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Faema Takes Over New York City With A Pop-Up Coffee Shop

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Who doesn’t love a good pop-up? No one, that’s who. Milan-based espresso machine manufacturer Faema is taking the pop-up to 11, with an extended residency stateside at 198 Allen Street in New York City. Taking place between June 3rd and 29th, Faema’s appropriately titled Pop-Up Coffee Shop will be offering a host of coffee experiences, including a variety of learning experiences and 16 different roasters.

Per Faema’s website, the Pop-Up Coffee Shop “will stand as a hub where baristas and roasters can come together over a shared passion and set their craft in motion, breaking the rules of coffee and taking experimentation to the next level.” Each week four new roasters from across the US will be on bar at the pop-up, where they will “alternate and [use] different methods of extraction, from espresso to flash brew.” The roaster schedule is as follows:

Week 1:
Verve Coffee Roasters
SkyTop Coffee Company
Mr Espresso
Saison Coffee

Week 2:
Brandywine Coffee Roasters
La Colombe Coffee Roasters
Sump Coffee
Katz Coffee

Week 3:
Coffee Project New York
Coffee of Grace
Methodical Coffee
Caffe Ammi

Week 4:
Partners Coffee
GEVA Coffee
Mojo Coffee Roasters
Afficionado Coffee Roasters

More than just providing a wide range of tasty coffee, Faema’s Pop-Up Coffee Shop is offering attendees a variety of learning experiences no matter where they are in their coffee journey. There are events like public cuppings and intro brewing classes for those just dipping their toes in the water, latte art masterclasses for the working barista looking to up their game, and even creative marketing classes, panel discussions on opening a cafe in NYC, and talks on sustainability practices for coffee shop management/owners. Or you can just chill out with a coffee cocktail at Faema’s X30 Happy Hour.

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. There are 15 total events taking place at the Pop-Up Coffee Shop for your caffeinated enjoyment. And it’s happening right now! The pop-up will be open from 10:00am to 4:00pm daily through the 29th. For more information about Faema’s Pop-Up Coffee Shop or to see a full list of events, visit their 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 Faema

Disclosure: Faema is an advertising partner with the Sprudge Media Network

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Source: Coffee News

Going From Seed To Cup At Unique Cafés Especiais In São Lourenço, Brazil

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unique cafe São Lourenço minas gerais brazil

São Lourenço is a touristy little town in the heart of Mantiqueira de Minas, one of Brazil’s most notorious specialty coffee producing regions in the state of Minas Gerais. The town’s Parque das Águas (water park) occupies a 400,000-square-meter green area downtown and is the source of nine therapeutical mineral waters, each holding distinct healing properties. Visitors can fill their bottles with the water of choice and also choose to take one of the therapeutic baths, sauna sessions, or ayurvedic treatments that are offered at the park’s spa center.

Helcio Junior and his family founded Unique Cafés Especiais in São Lourenço back in 2008, following the trend they had been observing as green coffee traders—his family farms coffee as well—but also as a means to absorb the town’s great touristic potential. The first Unique coffee shop is located very close to the water park, in the city center. All these years, their wholesale operation grew considerably, but their roastery was located in an industrial site in Carmo de Minas, not open to the public.

unique cafe São Lourenço minas gerais brazil

The new roastery, inaugurated in November of 2018, celebrates everything that Junior and his family have wanted to do for a long time. In a much larger space exclusively dedicated to coffee, they now house a coffee bar, their administrative and sales headquarters, and a roastery, all in the same space, right off the road between Carmo de Minas—the epicenter of coffee production in the Mantiqueira—and São Lourenço, the therapeutic water haven.

“I knew the region had this touristic appeal, and following the craft beer, wine, and cheese waves, we wanted the new roastery to showcase the roasting process to customers, and at the same time strengthen our brand as a local coffee company,” says Junior. In fact, many of the customers at the new roastery come as part of a special tour Unique promotes on a weekly basis, that takes tourists and coffee geeks alike from the coffee bar in downtown São Lourenço to the farm and now ends at the new roastery. “It is literally a seed to cup experience,” says Junior. He is right, and although we are in a producing country, not many roasteries can showcase such a complete connection between the consumer and the producers, let alone on a weekly basis.

unique cafe São Lourenço minas gerais brazil

The new space has an industrial feel, but Junior explains that has more to do with complying with local legislation than anything else. Initially the idea was to use up a lot of repurposed wood from the family farm, however since they are required has to follow local food production legislation, they had to use cement and tiles instead. The architect made the roastery space visible through glass wall, and the high ceilings from the location make the temperature inside very pleasant. The entire space has about 200 square meters, which is rather large for a specialty roasting operation in Brazil, and they roast on a 25-kilo Probat.

Right across the street, the Unique team planted more than 300 coffee trees right off the road, just so people who are just driving by can have the opportunity to see what coffee trees look like, even if they don’t get to visit a coffee farm. The idea is, in the future, to build a green house to grow coffee seedlings in the backyard of the roastery space.

unique cafe São Lourenço minas gerais brazil

With the shop located on such a busy thoroughfare, Junior is hopeful it might attract attention from even more casual Brazilian coffee consumers.

“I think that this could be a first step for all these drivers who travel this touristic route to become more curious about the coffee chain. Here, they can learn a lot about coffee just having a chat with our baristas or our roastery folks,” he explains. “Sometimes, people don’t want to go all the way to the farm, or don’t have the time to do so. And that’s ok. We are here for those people. They can learn about coffee with us, right here.”

unique cafe São Lourenço minas gerais brazil

The focus of the coffee shop inside the roastery is a bit different from the location in downtown São Lourenço, a shop that is constantly busy and has many food options. Here, there are only a few food items to choose from—the menu is built around coffee—espresso and filter methods—and the so-called coffee “duels,” where the client can choose the same coffee extracted in two different methods. And although they do serve beans from Fazenda Sertão, Junior’s family’s own farm, the roastery operates independently, and coffee is sourced from a variety of farms. Every two months, a limited edition coffee is released for online sales and served at both shops.

Whenever you visit São Lourenço for its therapeutical waters, or go to Carmo de Minas for green coffee sourcing, you can complete the experience with a trip to this striking roastery cafe conveniently located along your journey.

Unique Cafés Especiais is located at Via Othon de Carvalho, 1020, São Lourenço. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

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

Photos by Tribus Studio.

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Source: Coffee News

Science Gives Up, Says 25 Cups Of Coffee A Day Is Fine

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At the intersection of science and clickbait, there lies coffee. What presumably start as arguments and inquiries made in good faith get twisted by we media folk into sensational headlines about “Science Proves Drinking Coffee Will Kill You” or “A New Study Shows That Drinking Coffee Will Make You Live Forever, But Only If You Drink Exactly 3.28 Cup A Day.” It’s just the way the world is. You, dear reader, probably aren’t going to give us those sweet, sweet clicks about some stupid science mumbo jumbo unless we grab you with a bonkers headline.

Now Science, bless them, are embracing the absurd and writing the attention-grabbing headlines for us with their newest discovery, “Fuck it drink 25 cups of coffee. It won’t kill you.

Maybe they didn’t say it exactly like that, but that’s the jist of it. According to CNN, new research funded in part by the British Heart Foundation finds that drinking five cups of coffee a day is no worse for your arteries than drinking less than one (and before you all get hot on the biscuit and take to social media, I DON’T KNOW WHAT THEY MEAN BY A CUP, OK?!). These findings run contrary to previous research that found coffee “can cause a stiffening of the arteries, putting pressure on the heart and increasing the likelihood of stroke or heart attack.”

So how did get land on 25 cups being a perfectly reasonable amount of coffee to not initiate cardiac arrest? In this most recent study performed by scientists at Queen Mary University of London and presented yesterday at the British Cardiovascular Society conference, researchers examined 8,412 individuals, breaking them up into three different groups: those who drank less than one cup of a coffee a day, those who drank one to three, and those to drank more than three (but no more than 25. The 26+ were excluded as outliers, which is a weird and arbitrary line to draw but ok). Participants were all given MRI heart scans and infrared pulse wave tests, factoring in things like “age, gender, ethnicity, smoking status, weight, blood pressure, diet and how much alcohol a person drinks.”

They found, according to researcher Kenneth Fung, that “drinking more than three cups of coffee a day did not significantly increase the stiffness of blood vessels compared to people who drink one cup or less a day.”

So there you go. Science says drinking 25 cups of coffee—again, not 26, that’s a bridge too far to even be studied—won’t make your heart explode.

But let’s be real for a moment. If you drink 25 cups of coffee a day, you will most certainly die prematurely. To even get to 25 cups of coffee, you have to make many bad choices, conservatively 10 of them. You’re undoubtedly making all sorts of other questionable decisions throughout your day-to-day activities. Eventually, one of them is going to get you.

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

Chris Tellez: The Sprudge Twenty Interview

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Photo by Daniel Smith

Welcome to The Sprudge Twenty Interviews presented by Pacific Barista Series. For a complete list of 2019 Sprudge Twenty honorees please visit sprudge.com/twenty.

Nominated by Priscilla Fisher 

Chris Tellez is a coffee professional and entrepreneur based in Ontario, where he serves as a regional sales representative for Phil & Sebastian Coffee and owns and operates Show & Tell Coffee. A career professional, Tellez has been competing in the Canadian barista competition circuit for more than a decade. His work came to international attention in 2019 for a protest routine on the Canadian Barista Championship stage, calling out an official World Coffee Events rule disallowing the use of alternative milk. Tellez’ routine was timed to the launch of a petition formally requesting WCE reconsider the rule.

What issue in coffee do you care about most?

I’ve spent the last several years focusing on personal wellness and its role in the coffee industry. We are largely a customer-facing, service-oriented business, and being in that position requires creating an emotionally, physically, and spiritually stable foundation. I think there is a serious problem of burnout in our industry, which leads many, many people to end up leaving the customer-facing positions, or the industry altogether. I see very little being done to cultivate all-around health within organizations and I think this is a huge area where we can improve.

I should also mention that currently I am putting a lot of effort behind trying to change rule 2.2.2 in the World Baristas Championships, which indicates that competitors must use cow’s milk for the espresso and milk course. As a vegan, and someone with sustainability in mind, I really feel like this is a regressive rule and it is definitely time that we work towards updating it to reflect the current culture in the industry, where more and more plants milks are being enjoyed, at a fraction of the ecological footprint of dairy milks.

What cause or element in coffee drives you?

I think the driving force for myself in coffee is creating accessible spaces to learn about coffee. At the cafe level, we work really hard in our spaces to create an environment where everyone can ask questions and learn at their own pace without feeling alienated. But on a broader level, I really love to work with new coffee professionals, to get them thinking about coffee in new and unique ways, and to try and learn from their experiences so that I can better understand where people are coming from when they start to pursue coffee. It makes it a lot more exciting for me and it allows me to connect with people on a more honest level, which is the most motivating thing I can think of.

What issue in coffee do you think is critically overlooked?

Lately, my mind has been on green coffee quality and the issues we are facing in getting quality roasted coffee, due to green issues. We get sent tons of samples, and so, so often the coffee tastes past crop. When I taste age on a coffee, it no longer feels like specialty coffee to me. When we get into the end of the winter months, and everyone’s coffee is starting to taste its age, there are only a few roasters really doing anything to combat this. It’s something that has inspired us to create a pretty hard-line on the coffees we will be bringing in, and that in the future we simply cannot accept old coffees. I really look forward to more roasteries addressing this in a sustainable way.

What is the quality you like best about coffee?

Coffee gives us the opportunity to connect with a plant every time we drink it. I have a great respect for the power of plants and the medicine they hold. Coffee has been known for a very, very long time to be a powerful and potent medicine, and I think our ritual of roasting and brewing the seed builds a very direct relationship with the plant, something most of us lack in our day to day lives. In addition to having a career in coffee, I am also in the final stages of finishing school to become an herbalist, and I like to see coffee making as a daily practice in connecting to the plant world.

Did you experience a “god shot” or life-changing moment of coffee revelation early in your
career?

Probably not dissimilar to a lot of people, but I remember in 2007 going to a coffee shop and being served an “Aricha” Ethiopian Clover coffee. You probably could have assumed it was 2007 because I said Aricha and Clover. Anyways, it was the first cup of coffee I paid a lot of money for, and it was the first time I tasted something that was entirely outside of my preconceptions of coffee. It was a blueberry bomb, no subtlety, no nuance, no elegance, just big, loud, and full of blueberries… and roast. Definitely opened my eyes up to the idea that there was something else going on, and led me to pursue working with a roaster, which helped me explore these things.

What is your idea of coffee happiness?

I don’t know if I’m interpreting this question properly but I think “coffee happiness” to me is just being served a really well-made, fresh coffee from a barista who genuinely cares about providing a good experience. I get to travel a fair bit for my work and I go to a lot of cafes. When I meet a barista who clearly has the intention of making something special out of the experience, I get really stoked. That’s what I try and do as much as possible in my cafes and what I really try to encourage staff to think about. It also really helps when the coffee tastes amazing. I’m a sucker for a really well made batch brew.

If you could have any job in the coffee industry, what would it be and why?

This is such an awesome question, and I think my answer actually has a few caveats. Firstly, I kind of have exactly the job I want now; I run a couple cafes (along with my business partners) and I do wholesale management for Phil & Sebastian Coffee Roasters. It’s a really cool blend of work that gives me a lot of opportunity to build personal connections, which is what I care most about. But if I wasn’t doing this, I think I would really like to create a role within a large coffee company that focuses on blending elements of HR and community engagement. Acting as a voice for both the baristas and/or roasting staff to help maintain a healthy internal community, while bridging the gap between what the company is trying to achieve and the outside community’s role. I would also foresee some kind of overall “Wellness” attribute to it.

Who are your coffee heroes?

Oh man, I have a pretty long list of the people who have inspired me. As a competitor I was always so, so inspired by Colin Harmon. Watching his sets just made me so excited, because I could see a little bit of how I liked to perform in him, just on a whole other level. I would also put Ben Put into that category. No one in my competitive life has set a better example than him. Outside of competition, I have to say Phil Robertson and Sebastian Sztabzyb. Every day I see the phenomenal amount of dedication they put into what they do and I am so deeply humbled and inspired. The things they do at origin, the way they approach problems like green quality, and their excitement surrounding roasting is just such a good reminder of why I care about coffee.

On a more personal level, every one of my staff members inspires me, though we have worked hard to try and promote female coffee professionals within our organization, which was something that my very first coffee job was really good about recognizing and set the tone for me. Having strong female voices in the mix just feels so natural and so so important, and gives me a much better understanding of the industry as a whole, so they are definitely my heroes.

If you could drink coffee with anyone, living or dead, who would it be and why?

So, he’s more of a tea drinker, but it would have to be Ram Dass, my spiritual teacher. He is the person who taught me how to live in my heart, helped bring me out of the depths of my depression, eating disorder and self-harming thoughts, and really just opened my eyes to so much of the beauty in the world. Without him I couldn’t be the person in coffee I am now, so a coffee date would be a pretty big experience. We did have a Skype date once, but I don’t think I had a coffee with me.

If you didn’t get bit by the coffee bug, what do you think you’d be doing instead?

I might be working on a vegetable farm in some strange corner of the world, living in a van near a climbing crag, or likely working in the health industry. I studied nutrition, and am finishing up my schooling in herbalism, so I suppose that would probably be somewhere in there too!

Do you have any coffee mentors?

The Phil & Sebastian team for sure, I think the Cat & Cloud team really has helped me better understand my own vision for managing a team, and I wouldn’t be anywhere without my bosses at my first cafe, Mark and Christene at Espresso Post in my home town.

What do you wish someone would’ve told you when you were first starting out in coffee?

I was 16 so, there was a whole lot of lessons I needed to learn, but I think the biggest one would be to just stay quiet and curious. I had a lot of self-esteem issues and I really only knew how to play those off by faking confidence. I think this got in the way of some of my learning early on, especially when I took my first serious coffee job after high school. It led to certain assumptions about me that I don’t think were very accurate and I probably could have avoided some of that. Regardless, it helped me grow into who I am now, so I’m thankful for that.

Name three coffee apparatuses you’d take into space with you.

I guess a scale wouldn’t be much good, hey? So maybe like, a cup with a lid, some freeze-dried coffee, and a straw?

Best song to brew coffee to:

At the risk of sounding way too Canadian: “Big League” by Tom Cochrane. I used it in my comp playlist this year and I was pretty happy with it.

Look into the crystal ball—where do you see yourself in 20 years?

I have a kind of grandiose plan. I would like to create a network to provide people within the coffee industry access to health services that are normally outside of their financial means. Things like nutrition, personal training, meditation, talk therapy, etc. We work in an industry that really doesn’t do a great job of promoting a healthy lifestyle, and I think we need to start changing that. In 20 years I would love to be operating a space which acts as an almost wellness centre to provide that to our industry. And of course, there would be a cafe involved too.

What’d you eat for breakfast this morning?

A ton of berries and some almonds. Pretty standard!

When did you last drink coffee?

Literally right now… it’s happening.

What is it?

La Magdalena #1 from Colonna Coffee. It’s a Colombian coffee comprised of a bunch of microlots from Tarqui, Huila. It’s a total slugger, insanely delicious and a very perfect morning coffee.

Thank you.

The Sprudge Twenty is presented by Pacific Barista Series. For a complete list of 2019 Sprudge Twenty honorees please visit sprudge.com/twenty

Zachary Carlsen is a co-founder and editor at Sprudge Media Network. Read more Zachary Carlsen on Sprudge. 

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Source: Coffee News

Organic Farming, Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Ant-Processed Coffee

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We as consumers have in recent years put a premium on all things organic and pesticide-free; we’ve even developed opinions on monoculture systems (we don’t like them). And while all these sustainability-focused practices are decidedly good things, it’s often easy to say what folks worlds away should be doing when we have no real stake in the game. Many producers are just trying to eke out a living, so switching entire farming practices to follow a trend—for better or worse—is untenable. Ants, crickets, and beetles still exist; they are the “pest” the sprayed chemicals are trying to “icide” away. One Brazilian coffee farmer decided to make the switch to organic farming, and right on cue, the ants showed up and began carrying off his coffee cherries.

But then, an interesting thing happened: the farmer started to notice discarded coffee seeds cleaned of the pulp, so he began to pick them up. Turns out, they tasted pretty good.

As reported in Atlas Obscura by frequent Sprudge contributor Rafael Tonon, João Neto of Fazenda Santo Antônio in the interior state of São Paulo opted to move away from monoculture coffee production and chemical pesticides, practices the farm has used for decades. Neto did so for ecological reasons, to allow for the “natural rebalancing that the monoculture of coffees had extinguished” at his farm. “Nature is in charge. If these plants have to stay here, they will resist,” Neto told Atlas Obscura.

And nature was hungry. The re-emergent ants began climbing up the coffee trees to knock off coffee cherries to take back to their mounds. After feasting on the pulp, the ants would leave the seeds outside the mounds, which Neto began to collect. After collecting enough seeds to “fill a large coffee grinder,” Neto reached out to friend and owner of Tokyo’s Café Paulista, Katsuhiko Hasegawa, who wanted to see how they tasted.

When Hasegawa next visited Fazenda Santo Antônio, he roasted the coffee and found that it had, as Neto described, “a different and pleasant acidity.” Others who tasted the coffee said “the flavor resembled other floral coffees with jasmine notes” and that the ant processing gave the coffee “sweeter notes.”

But even after a successful trial run, don’t expect to find Neto’s unique coffee popping up in your local shop anytime soon. The best harvest of the ant-processed coffee didn’t eclipse the 60-pound mark, and with the switch away from monoculture farming, Neto’s land use for coffee production has decreased from 230 hectares to just 40. Neto is currently only making samples of the coffee, but according to Atlas Obscura, he hopes to someday sell “tiny amounts” of it to interested parties.

Even if Neto’s coffee never sees commercial success, Fazenda Santo Antônio acts as a proof of concept that nature and coffee farming can coexist more or less peacefully. Keep an eye out for ant-processed coffee taking the coffee competition world by storm. Lactic processed Gesha is so 2018.

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 from Marvel’s Ant-Man via IMDB

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Source: Coffee News

Where To Drink Coffee In Brussels

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brussels belgium coffee guide

A walk in the park, Brussels is not. In the Belgian capital, contrasts between the well-off and those in need can be stark. Street names and signs are given in two languages, though neighborhoods and their inhabitants tend to identify as either Francophone or Flemish-speaking, sometimes leading to notoriously nationalist identity politics and social strife. Majestic though they are, many of the monumental buildings look like they are forever in need of a power wash.

Despite these complexities, not to mention the city’s Eurocratic solemnity—it is known as the European Union’s “de facto capital” (the title itself evoking bureaucratic provisos and red tape)—Brussels’ mascot is the Manneken Pis. That this simple little statue of a naked boy urinating into a fountain attracts so much attention and celebration reminds us that humor and joie de vivre also exist here. So do chocolates galore, among many other famous local sweets (waffles, nougat) and treats (mussels, beer). Meanwhile, a contrast to all the traditionalist Belgian gastronomy is the novelty of specialty coffee. The scene is still young and the cafes are still very much countable, but that makes it all the more exciting. Here, then, are a variety of venues worth a visit.

brussels belgium coffee guide

OR Coffee

Its name is a conjunction connecting choices, but visiting OR Coffee should not be a matter of choice when in Brussels. Many would agree that this brand brought specialty coffee to the Belgian capital, over a decade after Katrien Pauwels and Tom Janssen founded their own roastery in 2001. Today the couple has two cafes in Brussels, two in Ghent, and the OR coffee school and roastery in Westrem.

Flanked by a Marriott Hotel and a Bobbi Brown store, the Brussels’ city-center location, which opened in 2012, attracts a cross-section of clients, whose Flemish, French, and English conversations bounce animatedly off the bi-level brick walls. Coffee orders—taken at the counter but delivered to tables—might range from traditional espresso-based milk beverages to the most pronouncedly pampelmousse Kenyan à la Kalita this reporter has ever experienced. And in the Dutch and Flemish tradition, drinks are served with a little sweet on the side: here, a chocolate in OR’s signature forest green and gold packaging.

An estimated 95% of OR’s coffee is “direct fair trade,” says the company’s head of education, Wouter Helsen. This choice is facilitated by the close working relationship with Pauwels’ other business, Cup-A-Lot green coffee sourcers, and she and Janssen’s ability to personally travel to origin countries.

brussels belgium coffee guide

For equally appealing offerings and service, visit OR’s second Brussels branch in the municipality of Etterbeek. This cafe attracts the darker-suited set with business in and among the nearby European Commission and provides, for the coffeecrats among us, the cool sight of a Pentair water filter system with customized copper tubing wall-mounted like an objet d’art.

OR Coffee Roasters is located at Rue A. Ortsstraat 9, 1000 Brussel. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

 

brussels belgium coffee guide

MOK

Like OR, MOK has its roots, roastery, and first coffee bar in Flanders, but its Brussels outpost has become the company flagship. Though founder and owner Jens Crabbé says he once felt namer’s remorse for the obvious choice—mok means “mug” in Flemish—he acknowledges it was an ode to filter coffee, experiencing a renaissance in the Low Countries when his business began almost eight years ago. And it remains fitting considering the scrutiny with which Crabbé develops his roasting profiles and brew recipes; unsurprisingly, he is Belgium’s reigning Cup Tasters Champion.

“It started off maybe quite small and cute and then, as I grew as a person,” says Crabbé, now just shy of 30, “my style started to change, and the brand kind of followed.”

With high ceilings, a communal table, a custom-designed shelving-cum-blackboard unit, and an open kitchenette producing vegetarian-friendly cold and hot breakfast and lunch, MOK is progressive in its aesthetics and taste. Being situated on the fashionable Rue Antoine Dansaert—from A.P.C. to Kartell, stylistas can shop in a straight line—is fitting, though MOK deftly balances chic and geek.

brussels belgium coffee guide

Jens Crabbé

Riffing about MOK’s reverse-osmosis system and the different hardnesses for espresso and filter, Crabbé notes: “When people buy coffee we even encourage them [by saying], ‘Hey, take half a liter of water home from the tap, try it at home with our water. Water is really important, and we really try to like tick all the boxes to give you a good coffee experience.’”

Inasmuch as Crabbé enjoys living and working in his hometown of Leuven, he is seeking a new roasting space for MOK in the Belgian capital. “There’s a lot of work to be done still in Brussels in coffee, and we really want to be a part of that,” he says. 

MOK is located at Rue Antoine Dansaert 196, Brussels. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

 

brussels belgium coffee guide

Fika

From light roasts in specialty coffee to clean lines in interior design, Scandinavia has contributed much to contemporary cafe culture around the world. In Brussels, however, Scandic style has yet to become big. And when Joana Soulard opened her homage to the Swedish coffee break in fall 2016, it was simply a commonsensical melding of two of her interests: specialty coffee and Scandinavian culture.

For filter preparations, Fika uses coffee roasted by April (founded by, indeed, a Swede), and is known to include Swedish favorites among its on-premise-baked pastries. “We have some Swedish [customers], but they come for the semla,” admits Soulard.

Of Fika’s city-central neighborhood, “it’s very mixed,” she says. The Matongé, as it is commonly known, is named after a district in Kinshasa, DR Congo, recognizing the many Congolese immigrants who have settled in the area over the last half-century; these days they are joined by other African communities and European Union-employed expats.

brussels belgium coffee guide

Fika does a lot of weekday morning takeaway, though during the day provides a peaceful spot to sit and sip. The venue, like its owner, is relaxed yet engaging; characteristically light wood and soft lines create a sense of holding space and hygge. That said, a non-Nordic nod goes to Café Capitale, the Brussels brand that supplies Fika’s espresso beans and a company whom Soulard credits with teaching her “everything about coffee” during her four-year employment there.

“For me, it’s important to use and to have some local products,” she adds.

Fika is located at Rue de la Paix 17, Brussels. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

 

brussels belgium coffee guide

Café Capitale

Café Capitale is a crowd pleaser. Perhaps this is because founder François Lafontaine established his company in 2001 with ambience very much in mind, aiming for “cool places to drink coffee,” as he put it in a Coffee with April podcast. But fast-forward a dozen years, after inspiring visits to Sydney and Melbourne—having discovered “places where you sell only classic basic milk drink and filter coffee, with no whipped cream, no syrup and no topping and a huge line of customers”—Lafontaine rebranded and renamed his business. His focus turned to specialty coffee and he plunged into SCA courses, eventually becoming a certified roaster and Q grader.

Nowadays, Lafontaine owns and runs an atelier and bakery in nearby Uccle, the Brussels-based Belgian Coffee Academy, which has a roastery and a training center, and two cafes in Brussels.

The Café Capitale on Rue du Midi, which dates back to 2001, occupies a busy corner near the city’s iconic square, the Grand-Place. Vinyl spins on a turntable behind the bar and illustrations of coffee apparatuses act simultaneously as wall art and a visual education.

brussels belgium coffee guide

Alongside espresso-based drinks and filter coffees—V60 is the default, though AeroPress and Chemex are also available—the menu lists “three aromatic coffees from the past,” as Lafontaine terms them: “the mochaccino, the caramel macchiato, and the cappuccinut.” This reporter found the last—a syrup-sweetened hazelnut crunch-topped cappuccino—a perfect pre-prandial pick-me-up. And for those who prefer not to nibble from a drink, but rather, a dish, there is breakfast, lunch, and snack fare, with many of the carbohydrates produced by Café Capitale’s own bakery.

Less spacious but no less enticing, the branch on Rue Ernest Allard is in Sablon, just a 10-minute walk south.

Café Capitale is located at Rue du Midi 45, 1000 Bruxelles. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

 

brussels belgium coffee guide

Aksum Coffee House

At Aksum Coffee House, do not expect an array of filter choices—in fact, on a recent visit, there was none on the menu, though a barista happily obliged when asked for one—nor conversations about water hardness and fruit-forward roast profiles. Be prepared, however, for a fine selection of espresso beans exclusively from Ethiopia, teas, chocolate, and baked goods, as well as a cost-free feast for the eyes in the form of rotating wall art by local street artists.

The Aksum brand has been around for a decade, but investor Vinod Gautam took it over about five years ago and, with the avid help of manager Fatima Boulben, began focusing on what Gautam calls organic, mainly small-cooperative-sourced Harar, Sidamo, Yirgacheffe, and Limu coffees roasted by Aksum’s own roastery. Though neither is Ethiopian—he is from India; her parents are from Morocco—the duo is intent on sharing Ethiopian coffee with the masses, and have ambitions to one day host Ethiopian dance and coffee ceremonies in Brussels.

Aksum Coffee House currently has three Brussels locations, though the most spectacular is in the renowned Saint-Hubert Royal Galleries, a 19th-century European shopping arcade (read: proto-mall). The Embassy of Ethiopia’s quarterly magazine called this branch, which opened in July 2017, “the temple of Ethiopian coffee in the city.”

brussels belgium coffee guide

Amidst the arcade’s Old World boutiques and high-end chocolatiers, it radically offers a hangout spot, with friendly staff and room enough for small groups to share a table or solitary laptop workers to concentrate.

As Boulben describes her vision of Aksum: “It has to be a place where everybody should feel comfortable. From the high social level to the normal social level, they should all feel comfortable, because you know when you say ‘specialty coffee’ people straightaway feel afraid this is expensive.”

Aksum is located at Rue des Chapeliers 17, 1000 Bruxelles. 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.

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Source: Coffee News

2019 Build-Outs Of Summer—Submissions Are Now Open!

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It’s that time again! It’s time for the 2019 edition of the Build-Outs of Summer, Sprudge Media Network’s annual planet-spanning survey of cafes under construction across the global coffee scene. Submissions are now open!

Submit your cafe now for the 2019 Build-Outs of Summer feature series. 

Now in its incredible seventh season, Sprudge spends each summer delving deep into the global world of new cafes, documenting them far and wide, featuring dozens, no hundreds of the hottest cafes around the world in an ongoing narrative of coffee cultural growth and expansion. We yearn for the thrill of the build! And we’re ready to kick the dang thing off again, this time bigger and better than ever.

This is an open call to be featured in the 2019 Build-Outs of Summer series on Sprudge. This year we’re looking for:

  • New cafes under construction between May and September of 2019
  • Cafe remodels that will be completed by September 2019
  • Tiny new cafes built on zero budget
  • Expansive new cafes that push coffee design concepts forward
  • Coffee bars considering sustainability and environmental impact
  • Cafes from North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, and Antarctica (especially Antarctica)

The Build-Outs of Summer 2019 season will kick off on June 21st and close on September 23rd. To help keep this annual compendium of coffee construction free and open for all to enter, in 2019 Sprudge has partnered with a select group of presenting sponsors for Build-Outs of Summer. This summer’s series is brought to you in partnership with…

  • Pacific Barista Series — purveyors of fine artisan alternative milks, a must-have for today’s modern and inclusive coffee bar.
  • KeepCup — trendsetting creators of stunning, stylish reusable takeaway cups, and leaders for sustainability in the coffee bar and festival space.
  • notNeutral — pioneers helping lead the fusion of coffee and contemporary vessel design, one “for here” order at a time.
  • Mill City Roasters — makers of handcrafted artisan coffee roasting machines, for aspiring and established coffee roasters alike.

Throughout the summer we’ll learn a bit more about how our presenting partners are working with brands large and small to help make coffee dreams come true. These Build-Outs features are more than just cafe previews—they are a snapshot of where the global coffee culture, and where it’s headed next.

This year’s season will kick off shortly, so bring to us your tired entrepreneurs, working day and night to get the darn thing open (permits permitting); your project managers, your construction liaisons, your architects bedecked in blueprint blues; bring to us your thirsty PR reps, huddled masses yearning to breathe free (and bill fees); show us your carts, your bikes, your trikes, your rippin’ #vanlife conversion vans, your grand new cafe schemes and humble 200-square-foot espresso ventures, your palaces of brekkie, your porticos of ‘spro. Bring us your builds, and upon them we ourselves will build anon, and on, towards another annual edition of the Build-Outs of Summer!

Submit your cafe now for the 2019 Build-Outs of Summer feature series. 

The 2019 Build-Outs of Summer series on Sprudge Media Network is presented by Mill City Roasters, Pacific Barista Series, notNeutral and KeepCup. 

Contact us today and submit your cafe for the 2019 Build-Outs of Summer feature series. 

Explore every last Build-Out over the last half decade in our archives.

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Source: Coffee News

Dive Into Cafe Imports’ New “Coffee Processing” Video Series

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By now most of the specialty coffee consuming public knows that there are such things as washed and natural processed coffees—and to a lesser extent honeyed—and the majority would probably be able to give you some sort of description of the difference between the two in terms of flavor. (And if you don’t, don’t worry. Consider joining our newsletter to be part of the Sprudge Coffee Club, where you will receive discounts on all manner of coffee from some of the best roasters around.) But if you were to ask most folks to describe what exactly goes into these processes, you’d probably end up with a lot of blank stares.

Cafe Imports is looking to change that. Ever the purveyor of educational coffee videos, over the course of the next week, June 3rd through 6th, Cafe Imports will be releasing a new series called “Coffee Processing” that explains the four major processing methods found in specialty coffee, and a preview has been released today.

Averaging a little under six minutes a video (a 23 minute total run time), the video series explains the processing methods by following them each step by step as they happen at origin. The videos cover: the washed process at Finca Ecológica in Agua Colorada, Cajamarca, Peru; the natural process at Halo Fafate Washing Station at the Worka Cooperative in Gedeb, Ethiopia; honey processing at Las Lajas micromill in Sabanilla de Alajuela, Costa Rica; and semi-washed (or wet hulled) processing at the Bergandal Mill in the Gayo Highlands of Sumatra.

Starting on Monday, Cafe Imports will release a new video every day at 2:00pm CT on their YouTube channel and via their website. They will be released in the other of: Washed, Semi-Washed, Natural, and Honeyed. For now, a preview of the entire Coffee Processing series will have to hold you over.

 

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You don’t need to be a coffee roaster—or a coffee professional at all for that matter—just coffee curious in order to find these videos useful. Coffee beans just don’t fall off the tree ready to be roasted; a lot of work goes into getting them into a usable state, and the Coffee Processing series gives a better idea of exactly what that work is.

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 Cafe Imports

Disclosure: Cafe Imports is an advertising partner with the Sprudge Media Network

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Source: Coffee News

Coffee Design: Ceremony Coffee In Maryland

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Annapolis, Maryland-based roasters Ceremony Coffee just launched brand new packaging for 2019. With it they’ve incorporated their “Taste By Color” palate palette in the design “meant to simplify finding a favorite coffee and convey a sense of familiarity” with their seasonal offerings, explains Roaster and Green Coordinator Jared Voorhees. We reached out to Voorhees via email to learn more.

When did the design debut?

The new bags started trickling out Monday, May 13th.

What’s different about the package?

We’ve pursued an approachable minimalism and incorporated what we’ve been calling Taste by Color into the redesign. The colors on our website, our cold brew cans, and now our bags, are all meant to simplify finding a favorite coffee and convey a sense of familiarity within our seasonal offering. Take a peek at tastebycolor.com to see what’s up.

Who designed it?

The rebrand was a team effort between Drexler Design Studio in Baltimore and several very relieved people at Ceremony.

How long did this redesign take to develop?

This package redesign was roughly two years in the talking-about phase and took about a year in heavy collaboration.

Why are aesthetics important for coffee packaging?

Coffee packaging is often nice to look at, but if it’s honest, it can also be an elegant heuristic that works as a guide to what’s inside.

Where is it available?

You can snag a bag at ceremonycoffee.com, in any of our four (soon to be six) cafes, or your local Ceremony stockist. DM us if you want to find out who has our coffee near you.

Thanks!

Company: Ceremony Coffee
Location: Annapolis, Maryland
Country: United States
Design Debut: May 2019
Designer: Drexler Design Studio

Zachary Carlsen is a co-founder and editor at Sprudge Media Network. Read more Zachary Carlsen on Sprudge.

Disclosure: Ceremony Coffee is an advertising partner of Sprudge.

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Source: Coffee News

Bring Your Bag, Get Some Swag: Brandywine’s New Upcycle Rewards Program

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When I first got into specialty coffee, I saved every retail bag I purchased. My goal back in those halcyon days was to eventually catalog them all, taking down notes about origin, flavor, my general enjoyment of the coffee, etc. I was gonna crack this whole fancy coffee nut through diligent study. Well, I never did catalog them, but that didn’t stop me from continuing to save every bag, which I convinced myself I would turn into an art project. That art project also never happened. What did happen about a year ago, though, is that I finally gave in and threw away over 400 coffee bags.

Even with my admission of lacking the gumption and requisite artistic skill to save those bags from their ultimate fate, it would have been nice if there was a way for SOMEONE to find a use for them. To combat this with their own bags, Wilmington, Vermont’s Brandywine Coffee Roasters has created a brand new rewards program. Called the Brandywine Upcycled Rewards Program (BURP), the coffee company is offering discounts on future orders for returned bags, which will then be given to local artists to use in their work.

The program is simple: the more bags you return, the better the reward you receive. Send in five bags and receive a free six-ounce bag of BURP-exclusive coffee. 10 bags earns you the same coffee plus a BURP sticker and pin. 20 bag earns you the coffee as well as 10% off your next coffee order.

BURP is also available to Brandywine customers outside Delaware. Per the coffee company’s website, to receive your rewards, “send your mailing address, number of bags to upcycle, and past order number to info@brandywinecoffeeroasters.com to get your free return shipping label, and let the upcycling rewards roll in!”

The collected bags will then be given to artists “who used upcycled materials to make magic.” The first two artists selected are Todd Purse—Brandywine’s Creative Director who also designed the company’s bags, featured here—and Clara Logue, who will be making collages on wooden canvases and coffee bag pouches, respectively. Those items will then be sold in Brandywine’s web store, and the artists are taking direct commissions for their upcycled works as well.

In the future, Brandywine states they will be switching to a new version of the Biotre bags from Pacific Bags. In the meantime, Burp provides a creative solution to curbing the number of bags that make it to a landfill. For more information about the Brandywine Upcycle Rewards Program or to buy or commission a custom upcycled work, visit Brandywine’s 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 Brandywine Coffee Roasters

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Source: Coffee News