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Specialty Coffee Archives - Page 30 of 35 - The Curb Kaimuki

Bless This Mess: Syntropic Coffee Farming Takes Root In Brazil

By Coffee, News

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

When I first saw João Pedro David’s farm, it was hard to understand. For me, having grown up the daughter of a monoculture-conventional coffee farmer in Minas Gerais, Brazil, David’s land looked more like a forest than a farm, with some Yellow Catuaí coffee trees dotted here and there.

But with time, David made his case, and explained the symbiotic relationship between coffee and the various species of fruits and vegetables native to our Mantiqueira region he had chosen to carefully plant here.

David’s vision for his Sítio Travessia farm is systemic and soil-focused—the ground here is always covered with mulch and organic material. And so it makes sense that it carries the look of a forest, which, after all, is really just an organic system of constant, dynamic soil-enrichment, with each species in an ecosystem contributing to the health of the whole.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

On David’s land, coffee is seen as a plant whose growth is made possible by diligent pruning and the management of the health of the rest of its ecosystem. The coffee coexists with other plants throughout several phases of growth, thriving in the shade of fruit and timber trees.

But David’s coffee trees are not the only things that rely on an ecosystem for survival. In 2012, when he bought the piece of land in Itajubá, our hometown, that would become Sítio Travessia, he knew nothing about the Pedra Preta neighborhood in which it was located, nor had he ever considered using the land to cultivate coffee. That was, until his neighbors began reaching out to he and his wife, Claudia, about water, and specifically about a water shortage.

Apparently, there were springs located on the Davids’ land that could supply the whole of Pedra Preta. The want for water struck João as strange—how could a region with so many natural springs suffer shortages of the resource?

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

He joined RAMA (Mantiqueira Agroecological Network), in order to establish a proposal to develop Pedra Preta with the sustainable use of water at its forefront.

The Davids’ land would be a sort of model for the proposal, putting into practice conservation and water-use policies whose widespread adoption by the neighborhood would come later. As it turned out, evaluation of the Davids’ land found that the area was not only situated sensitively—its health was vital to the greater ecological health of Pedra Preta—but that it had potential for organic coffee cultivation.

So despite never having worked with coffee before, the Davids—João an architect and Claudia a former lawyer—found themselves the new owners of an experimental coffee farm.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

“Our region is blessed with good elevation, well-defined rainy seasons, and suitable sun orientation toward the soil,” João says. “We understand that the agricultural viability of the Mantiqueira area is geared towards the cultivation of premium, special products that are well regarded due to their privileged origin and quality,” he adds, explaining that Sítio Travessia is suitable for growing olives, grapes, and berries, in addition to coffee.

Until this point, Sítio Travessia sort of makes sense. But what’s really remarkable about the farm is its utilization of an agroforestry model called syntropic farming, and its location in an area where monocultural coffee farming is the norm. In fact, Sítio Travessia is one of the first of a growing number of farms in Mantiqueira growing coffee syntropically.

The term syntropic farming was coined by Ernst Gotsch, a Swiss-Brazilian biologist who developed the concept of agricultural cultivation as a means of environmental regeneration—by listening to the native biome of the land, Gotsch and syntropic farming have converted over 1,000 acres of formerly degraded land throughout Brazil into productive, healthy forest.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

João explains that soon after planting Sítio Travessia’s coffee trees, he and Claudia began experimenting with the techniques of syntropic agroforestry. The results came quickly and were so positive that it wasn’t long before Sítio Travessia was hosting events to share what they had learned with the local Mantiqueira community.

“This system enabled us to reconcile all our desires,” João says. “The regeneration of the forest takes place in a highly productive fashion, improving soil, water, and food production, while integrating we human beings into the natural system, and serving as a vehicle for community integration.”

Not far from Itajubá, in Santa Rita do Sapucaí, I met Iracema Bonomini and her husband, Braulio Garcia, at their farm, Iraflor. The couple recently planted their first Catucaí Amarelo coffee trees—also members of the RAMA group, and with prior experience in organic and agroforestry farming, they’re excited about the fruits their work will bear. They, like the Davids, utilize syntropic farming techniques.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

Photo courtesy of Iracema Bonomini.

But Bonomini has always been a “mess farming” advocate, she laughs. “It never made sense to me, a bunch of plants of the same species, meticulously occupying a delimited area,” she says.

“One day I had a course with an agronomist that explained that the ‘mess’ systems actually work for a reason,” she adds. “One species complements the other, feeds the other, and together they are better off. In that course he also mentioned that coffee is originally a sub-shrub from forestries in Ethiopia.”

That idea stuck with her.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

Photo courtesy of Iracema Bonomini.

In 2017, Bonomini and Garcia traveled to Brasília to complete a syntropic farming course. It was a shock to them to travel through the giant soybean and corn monoculture fields endemic throughout the Brazilian mid-west.

“We saw no birds, no insects, no nothing,” Bonomini says. “Just people dressed as astronauts applying chemicals to the crops, or small airplanes spraying insecticides. We were shocked.”

When they arrived at their course, and laid eyes on a syntropic coffee farm, it felt like a relief. Here was the sub-shrub, Bonomini thought.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

Photo courtesy of Iracema Bonomini.

“Believing that the classic N-P-K formula is enough when planting something is, at minimum, naive,” she says. “Plants need a variety of nutrients, macro- and micronutrients. Monoculture is like feeding a human being only rice, beans, and steak for all of his meals.” The couple was already growing, eating, and selling the products of their “messy” orchards and gardens, so they decided to venture into syntropic coffee farming.

“It had to be syntropic, there was no other way,” Bonomini says. “In music, we have this horizontal and vertical reading concept, which together form the study of a song. Syntropic agriculture is the same. It’s a horizontal reading of the soil—which is done, in a very simplistic way, on conventional farms—plus a vertical reading, where we occupy the vertical spaces, the strata, and thus we have a symphony of high complexity.”

At Iraflor, coffee trees pull in a wide variety of nutrients, sourced from raspberries, manioc, corn, mambaça, numerous flowers, beans, jacarandá, cedar, lemon, palm trees, and guava, among other native plants.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

Photo courtesy of Iracema Bonomini.

But the farm wasn’t always so replete with diversity or healthy soil. Bonomini’s land, like the Davids’, was sickly after years of monocultural farming—first it was coffee, then pasture, then eucalyptus. On her land, syntropic farming practices have brought the soil back to life.

Although her and João David’s coffee philosophies begin in the soil, it doesn’t end there.

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

Photo courtesy of Iracema Bonomini.

“When talking about organic specialty coffee, attention should not be restricted to cultivation,” João says. “It is a common mistake to see organic or agroforestry producers neglecting the next stages. To revere the fruits of coffee that nature is offering us, we must pay the same amount of attention to the harvest, the post-harvest, the roasting, and the extraction. All these steps are critical to ensuring that the specialty coffee experience is complete.”

syntropic farming juliana ganan brazil

Photo courtesy of Iracema Bonomini.

The Davids are already producing outstanding coffee, and their successes and missteps are being constantly recorded to inform future best practices—Bonomini is observing the ongoing experiments on Sítio Travessia as she looks forward to her own farm’s future.

But as both farms experience the positive effects of syntropic farming, the hope is for other farmers in the Mantiqueira region to take notice, and ultimately adopt more sustainable production practices themselves. If and when the wholesale adoption of syntropic farming will take place here is unknowable, but judging by the coffees already produced thereby, the future of the Mantiqueira region is bright.

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

Photos by Fabio Quireli unless otherwise noted.

The post Bless This Mess: Syntropic Coffee Farming Takes Root In Brazil appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Two Baristas At Duke University Cafe Fired Over Rap Song

By Coffee, News

At Joe Van Gogh on the campus of Duke University, the university’s Vice President of Student Affairs Larry Moneta stopped into the local JVG last Friday, heard a rap song playing, and according to Indy Week, did the completely reasonable thing of getting multiple people working at the coffee shop that day fired.

As per Indy Week, Moneta is said to have stopped by the cafe during the mid-day rush to get his usual order of hot tea and a vegan muffin. While suffering the indignity of waiting in line, Moneta heard the musical stylings of one Young Dolph. The song, “Get Paid,” was part of a Spotify playlist chosen that day by Britni Brown, a barista who had been with Joe Van Gogh for 18 months and was at the time of the working the register. To be clear, “Get Paid” is by no means a hymnal; there are n-words, f-bombs, and hard b’s aplenty. It’s a real pearl-clutcher for the pearl-clutching types.

Here’s the song, if you want to hear what all the hullaballoo is about. In case there are any other Duke VPs of Student Affairs out there who may find this distasteful and try to get me fired, let me be clear, there’s bad language ahead (and probably some mean jokes), so please don’t read any further.

When Moneta got to the counter, according to Indy Week, he, “a white man, told Brown, an African-American woman, that the song was inappropriate.” Brown states that she stopped the song, apologized for the offense, and offered Moneta his unflavored ice milk free of charge. Moneta insisted on paying (total power move—look at this guy, with his $4 he can throw around willy-nilly), which he did and then left.

The exchange between Moneta and Brown as described by Kevin Simmons, another Joe Van Gogh barista working the espresso machine that day, as “verbally harassing.” This is where the story probably should end: a grown-up hears grown-up words they don’t like, feels compelled to make sure everyone knows about it and then leaves. But…

Less than ten minutes later, Brown claims she received a call from Robbie Roberts, the owner of Joe Van Gogh. He said that [Robert] Coffey, the director of dining services [at Duke], which oversees this Joe Van Gogh location, had just called him. Roberts asked her about the incident. According to Brown, she explained what happened, took full responsibility, and apologized again…

On Monday morning, Brown and Simmons were called into Joe Van Gogh’s Hillsborough office and asked to resign.

Indy Week obtained an audio recording of that meeting:

“We had gotten a call from Robert Coffey of Duke saying that the VP of the university had come into the shop and that there was vulgar music playing,” Wiley said, according to the recording. “Joe Van Gogh is contracted by Duke University, so we essentially work for them. And they can shut us down at any point.”

Wiley cleared her throat. “Duke University has instructed us to terminate the employees that were working that day,” she said.

A manager at that same Joe Van Gogh location states that initially they were to just terminate Brown’s contract but later word came down to let go of Simmons—who had no say in what music was played—as well. In the audio recording from the meeting, Brown believes the firing of Simmons is to “cover it up as to make it not look discriminatory for firing a person of color.”

In an email to the Duke Chronicle, Moneta, clearly still shaken up by the curses—but not nearly as distraught about hate speech, per Indy Week—states that he was shocked to hear such language in his coffee shop, and that after expressing his displeasure with the staff he their boss Coffey to continue to express more displeasure, but “that was the end of [his] involvement.” In the same email he also stated that “How [Joe Van Gogh] responded to the employees’ behavior was solely at their discretion,” which contradicts what representatives of Joe Van Gogh stated in the audio recording and also doesn’t seem like the sort of thing you would know if your involvement actually ended after expressing your horror.

Just remember, in 2018 we live in a world where the same person who tweets this:

…will get you fired for listening to Young Dolph. 

As of publishing, Brown and Simmons—neither of whom have had any prior reports of misconduct—are still out of jobs. Mr. Moneta is believed to be making a full recovery from the rap music-induced wounds to his ears, heart, and soul; his twitter account may not be so lucky.

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

*image of Joe Van Gogh via Sam0hsong on Flickr.

The post Two Baristas At Duke University Cafe Fired Over Rap Song appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Take The Sprudge Reader Survey And Tell Us How You Really Feel

By Coffee, News

It’s that time again! It’s time for us to learn more about you, our readers, who are us, by asking you to fill out our Sprudge Reader Poll. These polls are a great alternative to us monitoring your browser cookie metadata for personal information, which is creepy; it also gives us a chance to ask you all kinds of questions that cookies can’t answer, which is helpful.

This survey will help us grow, learn, and better serve you as a Coffee Media Publication. The questions are mostly painless and won’t take longer than a minute or two to answer.

Thanks!

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The post Take The Sprudge Reader Survey And Tell Us How You Really Feel appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

A New Event Series From Marco Kicks Off In London

By Coffee, News

Marco Beverage Systems—the Dublin-based makers of the MIX, SP9, and Über Boiler—are hitting the road this summer for a few special global engagements, and they have just announced the first event, taking place in merry olde London. Called Marco Meets (I would have called it the Marco MIXer, but whatever, I’m sure there was just a Marco MIX-up in Marco-ting), the event series “aims to connect local baristas and tea/coffee professionals with well-known figures from the specialty tea and coffee industries.”

For the first event, Marco has teamed up with the UK’s Has Bean Coffee to “share their advice, insights and predictions,” per the press release. Taking place May 17th at The Gentlemen Baristas, this first Marco Meets will feature a talk from Sonali Tailor, an Authorized SCA Trainer, UK coffee competition judge and competitor, and Has Bean’s field trainer who will offer her experiences and advice on how to make a successful career in coffee.

Marco Meets London will also include a panel discussion featuring Taylor, free food and drinks, brewing demonstrations, and a variety of Has Bean coffees brewed on the Marco SP9.

The event is free to attend but do require an RSVP, which can be done here. For more information, visit Marco’s official website.

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

*top image via Marco

The post A New Event Series From Marco Kicks Off In London appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

The Roastery At Harrods: Coffee Elegance In Knightsbridge

By Coffee, News

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

In the world of Third Wave coffee shops, it often seems the case that the look of a cafe is as important to customers as the quality of the beverages on offer. In London for example, I tend to gravitate towards a certain type of coffee shop: small outlets with micro-roasters and minimalist fit-outs, tucked away in the backstreets of trendy neighbourhoods. An elegant, historic food hall inside one of the most luxurious stores in the world isn’t the kind of place I would normally associate with today’s specialty coffee trends—but Harrods, the iconic department store in Knightsbridge, is breaking the rules.

Harrods was founded in 1849 as a wholesale grocery and tea merchant and, to this day, the Harrods food halls remain a tantalizing option for fine foods in London. With a legacy spanning over 160 years, providing the best products and maintaining high-quality standards is of utmost importance to the company—and now they’ve raised the stakes in their coffee game.

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

In November of 2017, Harrods unveiled The Roastery and Bake Hall, as part of a large-scale renovation that will see a total of five new food concepts launched in store by 2020. It is the largest redevelopment of the food halls in more than 20 years, focused on bringing the theatre of food production to the public.

In true Harrods style, the Art-Deco-inspired hall is grand, timelessly glamorous, and all about making a big statement—with paneled ceiling, marble tile floor, black steel light pendants, and decorated pillars. There is an artisanal bakery serving fresh breads every 15 minutes (a brass bell is rung whenever new pastries are ready), a patisserie, gourmet grocery, and a tea counter where customers can get a tailored experience of loose leaf blends made up to their personal tastes.

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

A round coffee bar stands out in the middle of the hall: marble bar counters with elegant brass rails and leather stools surround a team of trained baristas working behind black La Marzocco FB80 machines. Shelves are lined up with coffee bags, metal tins, and coffee pods for customers looking to buy beans. They can choose between Harrods coffee blends or seasonal single origins as well as order a blend made to their personal tastes.

Inside the new hall, there is a state-of-the-art brew bar, boasting a Marco MIX Ecoboiler tap and a Modbar. And in full sight—albeit within a glass enclosure—is an 85k Probat coffee roaster. For the first time in Harrods’ history, customers can watch every step of the process—from roasting to brewing—and enjoy the coffee-making process from bean to cup.

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

As part of the project Harrods is calling “The Taste Revolution,” the company appointed a new Master Roaster, Polish-born Bartosz Ciepaj. Ciepaj, a 2017 UK Roasting Championship finalist, spent more than a year prior to the launch consulting Harrods on how to design the new roastery and coffee areas, ensuring quality control in every cafe and restaurant inside the store, as well as Roast & Bake, a new food-to-go concept shop located outside the store on Basil Street.

A few days after the grand opening, I had the opportunity to attend a cupping session with Ciepaj at the roastery. “Although Harrods is a large company, it is still very much a small-batch artisan coffee roaster,” Ciepaj insists. And yet the scale of coffee operations at Harrods is impressive: around 450-500kg of coffee roasted weekly, peaking at more than 700kg  per week during the Christmas period.

Unsurprisingly, Ciepaj’s biggest challenge is serving the approximately 15,000,000 customers that walk into Harrods every year, whilst delivering the same standard of quality service to everyone.

The house espresso, named “Knightsbridge” for the posh neighbourhood where Harrods is situated, is a blend of four different types of Arabica beans (Brazilian, Colombian, Sumatran, and Costa Rican). It’s a full-bodied, round, and nutty blend with notes of chocolate, a spicy aftertaste, and red berry sweetness. “We were looking for an ‘easy’ blend that would appeal to the wider general public,” Ciepaj says. Customers curious to taste more unique seasonal offerings can choose from a wide range of single origins.

harrods roastery london england giulia mule

Bartosz Ciepaj

“We roast several styles of coffee and regularly tweak our coffee range to offer fresh and seasonal offerings. Our ambition is to be very inclusive and accommodate the different taste preferences of our customers,” Ciepaj says.

“I am open to all sorts of roasts and coffee,” Ciepaj continues. “My idea is to serve everything for everyone, everywhere. We don’t have to narrow ourselves down for five percent of customers who are crazy about a certain style of coffee, but instead we can appeal to each individual group.” And in a venue serving as broad a customer base as Harrods, Ciepaj and his team have a unique opportunity to do just that—and in grand London style.

The Roastery and Bake Hall at Harrods is located at 87-135 Brompton Rd, Knightsbridge, London. Visit their official site and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Giulia Mule is a Sprudge.com contributor based in London. Read more Giulia Mule on Sprudge

The post The Roastery At Harrods: Coffee Elegance In Knightsbridge appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Hot Coffee Does A Better Job Of Cooling You Down Than Cold Drinks Do

By Coffee, News

As summer approaches and the temperature continues to rise, many coffee drinkers are eschewing hot coffee and instead opting fun iced coffee cocktails to keep cool. Not me. I’ll drink hot coffee while standing next to an open flame cooking burgers during 100°+ (F or C, I don’t care) Texas summers. But if keeping cool is your end game, according to Science, then you shouldn’t be switching from hot coffee.

A recent article in LAD Bible breaks down the paradox. According to University of Cambridge neuroscientist Peter McNaughton, coffee and other hot drinks cool the body in a roundabout way. Consuming hot beverages will increase your core temperature, which then cues the body’s natural response to increase perspiration. As the sweat evaporates from your skin, it “acts as a coolant.”

This cooling effect has a greater impact than just consuming a cold beverage, mind you. Professor McNaughton adds, “Cool drinks only cool you momentarily, because the volume of the cold drink is relatively small when compared to your body, so the cooling effect gets diluted quite quickly.” And you can’t just drink a ton of cold ones to have a similar effect. The article notes that drinking too many extremely cold things “can cause blood vessels to tighten, making you feel much hotter,” with Professor McNaughton adding that “there is a limit as to how much you can drink because this will overload your kidneys.”

So while beer, cocktails, cold brew, jello shots, etc are all cool—I want all those things both when it is hot and when it isn’t—if you are looking to actually cool down, then hot coffee is the way to go.

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

The post Hot Coffee Does A Better Job Of Cooling You Down Than Cold Drinks Do appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Language Barriers Affect The Entirety Of The Coffee Supply Chain

By Coffee, News

In all sectors of U.S. specialty coffee, lots of the most notorious and beloved coffee professionals are white men of European descent, and that ideal often unconsciously informs people’s mental picture of what a coffee person looks or sounds like. Alternative coffee media outlets such as the Chocolate Barista and Boss Barista podcast have started to challenge those norms, but even as non-white, non-male coffee workers have begun to expand the popular notion of who can be seen as an expert in coffee, most major coffee culture forums haven’t yet started to address the linguistic and cultural barriers that coffee workers from producing countries experience when engaging with U.S. coffee culture. Looking at cafe culture, entry-level hiring bias, access to education, and the nuances of communication in commerce, six Latin American coffee experts discuss the myriad ways that language and culture affect their engagement in and with the U.S. coffee world.

Language Barriers In Cafes

Abner J. Roldán, co-owner of Café Comunión in Santurce, Puerto Rico, started working full-time as a barista in 2013. While working his first English-language barista job in Portland, Oregon, his proficiency in English was less of an issue than his accent; even though his coworkers were receptive and patient, it was challenging for him to communicate with the many customers who also had varied accents. While most of his customers were friendly and curious about his background, some were impatient, and despite the general tolerance he’s experienced in the U.S. regarding language barriers, he sees a missed opportunity in the way that English speakers tend to approach people who speak English as a second language: “People from the U.S. should see communication as a mutual effort; they can help their ESL coworkers, and have the chance to learn about their culture and work on their Spanish.”

Ximena Rubio, who works for Quentin Café in Mexico City, worked as a barista for several years before moving into wholesale and quality control. She sees many customers from the U.S. approach baristas with a presumption that everyone should speak English—even outside the U.S. “Not to generalize, but sometimes when customers from the U.S. come in, they don’t say hi and they speak right at baristas in English, assuming we speak it too.” In the case of her shop, there is usually at least one English speaker on shift at any given time, but in less high-end shops there are sometimes none at all. This not only makes it difficult for baristas to know what drinks to make, it shows a lack of mutual effort toward communicating; learning a few key phrases or even just greeting baristas in Spanish shows at least some level of care.

Another barrier for Latinx baristas who speak English as a second language in the U.S. is that business owners are sometimes reluctant to hire them for entry-level barista jobs, even when qualified or overqualified. A Bay Area coffee worker who asked to remain anonymous pointed out that sometimes managers don’t want to hire baristas with strong accents from Latin America even though they would have no problem hiring baristas with thick British or Australian accents: “It’s about their expectation of ‘the right fit.’ Good people still have unconscious biases, and because of that they often surround themselves with workers who look like them and come from similar backgrounds.” With that hiring bias at the entry level, it can be difficult for Latin-American workers in the U.S. to get barista jobs and move through the ranks into higher-level coffee jobs through the conventional career pathways many U.S.-born baristas use. So, when Latin American coffee workers do make it into the few sought-after positions in the green coffee sector, they are often highly educated with degrees and practical experience in agronomy as well as competency in multiple relevant languages; in other words, to make it to the upper tiers of the industry, they have to be many times more qualified than their white, U.S.-born peers.

language barriers rj joseph

Mariana Faerron-Gutierrez

Language Barriers In Education

One of the main places Rubio sees language barriers manifest is in the educational access of her barista community in Mexico City. Because so many educational resources—popular blogs and Facebook forums such as Barista Hustle, news and culture publications such as Sprudge and Barista Magazine, and valuable reference books such as The World Atlas of Coffee—are in English only, baristas in her region often aren’t able to advance their craft to the degree of baristas in other regions.

She adds that this problem applies just as much to coffee producers as baristas; as the actual people growing and processing coffee, they need to have access to industry standards in order to know how to improve their craft, or how to value it when it’s already exceptional. “I absolutely think that if we had more resources and information in Spanish, these farmers would do such great things. Knowing about cupping, knowing about brewing, just being able to know the value of their coffee; not only would prices go up, which would be great, but the quality would go up. That not only helps producing countries, but also consuming countries.”

Mayra Orellana-Powell, Honduran coffee producer and founder of producer community organization Catracha Coffee Co., points to the huge opportunity that the industry has to allow more producers to learn and improve their craft by producing more Spanish-language coffee resources. “We are the producers of coffee; we are the people who actually have the ability to make great coffee. We need to have access to education, especially on increasing sustainability. Many SCA lectures and materials are not translated, and we’re missing out.” Her goal is to encourage people to actively think about solutions. “We need to be having this conversation. If those things aren’t happening, how can we make them happen?” She’s glad to see improvement but wants people to keep pushing forward.

language barriers rj joseph

Ximena Rubio. Photo courtesy of Menachem Gancz.

Language Barriers In Importing And Production

Rubio says that not only can language barriers do a lot of harm to farmers, but that sometimes green buyers can exploit that gap, whether intentionally or unintentionally. For farmers in Latin America who don’t speak English, it can be tricky not only to negotiate a fair price for their product, but also to accurately assess the quality of what they’re producing. She explains how coffee buyers can claim fairness via Direct Trade while reaping the fiscal benefits of skipping the middleman; they often neglect to consider the fact that importers and exporters are usually more equipped to foster an equitable negotiation because of a shared language. “Because people negotiate with people who can’t understand them as well as the importer can, they’re benefiting twice from skipping the importer. There are so many great producers who don’t even know specialty coffee exists. They may have a Pacamara that’s 90 points, and they don’t know how expensive that should be.” At that point, buyers can offer them a deal that’s better than what they were asking, but still not even close to what they should be paying, and still characterize the purchase as a fair or even charitable act.  

Rosi Quiñones, who manages farm certifications and quality control at green coffee importer Royal Coffee, pointed out the myriad benefits and opportunities that come from employing Spanish-speakers from producing countries as coffee workers in general, and more specifically in the green coffee side of the chain. An agronomist from Lima, Peru, Quiñones loves working directly with producers and helping them improve their craft and get the best prices for their product; she says that when dealing with complex interpersonal engagements like negotiation or logistics coordination, not only does fluency in a shared language help people to do great work together, but shared culture matters as well. “When someone not only speaks Spanish but also understands the cultural values of producers, that understanding is helpful in building the relationship. For example, when producers from Peru introduce themselves, they start with their ancestors and their parents; that tells you important information about their values.”

language barriers rj joseph

Mayra Orellana-Powell. Photo courtesy of Jose Reynieri Hernandez.

Quiñones also points out that where many green buyers who only speak English might have to go through multiple translators to communicate with producers who only speak indigenous languages, buyers who are fluent in Spanish will have an easier time navigating translation to get crucial information about how the coffee was produced. Since (like coffee itself) Spanish is a language brought to Latin America through colonialism, the incredibly numerous and diverse indigenous languages of Latin America are often farm workers’ primary language, informing the nuances of their Spanish and adding complexity. In situations like this, Spanish is a way of meeting in the middle.

Mariana Faerron-Gutierrez, a Costa Rican agronomic economist and co-owner of Tico Coffee Roasters in Campbell, California, agrees. “In Latin America, a lot of producers speak more than one language and can communicate easily with importers and buyers they work with, but when they can speak with someone who comes from the same place, it makes the communication deeper than just the language. They open up and tell you things they otherwise wouldn’t, because through shared culture you’re able to make them feel that you value what they are sharing, rather than just focusing on technical aspects like how the coffee was produced or how long it was dried.”

language barriers rj joseph

Abner Roldán. Photo courtesy of Karla Quinones.

What The Industry Can Do

When asked what the industry can do to improve communication between cultures, all the coffee workers I interviewed suggested that English-speaking coffee folks take on some of the onus for bridging the language gap, from farm to cafe. As Roldán and Rubio both suggest, it’s not just the job of Spanish speakers to make communication happen—especially those in Spanish-speaking countries. Orellana-Powell is excited to see more English-speaking coffee people leaving their comfort zones and starting to learn Spanish and explore Latin coffee cultures, which are rich and diverse. “There’s a huge market of Latino consumers, cafes, and roasting companies in the U.S. and in Latin America, and we need to stop ignoring that market.” Quiñones adds that while she’s excited to see more cross-cultural engagement, these markets are taking off regardless of whether the U.S. acknowledges them or not, and in the process they are creating their own media and trends.

In addition to interpersonal communication, the coffee community needs to continue pushing for educational organizations and media groups to translate the resources they create, as World Coffee Research and Specialty Coffee Association have started to do. Beyond that, Faerron-Gutierrez wants people to think about whose stories the coffee industry is telling, and whether they really express the diversity of the U.S. coffee industry: “The industry highlights certain things or people, and then it goes back again and again; I feel like this country is so big that it just can’t be that there are no more people to recognize.”

In hiring, managers and owners should start thinking of fluency in Latin American languages and cultures as an asset, not just at the green coffee level but even at the entry level. The U.S. borders Mexico and is home to more Spanish speakers than the entire country of Spain, and there are many coffee lovers out there who communicate better in Spanish than English and would benefit from service that resonates with them.

As the coffee industry struggles with global issues such as climate change and labor shortages, it’s time to examine how certain things or people have come to be seen as more valuable than others and reassess those values. Looking to the future of coffee, white U.S.-born Americans need to start thinking of linguistic and cultural barriers faced in the industry as a group challenge requiring work on all sides, rather than just a problem for Spanish speakers in coffee.

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

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Source: Coffee News

There’s A Book Devoted To Coffee Lids

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If there is an unsung hero for take-away coffee, it is the lid. This humble but ubiquitous piece of plastic is all that stands between you and a lap full of piping hot single origin washed Yirg. And let’s be honest, the disposable lid is probably going the way of the buffalo; with the current focus on sustainability and reusability, there isn’t much room for the one-time use plastic lid in the modern world. Soon, we’ll all be saying, “remember plastic lids?” To which the response will be, “no.”

But a new book by two architects immortalizes the plastic coffee to-go cup lid, forever recording it in the annals of time. And the Smithsonian Museum as well.

According to the Austin American-Statesman, “Coffee Lids: Peel, Pinch, Pucker, Puncture” is the work of Louise Harpman and Scott Specht, New York and Austin-based architects, respectively, who bonded over their love of coffee lids. No, seriously. The pair met while studying at Yale, where they discovered the other person shared their love of lid collecting.

“When we realized we had the same interests, we began to compare items and traded lids almost like trading cards,” Specht says. “From then on, whenever we would travel together, we’d be on the lookout for new variations or types.”

Their combined collection of lids “was considered so crucial to understanding one part of American culture and technology, it was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution.”

Released in March, “Coffee Lids: Peel, Pinch, Pucker, Puncture” is 256 pages of photography, illustrations, patent drawings, and an entire classification system devoted to “the small bits of humble genius that surround us every day,” per the book’s website.

On the classification system, Specht tells the Statesman:

Some of the most important include: structural braces or moldings to prevent the lid from deforming and popping off when the cup is squeezed; ventilation ports to allow pressure to be equalized in the cup during drinking; foam lofts to prevent the whipped top of high-volume drinks from being crushed; and slosh-prevention systems, which allow overflow to drain back into the cup after a rough jolt.

Admittedly, I never use plastic lids. They mess up the flavor of the coffee. I just take a few extra hot slugs to get the liquid levels down to something more manageable and I live with the risk of spills, which explains why there are so many coffee stains in the crotch of literally every single pair of pants I own. But nonetheless, I can’t help but admire the devotion to the humble lid. Sure, they aren’t going to be around forever, but that’s all the more reason to appreciate them while they are here, before “Coffee Lids: Peel, Pinch, Pucker, Puncture” becomes an ancient history book.

Zac Cadwalader is the news 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

Now Open: Olympia Coffee’s New Tacoma Cafe And Roastery

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Olympia Coffee Roasting Company in Tacoma’s Proctor District.

Olympia Coffee Roasting Company opens its fifth location today in the historic Proctor neighborhood in the north end of Tacoma, Washington. This is the company’s first retail location in co-owner Oliver Stormshak’s hometown and their second outside of Olympia (their shop in West Seattle opened earlier this year).

Stormshak recalls visiting Tacoma cafes growing up in the 90s. “Tacoma cafes played a huge role in shaping me as a coffee professional. Temple of the Bean was my personal favorite while I was in high school,” Stormshak tells us (Temple of the Bean is now Cosmonaut). “Our Westside Olympia location is greatly inspired by that cafe.”

“I loved Cafe WA’s space which is now our friends at Bluebeard. Shakabrah’s original location was a great place to hang out with friends, couches, good music, open mics. I remember Duane Sorenson (we went to high school together and our mothers work together) who would found Stumptown making me ice mochas. I met my wife in Buzz City, a coffeehouse on the corner of I and Division at a record release party for Katie’s Dimples.”

Wide angle view of the interior. (Photo by Poppi Photography)

Poursteady brewer. (Photo by Poppi Photography)

Olympia Coffee Roasting’s new space, designed and built-out by The Artisans Group, features a La Marzocco Strada AV espresso machine, customized by Pantechnicon Designs, FETCO batch brew, and pour-over via the Poursteady automated dripper.

Roasting will be done on-site using a custom-made Diedrich IR-5 Kilo Roaster. Customers have an opportunity to sit and watch the roasting take place on barstools with a view. A blend created for the Tacoma cafe called “Little Buddy” is named after Stormshak’s sister’s 1986 Honda Civic which, according to their press release, cruised around Tacoma in the 90s.

Little Buddy blend.

The Tacoma location offers Olympia’s Left Bank Pastry. (Photo by Poppi Photography)

Hours are Monday to Friday 5am to 7pm, Saturday 6am to 7pm, and Sunday 7am to 6pm. A grand opening celebration takes place Saturday, May 12th with artisanal goods neighbor Lapis. Stormshak tells us to expect “snacks, music, libations, and free brewed coffee all day.”

The interior. (Photo by Poppi Photography)

“I always dreamed of owning a coffee roastery, growing up. I always imagined it would be in Tacoma, in Proctor,” says Stormshak. “Even though this is our fifth location this is truly a lifelong dream for me.”

Olympia Coffee Roasting Co is located at 2601 N Proctor, Tacoma. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

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

Photos by Poppi Photography provided by Olympia Coffee Roasting Co.

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Source: Coffee News

Coffee Makes People Like You More, Says Science

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Do you want to know how to win friends and influence people? The answer is simple: give them coffee. This may sound like just the ramblings and conjecture of a biased coffee writer—which it definitely is—but now there is science to make it less conjecture-y, though still very ramble-y.

According to PsyPost, a new study in the Journal of Psychopharmacology found that “drinking coffee before a discussion can help people stay focused and feel better about the people in the conversation.” So it stands to reason, if you want people to feel good about you, give them coffee before the meeting you both will be attending.

Titled “Coffee with co-workers: role of caffeine on evaluations of the self and others in group settings,” the research was authored by Vasu Unnava of the University of California, Davis, who split a total of 134 college students into groups and “had them discuss the Occupy Wall Street movement for 15 minutes.” Unnava found that participants who were instructed to ingest caffeine before the discussion were “better at focusing on the topic at hand” over the uncaffeinated—because no duh—but they also “felt better about themselves and their fellow participants.” These findings coincide with my own research on the subject, tentatively titled “Why Does Everyone Suck So Much, Just Kidding, I’ve Had My First Cup Of Coffee Now And You’re All OK In My Book.”

The research is not without its caveats (theirs, not mine. Mine is flawless). From PsyPost:

“A major caveat is that our coffee drinkers came to the study after staying away from coffee for a few hours,” Unnava told PsyPost. “So, we do not know if the coffee they consumed in the study increased their alertness or it is the decreased alertness in those who consumed decaffeinated coffee that caused the effects reported in the study.”

“Second, we used a topic that the participants generally agreed on. What the results might be if there is disagreement is an interesting issue to study further. Finally, we used only one type of task – group discussion. How coffee may affect people’s performance in other kinds of tasks (e.g., group problem solving, group physical work) is not known.”

Nevertheless, the takeaway here is to always bring coffee to a meeting to curry favor. It works like gangbusters on coffee drinkers. Maybe not so much on non-coffee drinkers, but jam enough of that sweet elixir down their gullets and they’ll get hooked and then we’re back to gangbusters.

Zac Cadwalader is the news 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