite you to the Future of Coffee, “a definitely-not-awkward evening of delicious drinks, two guest-of-honor coffees, and much frank and lively conversation about the future of everyone’s favorite beverage.”

Taking place Thursday, September 27th at Counter Culture’s New York Training Lab, the Future of Coffee is not only a chance to celebrate and taste coffees from two “projects that focus on areas of coffee life [InterAmerican] thinks are essential to coffee’s future”—youth, gender equality, climate change response, and producer profitability—but to also ask questions, discuss, and find out more about how this money will help the people working these farms. The conversations will be led by Jan von Enden (Hanns R. Newmann Stiftung), Joanna Furguile (Coffee Kids), Kathryn Selengia (Climate Smart Coffee), and Emiliano Rice (InterAmerican Coffee).

The coffees to be served at the event include the Guatemala San José Poaquil HRNS from the Chimaltenango region, where partner farms have seen a 56% increase in their yields and a 28% increase in income since beginning work with HRNS, and the Honduras Coffee Kids Uniocafe from the Ocotepeque region, a coffee that comes from 33 producers all aged between 15 and 39.

The Future of Coffee gets started at 5:30pm on Thursday, September 27th at the Counter Culture New York Training Lab. The event is free to attend but InterAmerican is asking those who are planning on making it to RSVP. To reserver your spot or to find out more information on the Future of Coffee, 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 InterAmerican Coffee

The post InterAmerican Wants To Talk About The Future Of Coffee appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Setting The Table At Communion Cafe In Richardson, Texas

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communion cafe richardson texas

communion cafe richardson texas

In the futile battle against getting older, there is one defining moment from which there is no return, the final imbroglio: “do I try to stick it out in the city or accept my fate and move to the suburbs?” The schism is an ideological one; the thinking being that the city is full of life and culture, and the suburbs are boring—a place where folks go to bed early. A place dotted with chain restaurants. The same chain restaurants. Over and over. In Dallas, this has historically held true, but as with most cities still growing outward, the ideological divide no longer tracks one-for-one with city/suburb limits.

One such municipality having a bit of moment in that blurred space is Richardson, a Dallas suburb just a quick jaunt north up I-75. It has, for as long as I can remember, been where Dallasites go for really good dim sum, all manner of Mediterranean fare, and northern Indian food. It has never, historically, been a place to go for coffee. But that is changing, thanks to Communion Neighborhood Cooperative. Part co-working space, part coffee shop, part bar, part restaurant, Communion is Richardson’s place for all that is good (and also to work).

communion cafe richardson texas

Communion is a collaborative effort between Tim Kahle (the founder and managing director of Communion Cooperative, the co-working side of the business) and Tim Cox and Kyle McAdams (the co-owners of the cafe side). Cox and McAdams are lifers in the Dallas coffee scene; four years ago when it looked like the coffee scene was just about to explode—Method had just opened, Houndstooth was about to move to Dallas, and Cultivar was opening its second location—Cox was heir apparent as the most likely (and arguably most anticipated) barista to open their own shop. But despite some of my more grandiose claims about Dallas besting Austin for state coffee supremacy, that boom never happened, and neither did Cox’s shop. Until now.

In the 7,000-square-foot former automotive shop in which Communion now resides, co-working and cafe life are kept discrete. This gives Communion the opportunity to serve not just those taking advantage of the 5,000-square-foot, members-only co-working area, but the public at large. It is through this division, Cox says, that allows Communion works its greater goal: building community. “We want to create an environment of shared ideas and shared experiences. We serve coffee, food, cocktails, we have a co-working community, we are an event venue—and we strive to do all of those things really well—but those things are not our product,” Cox states. “They are the tools we use to create what we feel our real products to be: community, experience, and culture.”

communion cafe richardson texas

communion cafe richardson texas

Cox and McAdams are on the front lines of this mission with the cafe side, where the majority of folks have their first exposure to what Communion is all about. Amid glossy, warm wood tones, roll-up windows, and mid-century modern-esque patinated brass, the cozy vibe inside Communion belies what is one of the most progressive (and in my opinion, best) coffee programs in the entire city. A multi-roaster, the Richardson cafe always has three roasters on offer—one local, one from Texas, and one from beyond—each for a three-month stint. In those three months, each roaster will spend a month on espresso, pour-over, and batch brew. This, according to McAdams, allows customers to try every roaster, “whether they are adventurous and enjoy all forms of coffee preparation or if they prefer to stick to one style of brew.”

And Communion actively seeks out new and exciting roasters to carry. In just their second rotation, they have already featured Sey, Maquína, and Houston’s Xela Coffee Roasters, each making their first Metroplex appearance on Communion’s concrete countertop, along with local favorites Oak Cliff Coffee, Cultivar, and Amarillo’s Evocation.

As a full-service bar (and one of the only ones in town with a few by-the-glass splashes of natural wine), Communion allows Cox and McAdams the ability to flex a bit of creative muscle and design fun PM-type drinks that a coffee shop-only establishment couldn’t. Think adult slushies like the frosé—which is exactly what it sounds like, frozen rosé—and the coffee slushie, which goes great with a float of your favorite spirit. But if a more traditional cocktail is to your liking, Communion’s whiskey-forward menu boasts 120+ whiskeys used to create unique imbibements to great effect, like the coffee-focused Skin Seed & Soil, featuring Buffalo Trace bourbon, sambuca, brandy, and house-made cascara and coffee bitters, all shaken together and served over a cold-brew ice cube.

communion cafe richardson texas

As Cox stresses, all these offerings are mere tools to build Communion’s real products: community and experiences. With their all-day approach to service, Communion is able to provide a litany of events for patrons, many of which don’t often find their way this far north of downtown. Be they scotch pairings, coffee cocktails, pop-up dinners with guest chefs, or latte art throwdowns, community engagement is at the heart of what Cox, McAdams, and Kahle are trying to do with Richardson’s newest all-day hangout. And it’s working. After several months, Communion Cafe is busy from AM to PM, bustling with locals, many of whom have perfected the seamless transition from coffee to cocktail all from the comfort of the same booth.

With each passing day, that dichotomy between urban and suburban life is proving to be more and more false. As “the big city” becomes prohibitively expensive, folks are looking elsewhere to start their own endeavors, often combining efforts to create a single, multi-use space. And nowhere are the rewards of this reaped more than in the outlying areas. With places like Communion finding homes outside the city center, the suburbs—contrary to decades of thinking otherwise—do not suck.

Communion Cafe is located at 514 Lockwood Dr #5609, Richardson. Visit their official website and follow them Facebook and Instagram.

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 Setting The Table At Communion Cafe In Richardson, Texas appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

You Can Bathe In Coffee At This Japanese Spa

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Remember five or so years ago when it seemed like every specialty coffee company had an ad of some dude pouring coffee on himself (or maybe his bro) out of a Chemex in a provocative way? Yeah, it was weird. But on a semi-related note, you can now bathe in coffee. A resort in Japan offers customers a swimming pool-sized spa filled with coffee for their relaxing pleasure.

According to The Travel, the Hakone Kowakien Yunessun Spa and Resort in Hakone, Japan is home to multiple food- and drink-based spas, including wine, tea, “ramen”, and of course, coffee. And it’s not just brown-colored water, it’s actually coffee—low heat Nel Drip style brewed coffee per the website—though I have had many a coffee that I would classify as “brown-colored water” and I can’t say one way or the other how this brew stacks up to those. I don’t plan on finding out either. The Hakone Kowakien Yunessun Spa and Resort wisely suggests you not drink the coffee. Or the tea or wine or ramen broth.

The coffee bath is more than just a ploy to draw in the coffee obsessed. Not much more, mind you, but still more. Bathing in coffee is said to have “recharging, relaxing, skin beautifying effects.”

Even if it’s not, a photo in a coffee bath is pretty pretty pretty Instagrammable.

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 Hakone Kowakien Yunessun Spa and Resort

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Source: Coffee News

Boston’s Ripple Cafe Is Expanding (With Your Help)

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Business is booming in Boston’s coffee culture. Three of the most prominent American specialty coffee companies—Counter Culture, Blue Bottle, and Intelligentsia—have set up shop there, with a burgeoning micro-roaster community of its own. In the historically Black neighborhood of Dorchester, Massachusetts, just south of downtown Boston, a coffee scene is growing on its own. Enter Ripple Cafe, a Black-owned coffee pop-up that opened last summer in the dining room of Taste of Eden, a Jamaican restaurant in Codman Square on the corner of Withington and Norfolk. After a successful first year, Ripple Cafe is moving into a permanent cafe space less than a mile from the pop-up, and they’re looking to the community for help funding renovations.

According to their Gofundme campaign, Ripple Cafe is slated to begin renovations immediately and hope to open by October 1st of 2018. Along with continuing to offer Counter Culture coffee, juices, and pastries, the cafe’s stated goals include creating a sustainable living for their baristas through liveable wages, investing back into the community through non-profit work, and providing first-time jobs for local youth. Owners Gaelle Ducheine and James Guerrier spelled it out on the cafe’s Gofundme page:

We have dreamed of owning this sort of cafe for years, but we knew the implications of debt financing in such a start-up situation would create financial pressure on the business. We wanted to start small and experience an organic growth, as this would mitigate risk and give us time to learn the ins and outs of the business. We built a coffee cart in the summer of 2017 and set up in spare dining room space inside a Jamaican restaurant in Dorchester’s Codman Square as a pop-up enterprise. We sold specialty coffee, tea, smoothies, and locally sourced pastries for a year, building great relationships with customers and making great friends along the way. We self-financed the entire operation and continued to do so until the pop-up was able to sustain itself. It took a lot of hard work, but it was sweet to see it flourishing on its own and to gain a glimpse of that organic growth and effect we had been longing for.

We are proud of our initial success as young entrepreneurs, owners of one of a very small handful of Black Owned Independent Coffee Shop’s in the city of Boston.

We’re living in a time where folks in marginalized communities are rallying hard to support each other, and we’ve been fortunate to see this same work taking place in coffee spaces. Groups like Boston Intersectional Coffee Collective (founded by Intelligentsia Post Office Square lead barista, Kristina Jackson) remind us our support for minority coffee folks—especially Black coffee folks—is not only important, but necessary. Fundraisers like the one underway in Dorchester offer another opportunity to extend support to minority-owned businesses dedicated to reinvesting into the communities they come from. It’s a ripple effect of positivity and growth that will reach far and wide to better the world of coffee, for drinkers and business owners alike.

You can support Ripple Cafe’s campaign on Gofundme and follow them on Instagram to stay updated on their progress.

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

Photos via Ripple Cafe.

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Source: Coffee News

Riffing On Coffee At Ghost Note In Seattle

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ghost note coffee seattle washington

ghost note coffee seattle washington

It was only a matter of time before Christos Andrews opened Ghost Note Coffee. The Capital Hill cafe that bills itself as a “modern, progressive coffee shop” is positioned to offer Seattleites a gastronomic coffee experience. Take it’s signature coffee cocktail, called The Sun Ship, for example. The drink, served in a martini glass, is a mixture of espresso, in-house smoked grapefruit rosemary syrup, coconut water, sparkling water, and lime.

“Any professional in any sort of field, art or otherwise, comes to a place where you feel like you’ve hit a wall,” Andrews says. “I felt somewhat limited until now.”

At Ghost Note, he’s the type of owner who pulls a towel from behind the bar 30 seconds after walking in to wipe up a smudged bit of creamer on the counter. His eyes flash around the cafe as he speaks, making peace signs at customers breezing through the entrance.

The prevalence of cocktails on cafe menus is on the rise. Ghost Note’s includes a concoction of African espresso, tonic water, juniper sage concentrate, and cucumber. And still another, dubbed the Firefly Tonic, that features tonic water, Burundi espresso, Lemon Lavender shrub, lemon bitters, and of course, in-house rose lavender syrup.

ghost note coffee seattle washington

Andrews made his entrance into the food world while working at Whole Foods in Nashville, where he was living attempting to make a go at drumming in the city’s music scene. Ghost Note’s name refers to a musical note that at once carries rhythmic value and no discernible pitch. For a drummer, a ghost note is what lends personality and feel to an average piece of music.

“But after I got my first barista job, it was game over,” Andrews says with a grin.

Instead of a drum kit, his instrument of choice at Ghost Note is a La Marzocco Linea. Andrews and his friends jokingly refer to the shop’s signature method of pulling shots as a Blast Brew.

“We put a flow restrictor on the pump,” Andrews says, “turning the pressure down to five-and-a-half bars, and the temperature up to 203, with a 14-and-a-half brew ratio.”

Other members of the Seattle coffee community, like Alex Johnstone and David Rothstein of Convoy Coffee, appreciate the way Ghost Note brings a culinary passion to coffee.

“We’re big fans of Christos,” Johnstone says. Of the Blast Brew, he adds: “It’s like pulling an espresso-esque shot at the volume of twelve ounces.”

ghost note coffee seattle washington

Ghost Note regularly stocks Seattle’s Broadcast Coffee, and sources food items from other local outfits like Salmonberry Goods and Columbia City Bakery, where Andrews expanded the coffee program. The shop’s mugs come from nearby Yu Tang Ceramics, and it adds a bit of imported flare from a guest roaster program, which has featured more far-afield roasters like Colorado’s Sweet Bloom Coffee Roasters.

It should be noted that Andrews’ price point is higher than that of other area shops. He and his partner, a software engineer named Lee Hampton from New York, surveyed the pricing of other cafes in Capital Hill and set theirs in the high end. Then they added 10 percent.

That’s because Ghost Note doesn’t accept tips. Andrews uses the added income of higher-priced menu items to pay baristas competitive wages as well as for holidays and two weeks of paid vacation.

“Ghost Note is different because they’re quietly doing things better than they need to be done,” Convoy’s Rothstein says.

ghost note coffee seattle washington

Andrews won America’s Best Espresso contest in 2013 while working for Tony’s Coffee out of Bellingham. Before that, he was directing coffee at Neptune Coffee, then Tougo Coffee for two years. Last year, his Sun Ship garnered a semi-finals nod at the Coffee Masters NYC competition.

“There were times when I had like three jobs,” Andrews says of his dedication to his work. “And I’m technically still a trainer and consultant at the Seattle Barista Academy.” When Ghost Note opened, Andrews ran the cafe by himself.

“I don’t recommend it,” Andrews says with a laugh.

Andrews says he has no idea where Ghost Note will be in the future. But he hopes to open another shop—he knows that much. And he also knows he doesn’t want to hit a ceiling. Today, Ghost Note is good. In five years?

“I’m hoping we’ll be significantly better,” he says.

Ghost Note Coffee is located at 1623 Bellevue Avenue, Seattle. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Paolo Bicchieri is a freelance journalist based in Seattle. This is Paolo Bicchieri’s first feature for Sprudge.

Photos by John Clem.

The post Riffing On Coffee At Ghost Note In Seattle appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Slovenia: The Inaugural Ljubljana Coffee Festival Is Coming Soon

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There’s a growing specialty coffee scene in Slovenia and at the center of it all is Ljubljana, much of which has been covered here on the virtual pages of Sprudge. And now, the capital city is looking to push their coffee culture even further with the inaugural Ljubljana Coffee Festival taking place October 5th and 6th.

Taking place at the City Museum, the Ljubljana Coffee Festival may be in its first year but you wouldn’t know it by everything they have planned. The two-day festival is chockfull of sensory cuppings and lectures by industry leaders from around the world, many given in both English and Slovenian. Lecture topics will include Home Brewing, Cascara, Career Development with Swedish Barista and Brewers Cup Champion Alexander Ruas, and a talk with 2016 World Cezve/Ibrik Champion Konstantinos Komninakis.

And if competitions are more your bag, the Ljubljana Coffee Festival has you covered. Along with the 2018 Slovenian Latte Art Throwdown—where the winner earns a training session with current World Barista champion, Coffee Masters London champion, and World Latte Art finalist Agnieszka Rojewska—the festival will also play host to the third annual Barista Battle Challenge. The multidisciplinary contest will put barista through the proverbial ringer, all to be judged by Polish and Slovakian National Barista Champions Natalia Piotrowska and Veronica Galova Vesela, respectively. But whoever makes it out the other side gets to take home a brand new La Marzocco Linea Mini.

Of course, there will be coffee. The Ljubljana Coffee Festival has teamed up with La Marzocco for the True Artisan Café, a rotating pop-up to highlight roasters from around the world. Making appearances at the café this year will be: OmniBus (Japan), George Howell (USA), Origin Coffee (England), Bonanza (Germany), Taf (Greece), The Coffee Collective (Denmark), and Bocca (The Netherlands).

Tickets for the Ljubljana Coffee Festival cost €10 for a day pass and €15 for a weekend pass and can be purchased here. For more information on everything going on the festival, visit the Ljubljana Coffee Festival’s official website.

Get ready, Slovenia, on October 5th and 6th you’re going to be the center of the coffee world.

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 Ljubljana Coffee Festival

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Source: Coffee News

Build-Outs Of Summer: Second Wind Coffee In Johnstown, NY

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second wind coffee johnstown new york

second wind coffee johnstown new york

Can you believe it? The end of summer is this week, and that means so too ends the Build-Outs of Summer. Sunrise, sunset. But we still have a few more tricks up our sleeve for you this week. The first of which hails from upstate New York: Second Wind Coffee in Johnstown.

A multi-roaster—including some international options—Second Wind Coffee is bringing delicious coffee to the upstate area and serving it from a brand new Slayer Steam X. Relaxed and rustic meets international and high tech, that’s what Second Wind is bringing to Johnstown, New York.

second wind coffee johnstown new york

As told to Sprudge by Shawn Beebie.

For those who aren’t familiar, will you tell us about your company?

We’re, Second Wind Coffee. We’re located in upstate New York, in the heart of the historical city of Johnstown. We will serve handcrafted coffees, espresso, tea, smoothies, and food. Our food menu will be seasonal with ingredients provided by local farmers. Whole bean, ground coffee, and brewing accessories will be available for purchase.

Can you tell us a bit about the new space?

Customers can relax in a vintage, rustic/industrial atmosphere, surrounded by works of art from local and national artists. Artwork, vintage furniture, and decor will also be available for purchase.

second wind coffee johnstown new york

What’s your approach to coffee?

Coffee will be sourced from our carefully selected list of local and international specialty roasters that will change with the seasons. We will offer traditional drip coffee, espresso, french press, pour-over as well as cold brew and nitro cold brew coffees.

Any machines, coffees, special equipment lined up?

The equipment we have planned for our shop is as follows: Slayer Steam X two-group, Slayer Espresso Single Group, two Ceado E37J Touchscreen coffee grinders with small hoppers, one Ceado E37J Touchscreen coffee grinder with large hopper, Curtis G3 Airpot Twin 2.2L – 2.5L Brewer, BUNN GHD G3 bulk coffee grinder, two Blendtec Connoisseur 825 blenders, one Blendtec rapid rinse station.

second wind coffee johnstown new york

What’s your hopeful target opening date/month?

We’re hoping to open August/September 2018

Are you working with craftspeople, architects, and/or creatives that you’d like to mention?

We’re working with world renowned Artist and Furniture makers, Barney Bellinger and Jonathan Sweet.

Thank you!

To my family and friends for their love and support and all who have helped to make my dream come true!

second wind coffee johnstown new york

Second Wind Coffee is located at 32 W Main St, Johnstown. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Build-Outs Of Summer is an annual series on Sprudge. Live the thrill of the build all summer long in our Build-Outs feature hub.

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Source: Coffee News

Ryan Gosling Makes Surprise Visit To Toronto Coffee Shop

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As the News Editor for the Sprudge Media Network, folks are always saying to me, “Zac, we miss seeing all the hot coffee goss on the site. WE WANT HOT COFFEE GOSS!” Know that I have heard your supplications for the tawdry. That’s why today I’m happy to present you with a hot Gos. Getting coffee. Canadian heartthrob Ryan Gosling recently took time out of his busy day being super famous to visit a coffee shop in Toronto.

Now, this story is a little more heartwarming than… other area warming. According to People, the film star was in town to premier his new movie, First Man, at the Toronto International Film Festival. Joelle Murray, owner of Grinder Coffee—not Grindr Coffee, which is unfortunate, because that would have really given this story some zip!—took this as the perfect opportunity to lure in the megastar with the cafe’s #RyanNeedsGrinder campaign. The plan was: for one week, the shop would post photos of a cardboard cutout Gosling enjoying some coffee at the shop, probably dust off a few “Hey Girl” memes, and use the hashtag. Well, the plan worked better than expected; patrons—including the not-Rob Ford mayor of Toronto—began posting photos with the fake Gosling, and the whole thing became this big viral sensation.

Then, on Day Eight, when it seemed like the ultimate goal wouldn’t be achieved, relegated to the depths along with an unsuccessful attempt to get Idris Elba into the shop the year previous, ultimate nice guy, THE Ryan Gosling, showed up unexpectedly to Grinder Coffee. As you can see from the photo below, Murray is pretty excited. Gosling remains handsome as ever.

I gotta say, I kinda love this story. It’s just good clean fun at a coffee shop and who doesn’t love that?

Oh, right. The people who wanted the ole Sprudge spice. Well then, try this tasty lick on for size: Coffee companies who use the term “Geisha” and have no intention of altering course shouldn’t try to “well actually” Jenn Chen’s wonderfully researched—no matter what you feel like should have been included or what you believe you are owed for the sake of “journalistic integrity”—and thoughtfully written OPINION piece on why she BELIEVES a different name should be used. Rather, they should shut the fuck up and stay on the side lines. Whew.

There. How’s that for spice? Now please don’t ask again for a while. My mouth is burning.

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 Grinder Coffee

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Source: Coffee News

Kaafi In The Hague: American Born, British Trained, With A Pakistani Twist

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kaafi the hague netherlands

kaafi the hague netherlands

Last year, Amsterdam decided to up its tourist tax, put the kibosh on downtown hotel-building, restricted how many days residents could Airbnb their abodes, and nixed the city center from opening new “tourist shops”—bad news for venues selling everything from Nutella-shellacked waffles to souvenir T-shirts (my favorite reads: GOOD GIRLS GO TO HEAVEN BAD GIRLS GO TO AMSTERDAM).

Whether or not the limits and levies push you out of the Dutch capital, note that there is now a distinct southwesterly pull away from it anyway—to The Hague. Museums full of Mondrians, international tribunals, and the brisk beaches of the North Sea aside, a must-visit in this city, discerning drinker, is Kaafi. The cafe opened in June 2017, in the Hofkwartier, a picturesque shopping district with no shortage of specialty coffee. Yet so much distinguishes Kaafi from other spots in The Hague and, for that matter, the Netherlands.

kaafi the hague netherlands

A telltale sign is the house espresso, the Red Brick blend roasted by Square Mile Coffee Roasters in London. And following Square Mile’s recommended specs for that very brew, Kaafi uses a three-group Victoria Arduino VA388 Black Eagle Gravitech espresso machine—a rare bird in the Netherlands, with its impressive built-in weighing system. This is no coincidence. Kaafi’s founder, Zeeshan Malik, was lured into the industry at London’s legendary Prufrock Coffee, to which Square Mile is a principal supplier.

From afar, Malik appears serious, if not stoic. But exchange one word with him and he is instantly disarming and buoyantly conversational. A Manhattan-born American who spent his teen years in The Hague and attended law school in London, the almost-30-year-old first became acquainted with Prufrock as an unassuming customer.

“I just kinda walked into the place. It was a rainy day and I just needed a place to study,” recalls Malik. “I had my first cup, which was probably a Red Brick cappuccino.”

Before long, though, he became an obsessive hobbyist, enrolling in Prufrock’s training program and taking course after course, from the barista skills foundations to an authorized training certification. “I was very lucky to have an amazing mentor,” Malik says of Jeremy Challender, who at the time co-ran Prufrock.

kaafi the hague netherlands

Zeeshan Malik

“He would have a whiteboard in front of him,” Malik describes of the drills Challender put him through. “He timed everything I did, from the moment I started grinding to how idle I am while I’m steaming milk. And it’d be like, ‘Well you just wasted 20 seconds steaming milk when you could be doing other things, like setting up a saucer and a teaspoon.’”

After completing schooling and becoming disillusioned with lawyering in London, Malik moved back to The Hague. Eventually, he found “the courage to say, ‘This is what I wanna do, for real,’” as he puts it. “I mean, I had the most kitted-out home barista kit you’ll ever see. I was the guy who had a [Mahlkönig] EK43 at home.”

Today the pet Mahlkönig EK43 is a workhorse at Kaafi, along with two Victoria Arduino Mythos One grinders. Nitro cold brew is seasonally available, and Malik plans to soon offer Turkish coffee—apt for a brand with a whirling dervish logo. Like Prufrock, Kaafi features a usual rotation of light-roasted coffees from dark-weather Europe (La Cabra, The Barn, etc.).

kaafi the hague netherlands

In the Netherlands, early-morning consumption culture is in its nascence, which Malik found out at the start, when Kaafi opened at 7:30 and was “absolutely dead” til 10am. He adjusted accordingly, although “that’s double digits already—like, life should be well into play by 10 o’clock,” he muses, expressing hope to one day “start inching towards 9:30.”

Anticipating a day when Kaafi could potentially approach big-city busy, Malik wanted “to create a bar that was optimized for workflow and quality consistency,” he says. “I always ask myself, ‘Do I have a bar that one person could handle on their own?’ And the answer to that inevitably is yes.”

The image of a solo staffer is comfortably projected onto the two Marco SP9s that are used to prepare filter coffee. The choice has been a local talking point, for which Malik has a considered response.

“My least favorite part of being a barista is pouring hot water. I think it’s just not something that you need to be spending time on,” he emphasizes. “Proponents of manual pour-over might say that it provides a better experience, but to that, I say, it’s 2018, and most of our customers are familiar with the way a pour-over coffee is made. There’s no need to be showing that off when you can be tending to them.”

kaafi the hague netherlands

kaafi the hague netherlands

Gear and groove aside, another trait that sets Kaafi apart is kinship. Malik’s parents, since retired from continent-spanning work as Pakistani diplomats, have embraced second careers—alongside their son. Malik’s father is Kaafi’s head chef, fulfilling a longtime fantasy to have his own restaurant and now creating delectable takes on cafe fare, such as brie brûlée toasties; Malik’s mother is his pastry chef, producing a score of sweets with Pakistani twists, like the signature pistachio cardamom cheesecake. Malik’s little brother was his first employee and his wife, a human rights lawyer by day, moonlights as his marketer.

kaafi the hague netherlands

The cafe comfortably sits 40. A dapper family-den feeling characterizes the main floor. It contrasts with the elevated back area that Malik calls “our inspiration-slash-productivity space,” hosting a “cupping table that masks as a communal-seating table.” Bright and minimalist, the alcove welcomes patrons to work, staying as long as they wish; the table height is ideal for standing typists and outlets encourage laptops (and during off-hours, kettles).

Clearly influenced by his inculcation at Prufrock and helped by his family’s panoramic support, Malik offers a kind of hospitality and attention on the guest that remains scarce in the Netherlands. So for visitors to The Hague, including those of us from Amsterdam, Kaafi is definitely something to write home about.

Kaafi is located at Prinsestraat 25, The Hague. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

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

Some photos courtesy of Kaafi.

The post Kaafi In The Hague: American Born, British Trained, With A Pakistani Twist appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News