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Build-Outs Of Summer: Fausto In Cincinnati, OH

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fausto cincinnati ohio

Is there any place the brother Ferrari won’t put a coffee shop? Two years ago—and part of the Build-Outs of Summer no less—Austin and Tony opened Ferrari Barbershop and Coffee Co, a coffee shop that cohabited with, you guessed it, a barber shop. And now they are back at it with their newest Cincinnati outpost Fausto, a restaurant and coffee shop concept inside the Contemporary Art Center.

For their new location, the Ferrari brothers are importing some of the California ethos shared with one of their other cafes, Provender in San Francisco. Not only will Fausto focus on seasonally-inspired California cuisine but it include some other West Coast sensibilities, most notably a focus on natural wine and a composting program. But they are still keeping it very Cincinnati by working with longtime roasting partners Deeper Roots Coffee. These two worlds blend together in perfect harmony for an all-day cafe, for Fausto in Cincinnati, Ohio.

The 2019 Build-Outs of Summer is presented by Pacific Barista SeriesnotNeutralKeepCup, and Mill City Roasters.

As told to Sprudge by Austin Ferrari.

fausto cincinnati ohio

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

Fausto is a restaurant that focuses on seasonal California cuisine inside of the world renowned Contemporary Art Center designed by Zaha Hadid in downtown Cincinnati. Fausto is an all day gathering place brought to you by the Ferrari Brothers. A restaurant with a coffee shop, lunch, mid-day food, and dinner (three courses for $39). We also have a very extensive wine program with wines from all over the world, most of which are bio-dynamic or naturally made. Fausto is a place where everyone is welcome through any hour of the day. Focusing on the same beliefs as art, we are ever so changing.

Can you tell us a bit about the new space?

Fausto is a contemporary designed restaurant to fit the space of the CAC. Fausto is named after our father who comes from Calabria, Italy. It was named after him because for my brother and I, our father is kind of an artist in his own light. He has worked in restaurants his entire life and we wanted to give back to the art of the restaurant work he has always done. Fausto comes equipped with everything you may need through your daily life.

What’s your approach to coffee?

Our approach you could say is definitely third wave. We like coffee that is clean, pure, and focused. My brother Tony and I have our own coffee blend (Ferrari Bros Blend) that is roasted by Deeper Roots Coffee Co. The blend is 50% washed Guatemalan and 50% natural Ethiopian. The biggest thing for us when it comes to coffee is making sure first and foremost we are using a clean and beautiful product and translating that to our baristas and to the guests. All baristas go through super extensive training, all of whom love what they do first and foremost. I think overall, we love to serve the best we can and what we know tastes great to us and others.

Any machines, coffees, special equipment lined up?

We are equipped with a custom painted La Marzocco Strada (painted by La Marzocco in Italy) and shipped to us. A Mahlkönig PEAK espresso grinder. A FETCO drip tower and a Mahlkönig EK43S. Coffee is a love for us and so is the equipment.

fausto cincinnati ohio

How is your project considering sustainability?

Our restaurant Fausto not only uses amazing, sustainable coffee from a trusted source and location but the restaurant as a whole focuses on using sustainable ingredients (everything is from within the midwest on the food menu). The wine is at least all almost sustainable. Plus, we are one of the only restaurants in Cincinnati, Ohio to be composting. Composting is basic rule in California but here in Cincinnati, nobody does it, but in our restaurant it is mandatory.

What’s your hopeful target opening date/month?

June 24th we open for morning service and lunch. A few weeks after we will open up the mid-day menu and dinner.

fausto cincinnati ohio

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

I think we would like to thank the entire staff at the Contemporary Arts Center. Our good friend and architect Daniel Ewald in San Francisco. Joe Girandola and Richard Wolhoy who are two amazing artists here in Cincinnati. Plus, our family for insight.

Thank you!

Thank you all for the love and support in what my brother and I do. We hope to have you in soon. Whether for a coffee or for a meal and wine. Cheers!

Fausto is located at 44 E 6th St., Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook 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.

Photos by Brianna Long

The post Build-Outs Of Summer: Fausto In Cincinnati, OH appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

A Little Podcast About Coffee Price Transparency: A Mini-Series By Ever Meister & Chad Trewick

By Coffee No Comments

The current crisis of the commodity coffee price on the futures market is perhaps the most immediate issue facing coffee as we know it (climate change may be a larger concern, but if the price isn’t rectified, there may be no farmers—and thus no coffee trees—to be deleted by climate change). We’ve made our feelings known about the current problem in no uncertain terms, and leading voices in the industry are doing their part to dive into the crisis in hopes of bringing it to the forefront of the collective coffee conscious.

Two such individuals are Ever Meister and Chad Trewick. Through the lens of price transparency, Meister—managing editor and education director at Cafe Imports and author of New York City: A Caffeinated History—teams up with Trewick—founder of Reciprocafé, LLC and one of the project leads for the Specialty Coffee Transaction Guide—for a four-part podcast series titled “A Little Podcast About Coffee Price Transparency.”

Totally just over a two-hour runtime, the four-part series was released all at once last week as part of The Discomfort Zone Podcast, Meister’s “interview-based show about a whole range of topics, beliefs, issues, anxieties, and quirks that make us uncomfortable, in the hopes that we can see each other and make real connections through open dialog.” Each episode tackles a different subject related to transparency and the price crisis. Episode One discusses the “functions of the coffee market and the C-market price, the foundations for the price crisis, and introduces the rest of a conversation about price transparency in specialty coffee and its implications in the greater movement toward long-term coffee sustainability.” Episode Two dives into ways to get farmers more money for their work, with Episode Three digging deeper into transparency and its potential impact on pricing. The series then caps off with Episode Four, about the consumer and their role.

All four episodes of A Little Podcast About Coffee Price Transparency are out now on SoundCloud. Give it a listen and continue the biggest conversation in coffee today.

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

Top image via A Little Podcast About Coffee Price Transparency

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Source: Coffee News

La Marzocco Turkey Wins The Red Bull Flugtag In Instanbul

By Coffee No Comments

Over the weekend, Istanbul hosted the most recent addition of the Red Bull Flugtag. a competition where teams of amateur builders create human-powered flying machines to see who can fall with style the farthest. Flugtags take place all over the world and are basically just parties where folks get all jacked up on Red Bulls (and probably other imbibements) and watch “pilots” human cannonball themselves into the nearby body of water. It’s as awesome as it sounds.

But there was one team that was just a little more juiced than all the others, and that was The Coffee Lovers, the team fielded by La Marzocco Turkey. Red Bull may give you wings, but coffee gives you creativity and distance, and that’s what allowed The Coffee Lovers to take home the gold.

The Flugtag is scored using three criteria: creativity of the flying machine, performance of the flying machine and team, and the total distance traveled, with the latter being the more critical. But you can’t count out creativity. Working with students from the Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University, the La Marzocco team created with KB90 Straight-In Portafilter plane, presumably for its aerodynamic and ergonomic prowess over say, a Linea-shaped box plane (though that workhorse machine would probably try-hard its way onto the podium somehow. Don’t count it out is all I’m saying). Nailing the performance aspect was pilot Cetin Gurer and human-powerers Aysin Aydogdu, Baris Somer, and Umut Ozturk, who came bedecked in lion costumes, a nod to the LM logo.

According to their team profile, The Coffee Lovers goal was to “fall as beautiful as possible,” which they did, beating out 34 other teams and landing gracefully on the top of the podium via the blue waters of the Caddebostan Beach.

So congratulations to The Coffee Lovers and to La Marzocco to proving once and for all which caffeinated beverage reigns supreme!

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

Photos via La Marzocco

Disclosure: La Marzocco is an advertising partner with the Sprudge Media Network

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Source: Coffee News

Applications Are Now Open For Coffee Masters Los Angeles

By Coffee No Comments

Coffee Masters is coming to Los Angeles! After four years in New York City, the multi-faceted coffee competition is hopping coasts to the Golden State. Taking place November 8th through 10th, Coffee Masters will be making its West Coast debut at the Los Angeles Coffee Festival, and applications to compete are now open!

For those yet to experience it, Coffee Masters is a rip-roaring, multi-disciplinary competition where coffee professionals go head-to-head in a tournament style battle for barista supremacy and $5,000 cash money. Individuals will have their mettle tested across seven competitions: cupping, brewing, latte art, signature drinks, espresso blend creation, origin identification, and “the order round,” where they will have to proficiently make up to 10 different espresso-based drinks from an order docket.

Thanks to the immediacy of the scoring for many of the rounds—either you made more drinks/identified more origins/made better latter art or you didn’t—Coffee Masters is one of the more fun for on-lookers, which lends itself to a pretty raucous atmosphere. It’s a good time to be had by all.

And you can be part of that good time. Allegra Events, the company that puts on Coffee Masters, is accepting applications to compete through September 8th. Applications must include the completed questionnaire (found here), a one to two minute video where you introduce yourself and create your own “LA Lifestyle”-inspired signature beverage, and one head shot; this is LA after all. Competitors with the best application will then move on to compete at Coffee Masters.

For more information about the application process, the rules, or the event itself, visit the Coffee Masters official website.

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

Top image via Coffee Masters

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Source: Coffee News

Build-Outs Of Summer: Solid Coffee Roasters In Bellflower, CA

By Coffee No Comments

solid coffee roasters bellflower california

Shipping containers used to just be… shipping containers. Big metal bins used to transport things—probably boring stuff like packing peanuts or pet rocks—by both land and sea. But in the past few years, shipping old shipping containers have found a second life as affordable building materials and are often repurposed into new, hip business parks where smalltime local makers can have a storefront all their own. And no self-respecting, hip maker space is complete without a coffee shop.

For Bellflower, California’s SteelCraft, that coffee shop is Solid Coffee Roasters. Alongside other establishments in the urban eatery like an ice cream shop, wine bar, bagel shop, and brewery, Solid is keeping things caffeinated with this, their third location. With an abundance of picnic table seating, Solid Coffee inside SteelCraft is the perfect place to fuel up and hang out while soaking in some of that beautiful Southern California sun. So grab a bagel, a beer, and a brewed coffee, because we’re checking out the brand new Solid Coffee Roasters inside SteelCraft in Bellflower, California.

The 2019 Build-Outs of Summer is presented by Pacific Barista SeriesnotNeutralKeepCup, and Mill City Roasters.

As told to Sprudge by Mark Tigchelaar.

solid coffee roasters bellflower california

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

SOLID Coffee Roasters was originally founded in 2014 out of the desire to provide a platform for any enterprise to raise funds by creating and selling their own coffee brand. Daniel Kam, Solid’s Founder, started brewourcoffee.com to do just that. It grew very quickly as organizations realized their supporters desired a good cup of coffee, not something that has been sitting on the store shelves for months.

After a few years, the team took an opportunity to move the roaster and open a cafe on the corner of South and Norwalk, in Artesia, CA. The cafe was immediately met with huge support and has been a staple in the neighborhood. It has become a hub for students, entrepreneurs, and families alike. You’ll often find people collaborating on projects, studying, reading, or just enjoying each other.

Now Solid Coffee Roasters is awaiting the grand opening of their third location and growing rapidly.

solid coffee roasters bellflower california

Can you tell us a bit about the new space?

The new location is at the newest Steelcraft development in Bellflower, CA. It’s a 20-foot refurbished shipping container and all but one piece of our equipment is used.

What’s your approach to coffee?

Simple, approachable, and remarkable. It’s very important for us to provide an excellent cup of coffee with focus on consistency all while giving the customer a remarkable experience.

Any machines, coffees, special equipment lined up?

Not really, we are serving Kombucha from two local companies out of a custom wrapped kegerator but other than than, just your usual workhorses!

How is your project considering sustainability?

All the shipping containers are refurbished and we used as much used equipment as possible.

solid coffee roasters bellflower california

solid coffee roasters bellflower california

What’s your hopeful target opening date/month?

We just opened last week!

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

Howard CDM was the developer. Also a big thanks to the City of Bellflower and Jim Dellalonga.

Thank you!

Thank you!

solid coffee roasters bellflower california

Solid Coffee Roasters is located at 16500 Bellflower Blvd #100, Bellflower. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook 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.

The post Build-Outs Of Summer: Solid Coffee Roasters In Bellflower, CA appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

The Sprudge Coffee Guide To Cardiff, Wales

By Coffee No Comments

Cardiff is the UK’s forgotten capital, overlooked in favor of London, Edinburgh, and even Belfast. That doesn’t make much sense to me, mainly because it’s cheaper than London, flatter than Edinburgh, and less-of-a-plane-ride-away than Belfast. Visit on match day—Wales is a country which loves rugby above all else—and the streets thrum with activity, blow-up daffodils sprout from the carts of temporary vendors, and red dragon flags flutter in the breeze. Visit any other time and attune yourself to the melodic rhythm of the Welsh accent, while picnicking in Bute Park, exploring the grounds of the city center’s medieval Castle, or strolling the Victorian arcades, which wend their way against the grain of the city, connecting disparate streets.

At its core, Cardiff is a city that welcomes, not overwhelms, and that’s an attitude that filters through to several of the city’s specialty coffee shops, bars, and roasteries. Over the last half decade or so, Cardiff has seen several specialty coffee shops sprout up in and around the city center, from within the traditional trappings of the Victorian arcades to the confines of the Cardiff Market. Wander down residential backstreets and you might even find yourself at a fine coffee shop too; meanwhile, even the main shopping street has superior coffee hidden in plain sight.



 

cardiff wales coffee guide

Hard Lines

Once a coffee shop-cum-record-store, Hard Lines launched a Kickstarter to fund its move to a bigger and better space until running into unforeseen problems with the building. All things considered, the team’s continued dedication to the Cardiff coffee scene—and other local businesses—is impressive. “It’s a city we love being in and a city we feel we can really help shape the coffee and independent scene,” one of the owners, Sophie Smith tells me. Now, this favorite coffee spot operates from a small but perfectly formed hole-in-the-wall stall within Cardiff Central Market and roasts in Abercynon (the new space will allow them to do both onsite).

Within the market, a pink neon sign beckons you away from grilled-cheese-makers and Welsh cake-bakers, as does the gorgeous La Marzocco Linea Classic pastel pink espresso machine. (She’s called Barb.) There are a couple of stools available if you want to hang out and chat to one of the owners—or simply sample a vegan cake or pastry, which are locally sourced from Angel Bakery. If you’re really taken with one of the Hard Lines rotating roasts, take-home bags of whatever’s on the menu are always available for purchase; although, you can’t go wrong with the super smooth, slightly sweet Colombian House Party.

Hard Lines is located at Unit 25, in Cardiff Central Market, Cardiff. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

 

cardiff wales coffee guide

Corner Coffee

With one expansive windowfront looking into the High Street Arcade and the other looking onto the High Street itself, the former pop-up Corner Coffee has, well, cornered the best of both worlds. “We love the feel of the arcades and the heritage of them. We feel privileged to be part of the arcade community, surrounded by other independent business,” owner Chris Corner tells me. Because, yes, this understated cafe, which opened in September 2017, is named for Corner himself, not its opportune (and coincidental) corner location.

Stepping inside, the décor is minimal—all bare wood tables and benches, plus a ubiquitous string of Edison bulbs dangling above the counter—and the coffee is presented in a similarly low-key way: my latte arrived in a simple glass tumbler. But the depth of flavor in Corner Coffee’s house beans (sourced from The Missing Bean in Oxford, England) belies the simplicity of their final-form presentation and the signature brownies are just the right side of gooey. Aside from the four-bean house blend, it offers a weekly-rotation of guest beans from other UK roasters, which the team of baristas are only too happy to explain. And their espresso machine? A Faema E71, perhaps “the only one of its kind in Wales,” according to Corner.

Corner Coffee is located at 13 High Street, Cardiff. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

 

cardiff wales coffee guide

Uncommon Ground

Make your way up the High Street from Corner Coffee before ducking into the Royal Arcade for Uncommon Ground Coffee Roastery, a low-lit hub of students tapping on laptops and dates exchanging anecdotes over coffee. Owned by brothers Ian and Paul Hayman, Uncommon Ground—opened in March 2015—is both coffee bar and roastery, and has a dedicated Head of Coffee and Roastery, Dominik Hurthe. “We buy and roast specialty coffee beans… from different importers, such as Falcon Specialty and Nordic Approach,” he tells me.

The décor—curated by Cardiff-based designer Tim Rice—is hodgepodge but inviting, tailored to cultivating a vibe of coworking-slash-socializing, as expansive tables with mismatched chairs, alongside squishy sofas, and coveted window bar seats dominate the ground floor. Upstairs—when open—is lighter and brighter but the quirky furniture continues; choose from vintage chairs or sit beneath a hooded hairdryer. Meanwhile, neon lettering, often obscured by an ever-present queue of customers, fronts the counter, while the three-group La Spaziale S5 espresso machine takes pride of place alongside a selection of pastries. As Hurthe says, “I imagine customers who are used to their coffee chains will see it as an uncommon cafe.”

Uncommon Ground is located at 10-12 Royal Arcade, Morgan Quarter, Cardiff. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

 

cardiff wales coffee guide

Lufkin

It’s worth searching through the backstreets of Cardiff to find Lufkin Coffee Roasters, which opened in September 2015 down a discreet, cobbled alleyway in the residential Pontcanna neighborhood. The bricks-and-mortar breezeblock exterior looks unassuming from the outside, but the two rooms within offer a cozy, fresh-feeling spot to enjoy a single-origin coffee, whether you prefer a pour-over or an espresso offering served from the sleek chrome La Marzocco Linea PB. Lufkin’s stylish ceramics are designed by Micki Schloessingk of Bridge Pottery in Gower.

Yellow highlights—from the coffee shop’s lemon-themed branding—offer splashes of color to the interior, while a selection of pies to the right of the counter, including a decadent-looking—and appropriate—lemon meringue, immediately catches the eye. “A friend we met through the local farmers market bakes them and brings them in,” says owner Frances Lukins. Frances and husband Dan paid homage to their original Latvian surname when it came to branding their coffee shop and roastery, Lukins being a down-the-line Americanization of Lufkins. When they discovered Lufkin meant “love”, they thought it the perfect name for their cafe. If you stop by on a Saturday, do browse the surrounding selection of stalls selling locally produced samosas, soaps, and beer in Kings Road Yard.

Lufkin is located at 183A Kings Road, Cardiff. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

 

cardiff wales coffee guide

200 Degrees

If you don’t have the time to head to Pontcanna, 200 Degrees Coffee Bar and Barista School, situated on Queen Street, the city’s main commercial drag, has you covered. Roped-off tables and chairs dare you to brace the Cardiff cold by sitting outside; however, going indoors is the infinitely better option, especially as this surprisingly long and skinny coffee shop has plenty of room to sit, as well as a mammoth Victoria Arduino Black Eagle espresso machine dominating the counter. Towards the back, there’s comfier armchair seating where you can sip a creamy soy milk cappuccino, made with the Brazilian Love Affair blend, alongside a functional Toper roasting machine. (Its slightly lower roasting temperature used inspired the 200 Degrees name.)

Unlike the lighter fare offered at other third waves across Cardiff, 200 Degrees is one of the few which includes substantial lunch options, including freshly-made sandwich and soup combos, as well as the obligatory repertoire of sweet treats. However, if 200 Degrees seems like a slicker operation than the other Cardiff coffee spots, that’s because it is. First founded by Tom Vincent and Rob Darby in Nottingham, there are now eight branches across the UK. Regardless, the coffee speaks for itself.

200 Degrees is located at 115 Queen Street, Cardiff. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Lauren Cocking is a freelance journalist who splits time between the UK and Mexico. Her work has been featured in CNN, BBC Travel, NatGeo, Lonely Planet, Broadly. This is Lauren Cocking’s first feature for Sprudge.

Top photo by Stephen Davies/Adobe Stock

The post The Sprudge Coffee Guide To Cardiff, Wales appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Bailey’s Released Non-Alcoholic Cold Brew, For Some Reason

By Coffee No Comments

Coffee and Bailey’s Irish Cream go together like peas and carrots, no two ways about it. They’re like bread and butter, like pb and j, like wine and cheese or chocolate or more wine even. They are two great tastes that taste great together. So when Bailey’s announced earlier this week they would be releasing a canned coffee product, it’s an easy home run, right? Wrong. Like Heddo at the end of Rookie of Year, when the young and normal-armed Henry Rowengartner lobs up one last meatball, Bailey’s completely whiffs. There’s no alcohol in this drink.

Yep, Bailey’s, a company that trades exclusively in flavored liqueur sector, has decided to expand their portfolio and start making ready-to-drink cold brew cans. Non-alcoholic ones. According to a recent article in Yahoo, the 11-ounce 100% Arabica beverage will come in two flavors, salted caramel and Irish cream, and will be available for purchase in-store and on Amazon. And that’s great, but why though?

I’ve got nothing but love for Bailey’s; a not-insignificant portion of my Freshman 15 is due to a late-night pre-game pick me up of Bailey’s and coffee. But this right here, this is a “stay in your lane” situation. If I wanted a can of cold brew—which frankly is rare but has been known to happen—why would I pick one up made by a non-coffee company? I don’t look to Anne Lunell every time I want a creamy liqueur (though Klaus Thomsen has some coffee liqueur experience that may come in handy).

Now you may be saying, “but Zac, just pour Bailey’s in it yourself. Problem solved!” Problem NOT solved, theoretical person who’s only trying to help. If I’m going to have to do all the heavy lifting and play shitty dorm room mixologist, I’m not going to use Bailey’s cold brew. What, am I going to mix Bailey’s Irish Cream with Bailey’s Irish Cream cold brew? Sure, let me just put this hat on this other hat real quick. No, I’m going to grab a regular, unflavored cold brew—maybe a Stumptown stubby, maybe some Verve flash brew, or maybe even that cannabis-infused Ritual cold brew if I’m feeling like getting wild.

What I won’t be grabbing, and you can put this on my tombstone, is a non-alcoholic Bailey’s cold brew. Buuuuuuut if you were to throw a little cold brew whiskey in there, maybe I’d be back in.

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

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Source: Coffee News

Which Democratic Candidate’s Coffee Order Are You?

By Coffee No Comments

After Round Two of the second Democratic Presidential Primary debate, we’ve now seen what all the candidates… we think, there would really be no way of knowing; things get a little fuzzy in the “nondescript white guy” section of the group. A sum total of 25 candidates—TWENTY. FIVE—have taken the stage to give their best talking points on why they should be the one most likely to beat Donald Trump in the 2020 general election.

There are a litany of issues upon which you, an informed voter, can decide which candidate’s ideas most closely align with your own, but we here at Sprudge are a single-issue voting bloc. And that issue is coffee. For us it’s simple. What coffee do they drink? Do I like that coffee? Does another candidate drink a coffee I like more? 

That’s why we here at Sprudge have created this handy dandy quiz to help you figure out what Democratic candidate coffee order you truly are, deep down in your very soul, thus revealing your one true hopeful. Sure, we all want to be an Elizabeth Warren of a Julian Castro, but somebody’s gotta Buttigieg. Maybe that someone is you. Take the quiz and find out!

Top image via NBC News

The post Which Democratic Candidate’s Coffee Order Are You? appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Build-Outs Of Summer: Prototype Coffee In Vancouver, Canada

By Coffee No Comments

prototype coffee vancouver canada

prototype coffee vancouver canada

We’re in the thick of it now. As July turns to August, ratcheting up the heat index, so too do we here at Sprudge ratchet up the heat on our annual series, the Build-Outs of Summer. And today, we’re heading back north to Vancouver to check in with Prototype Coffee.

Operating for years now as a wholesale roaster, Prototype is opening their first-ever store front to showcase their “continual pursuit of excellence.” And at their cafe, Prototype is doing something a little different. Instead of roasting on a single commercial-sized roaster, Prototype will instead use three Aillio Bullet R1s, one kilogram roasters. This, according to Prototype’s Matt Johnson, will give them the flexibility to roast as little as one bag at a time while allowing guests to see the roasting process firsthand, from green to brown.

It’s an ambitious plan, and it’s in its soft opening phase now. So let’s get a sneak peak at the brand new cafe for Prototype Coffee in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The 2019 Build-Outs of Summer is presented by Pacific Barista SeriesnotNeutralKeepCup, and Mill City Roasters.

As told to Sprudge by Matt Johnson.

prototype coffee vancouver canada

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

Prototype has been operating as a small batch specialty roaster in Vancouver for a couple years now but has only been offering coffee wholesale and for sale in an online store. We like to source a wide variety of coffees all at once, but they all have to be exceptional. We give sourcing preference to small unique lots sourced through our importing partners who build healthy and long term relationships with the producers at origin.

Here’s our mission statement: “Prototype exists to source, roast, and serve top quality coffees to consumers in a way that strives for continual improvement, innovation, and excellence and respects each participant in the supply chain, the product itself, and the customer. In all spheres, Prototype prioritizes the continual pursuit of excellence. This means working toward constant improvements in the quality of our products, in the efficiency and efficacy of operations, and in our relationships and service to customers. We are also guided by curiosity, always searching for new and better techniques and flavors.”

Can you tell us a bit about the new space?

We’re opening a coffee roastery and tasting room in Vancouver designed to showcase a wide range of coffees all roasted on site in tiny batches.

We’re paying a lot of attention to the design of the space on both sides of the bar in order to create a unique coffee tasting experience that is striking and memorable, and we think it’s going to be something really special. At the same time, it’s important to us that the tasting room is welcoming and not alienating to anyone, so while we will be rigorous in our coffee program, we will also aim to be thoughtful and accommodating in our communication.

The design itself will play with light and shadows, contrasting clean lines and angles, and a monochrome palette with green accents (using preserved moss installations). The idea is to create an immersive background that makes the color of the coffee itself stand out. The layout is a little unusual—the lines and the angles are designed to hide and reveal different parts of the space depending on where you’re standing, so just walking through the front door over to the coffee bar should feel almost like you’re discovering something surprising.

What’s your approach to coffee?

We’ll be implementing an unusual approach for our production roasting that involves three Aillio Bullet R1 roasters operating right behind the bar. The system will have the flexibility to roast as small as a single bag at a time but with a relatively high per hour production capacity. Customers will also be able to see the roasting process take place from green coffee to finished product.

In terms of roasting style, Prototype uses a medium-light roasting style. Because we feel like each coffee has its own story to tell, we tailor each profile to enhance and showcase what we think the coffee has to say. For us, that means trying to maximize sweetness, balance, and versatility across brew methods while trying to avoid roasty notes. The goal is to use roasting as a way to give the coffee a voice without getting in the way too much. We don’t want to flavor the coffee; we want to let it speak.

prototype coffee vancouver canada

Any machines, coffees, special equipment lined up?

Yes! We’ve got a really exciting lineup of equipment.
Aillio Bullet R1 roasters: we’ll be lining up three right behind the bar for all of our roasting.
Modbar AV: The new AV has a gravimetric function with scales built into the drip trays, so every shot comes out at the exact weight you want. This makes for fast, consistent precision.
Nuova Simonelli Mythos II: We’re going to be running the gravimetric Mythos II as our primary espresso grinder. The gravimetric feature will allow us to be really precise in our shots every time, especially in combination with the Modbar AV.
Lyn Weber Workshops EG-1 grinder: This single dose grinder is a game changer. We’re going to be using it on our espresso bar for alternative espresso options. The build quality on these things is just insane—such a well designed piece of equipment. It’ll add some really exciting flexibility to the espresso bar.
Gina drippers by Goat Story: We’ll be using these brewers for a hybrid immersion/pour-over recipe. Elegant and versatile design on these.
Marco UC8 undercounter hot water tower: We chose this not only for its its sleek and minimalist profile on the counter, but also for its multi-temperature versatility. It’ll give us the flexibility to brew at multiple temperatures as needed for both coffee and tea.
Mahlkönig EK43S: Our brew bar and batch brew will run through this grinder.

How is your project considering sustainability?

One of the most important aspects to us about coffee sourcing is ensuring that the supply chain is ethical and economically sustainable. To us, this is even more important than how the coffee tastes (which means it’s super important because taste is key for us!). We only buy from importers who pay significantly above the C market price for the coffee they source and who care about investing in long term and economically healthy relationships. So sustainability is one of the central considerations in our coffee buying decisions.

In the roastery, our production roasting model is an attempt to optimize the roasting system by reducing waste. By using three small roasters, there’s no risk of having to throw away large quantities of coffee while trying to get the profile just right—our sample size is essentially the same as the production batch size. This approach allows us to really treat the coffee with respect and extra care. We’re applying this sense of respect and care to every aspect of our bar. Our gravimetric espresso systems and our single dose grinders minimize the amount of coffee that is just thrown out while dialing in.

We’ll also be using an energy efficient electrostatic precipitator for our smoke elimination system, which will reduce our roasting emissions basically to zero without huge energy costs.

prototype coffee vancouver canada

What’s your hopeful target opening date/month?

July 15

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

Definitely. I’ve got some really great people on this project.

Bill Uhrich and Liina Pikk from Simcic + Uhrich Architects: I met with Bill at the beginning of all this and pitched him some of my ideas, but I was blown away by the fresh take he brought back in his first design proposal. Bill is an incredibly gifted interior designer and architect and a joy to work with.
Evan Creedon from Milltown Contracting: I’ve been so impressed with the quality of Milltown’s work on this project. When they build things, they build them perfectly with no compromises. The project is in great hands.
Sarah Annand and Cody Allmin from Boxset Designs: They’ve done some incredible work to give Prototype’s brand a facelift. We’re going to be launching a new bag design soon, and we’ve got some really exciting new branding that we’ll be rolling out when the new location opens.
Kat Pino Ceramics: We’ve been working with Kat to develop a line of custom ceramic cups for espresso drinks. After four rounds of prototypes, we’ve arrived at a cup design that will look and feel incredible with coffee in it. It’s been really exciting developing this design with Kat and has taken a lot of work and patience to get to this final stage.
ByNature Designs: We’ve got some really interesting preserved moss installations coming in from ByNature that I think will give the space a lot of character.

Thank you!

Thanks!

prototype coffee vancouver canada

Prototype Coffee is located at 883 E Hastings, Vancouver. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook 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

It’s Time To Regulate The Coffee Market

By Coffee No Comments

sitio santa rita brazil coffee farm

sitio santa rita brazil coffee farm

As of writing this, the price of Arabica coffee on the commodities market has dipped back under a dollar. There was a time not so long ago that the price of coffee being less than 100 pennies per pound felt like earth-shattering news; now, for us not in producing countries, those disconnected from the true hardships these numbers represent, this once nadir feels more like, “yep, that still sucks.” We’ve become used to it, like the no-longer-shocking racist tweets of a certain leader of the free world; it’s par for the course at this point.

As the first world becomes inured with finding new depths, the immediacy of the pricing crisis remains on the front of mind for those experiencing the devastating effects. And now, leaders of some of the world’s largest producing countries are banding together to protest at the next United Nations general assembly to “demand higher prices from the world’s coffee roasters.”

According to Bloomberg, the next UN general assembly takes place in September. There, per the head of Colombia’s coffee growing federation Roberto Velez, Brazilian president Jair Bolsanaro will join Colombia’s president Iván Duque to seek higher prices for their countries’ farmers.

“It is not just farmers but also their governments that are complaining to the coffee-roasting industry,” Velez said in an interview in his Bogota office.

Pleas for higher coffee prices are not new at this point, but what is new is that this appears to be the first comment from high-level officials directed at coffee roasting companies. In the past, statements have been made about the unsustainability of the coffee price in general, or there have been calls for enforcing a minimum per-pound amount. This, as best we can tell, is the first time a specific sector of the coffee industry has been targeted as the problem.

And Velez et al. aren’t wrong. Many coffee companies, especially the larger ones focused on commodities, aren’t paying a sustainable price for coffee. But this is more calling out the symptom rather than going after the disease. The real issue here, and it’s a big one, is global capitalism of the more unfettered ilk, plain and simple.

So long as coffee is treated like a commodity and traded on the futures market, things won’t get better. Without some sort of regulation—the free market capitalist’s bogeyman—to rectify the artificially low price, the bottom will continue to bottom out, and our tragedy of the commons will continue unfettered, to the detriment of millions invested in the coffee trade worldwide.

In general, meritocracies—which capitalism is supposed to be—don’t always work for those in need; folks who are starving can’t sit around wait for the free market to pay them what they are worth. If they stick to their principles, they will be buried underneath them. In the Bloomberg article, Starbucks states they pay growers “above and beyond the commodity market price.” Which they do, though it is still generally below what would be considered a sustainable amount. Thus, Starbucks has shielded themselves, at least partially, from criticism. So long as they’ve got someone or something else to point to as the problem, they’ve got plausible deniability.

In a request for comment from Bloomberg, Nestle stated “the present period of historically low Arabica prices due to a record Brazilian crop is causing hardship for many coffee farmers. It is not sustainable for the coffee sector in the medium term. We strongly believe that coffee farmers should earn a sufficient income to cover production costs and maintain a decent standard of living.” This is probably a statement that Nestle believes, but unless someone makes them act upon it, the company is not going to pay a fair price and cut into their own profits. If they were, they’d just, you know, pay more.

But Nestle and Starbucks can’t lose market share, or they’re beholden to stockholders, or any other number of businessy-sounding reasons for why they will continue to exploit immoral prices while releasing statements about how they vehemently disagree with them. No one commodity coffee buyer is going to put their neck out for the little guy, either in fear of it getting lopped off by the great golden axe of capitalism or because they simply don’t want to. All these scaled companies will have pay more or none of them will, starting with the biggest commodity purchasers. And the only way to make them act in a way counter to their financial interests—a way they claim to agree with—is to make them.

And that means regulation.

Those with money and/or power are not quick to give up either. Change is going to have to come from the top down, and consumers will need to understand why this is happening as it happens through measured, non-partisan reporting and analysis. Make coffee drinkers understand that either we regulate coffee now, or in 50 years—perhaps sooner—the coffee trade will be incalculably fucked. Stuff like this transparency pledge and voluntary paying of higher rates and institutional fair practices are a good start. Not for nothing, it honestly says a whole lot about the soul and purpose of specialty coffee as a cultural phenomenon that comparatively tiny companies like Counter Culture, Onyx Coffee Lab, Coffee Collective, Tim Wendelboe, Junior’s Roasted Coffee, and Seven Seeds are leading the charge.

But it’s only a start. The presidents of Brazil and Colombia aren’t wrong to blame coffee roasters. But don’t just blame them, make them change. Regulate the coffee market.

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

Top image by Bruno Lavorato in Using Fermentation To Take Coffee To New Heights At Sítio Santa Rita In Brazil

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Source: Coffee News