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Specialty Coffee Archives - Page 31 of 35 - The Curb Kaimuki

In Los Angeles, Cuties Coffee Serves The Queer Community

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cuties coffee los angeles california

A new chapter in the rich Italian tradition of paying it forward via coffee has been born in Los Angeles, where LA’s queer-centered coffeehouse Cuties Coffee recently launched a community tab program. The goal: to ensure that the joy and comfort of a cup of a coffee in a safe and welcoming environment is available to all who need it, regardless of whether they can afford it.

Since queer community members (especially those who are also marginalized in other ways) face higher rates of unemployment, homelessness, and poverty than their non-LGBTQ+ counterparts, the community tab advances Cuties’ mission to provide a true community hub for all—even those without the disposable income for their daily brew—by ensuring that no one is turned away for lack of funds.

cuties coffee los angeles california

Virginia Bauman and Iris Bainum-Houle.

The Suspended Coffee Tradition

In launching the community tab program, Cuties’ founders Virginia Bauman and Iris Bainum-Houle aren’t creating something entirely novel, but rather refining an historic tradition to fit their local community. The concept of suspended coffee—purchasing a second coffee for an anonymous future customer in need—is a tradition that comes from Italy (supposedly Naples) and dates back at least as far as the late 19th century. Originally called caffe sospeso, the tradition experienced a revival in Italy in 2011 when Italian authorities created an official “Suspended Coffee Day” to be celebrated each December.

Two years later, Irish plumber John Sweeney became enamored with the idea and launched a Facebook page Suspended Coffees. Four years later the page has over 388,000 “Likes”; the official organization Suspended Coffees that came from it has inspired thousands of cafes across the world—including many in the US—to adopt suspended coffee programs. Although some coffee shop owners found the concept of an official program to match customers looking to pay it forward with customers who could use a coffee break controversial, the idea resonated with many and continues to spread.

cuties coffee los angeles california

The Community Tab

Within the queer community, crowdfunding and passing the hat for friends and strangers alike is also a rich and longstanding tradition; both despite and because of the fiscal marginalization the queer community experiences, its members support each other when in need, and the community tab is just another expression of that tradition. Cuties, which was founded partially off of crowdfunding, has already tapped into that custom to give back to the community and create much-needed safe space.

“Our community faces frequent financial hardship,” said Bauman, reflecting on the inspiration for the program. “We want our space to be accessible, without the stigma of not having the funds to buy a drink or attend an event. The community tab allows people who have the means to support those who don’t.” Notably, the community tab allows its recipients to access the program without having to draw attention to their lack of funds—instead of asking the barista if anyone has left an extra drink, Cuties’ bar has a bowl of tokens that function as dollars from which anyone, without conversation, can pay. Customers can also add money to the bowl by purchasing “extra love” for any dollar amount with their order.

“Ultimately, the system needs to be able to be taken advantage of without conversation and be visible at the time of purchase,” says Bauman. “There needs to be a way to use it without outing yourself to others in the shop.” 

Bauman and Bainum-Houle funded the tab via an initial investment, but even after only a few weeks, the balance is already being maintained by the community, both in the cafe and through a Patreon account where fans can support long-distance.  

Bauman hopes the community tab will encourage queer and otherwise marginalized community members to come out and socialize even if they are facing financial hardship. “Isolation is extremely prevalent in our community—there are multiple challenges to leaving your house when you are a queer individual. If we can remove one of those challenges by providing the structure for those with means to help those without, then we’ll be very happy.”

cuties coffee los angeles california

Beyond the Cup

While Cuties has been open for under a year, the community tab is only the latest in their mission to serve their community beyond the cup. Bauman and Bainum-Houle—who met while attending queer, sex-positive, and storytelling events in Los Angeles and bonded over the inclusive community they wanted but didn’t yet see—think of Cuties as much more than just a place to get a cup of coffee. “We wanted a space that anchors the community, open during the daytime so that all ages could attend,” Bauman tells me. “We wanted a space for folx who don’t find a home in the queer nightlife scene. We wanted a space that was casual. There was a gap that we saw that a coffee shop could fill.”

Their flagship event, Queers, Coffee & Donuts—a casual queer coffee and donuts hangout—started before Cutie’s official launch. Since their storefront has been open, they’ve created a host of other events, including the Friday Flirt!, in which attendees can cruise in a safer space without alcohol, screenings of queer films, and craft nights. “My long-term goal is to have an event happening every day in the shop so there’s always something for our community to do and look forward to. That can mean a lot when your right to exist is under attack,” said Bainum-Houle. In addition to those events, they also provide a weekly newsletter featuring events happening in the broader LGBTQIA+ community as well as their own, including a section called “Adventures From Your Couch,” which features queer media that can be enjoyed from home including movies, music videos, books, articles, and podcasts. “This is for folx who aren’t going out that week, whether that’s because of social anxiety, mental illness, disabilities, or chronic illness. We want those folx to know we’re thinking about them even when they can’t come to the shop.”

Pay It Forward

For some, specialty coffee has earned itself a reputation for being elitist and inaccessible, and while those claims don’t necessarily take into account the whole picture, they also aren’t without basis. A focus on paying higher prices to coffee producers and workers across the supply chain doesn’t come for free, and as cafe prices have climbed, gentrification has put a pinch on many of the communities that house cafes. Communities that are marginalized have felt this pinch the hardest, and Cuties is working to make sure that their business actively circulates wealth back into the local queer community.

To support the community tab and Cuties’ other community programs, donate to their patreon and pay it forward—after all, it’s a coffee tradition.

Cuties Coffee is located at 710 N Heliotrope Dr, Los Angeles. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

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.

Photos courtesy of V.V.

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Source: Coffee News

Mavam On The Road: A Three Week West Coast Road Trip

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Ahhh the great outdoors. Is there anything better than getting out in nature and just kinda shutting off for a few days? The answer, of course, is, “Yes, doing all those things you just said but with a proper cup of coffee readily available.” That’s why Mavam Espresso has outfitted a trailer with a full service espresso bar and is hitting the open road for three weeks for the aptly titled “Mavam On The Road.”

Teaming up with Adventure Ready, Teardrop NW, Gron CBD Sirap, Caffewerks, Rhino Coffee Gear, and Califia Farms, Mavam is spending the better part of May touring the West Coast, with a Teardrop trailer custom fitted with a two-group Mavam and Victoria Arduino Mythos One espresso grinder. Over the three-week period starting May 9th in Portland and ending the 26th in Pinedale, Wyoming, Mavam will be popping up and down the West Coast, hosting throwdowns, tech trainings, and giving many their first up close and personal look at the new undercounter espresso machine on the block.

In a press release, Mavam partner Terry Ziniewicz—who, it should be disclosed, has been a longtime friend and advertising partner of this website and is related to one of its founders by marriage—had this to say:

Building a Mobile Espresso trailer has been a goal of mine for a long time. Combining Mavam’s passion for great coffee experiences and the outdoors, we are looking forward to connecting with people across the Western US who share in our love of good design and adventure! We look forward to seeing you on the roads less traveled.

The scheduled stops for Mavam On The Road are:

May 9: Portland, OR, Roseline Coffee
May 12: Salt Lake City, UT, Saint Anthony Industries
May 19: Flagstaff, AZ, Overland Expo West
May 22: Phoenix, AZ, Provisions Coffee
May 25: Loveland/Denver, CO, Dark Heart
May 26: Pinedale, WY, Pine Coffee Supply

You can follow Mavam on their road warrior exploits through their instagram @MavamOnTheRoad.

Is it considered glamping if you bring a trailer but it’s so full of coffee gear that you can’t fit anything else in it so you just end up sleeping outside on the ground?

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and butt nutter enthusiast.

*all media via Mavam Espresso

 

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Source: Coffee News

An Interview With Agnieszka Rojewska, 2018 London Coffee Masters Champion

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After four days of intense multi-skill barista action at the fourth annual London Coffee Masters during the London Coffee Festival, a new champion has been crowned: Agnieszka Rojewska, an independent competitor from Poznan, Poland.

From a field of 24 baristas—one not short on high profile competitors from across Europe and North America—Rojewska’s name quickly rose to the top of the list as the favorite to win it all, and for good reason; she is a three-time Polish Barista Champion, a four-time Polish Latte Art Champion, a two-time World Latte Art Championship finalist, a Polish Brewers Cup runner-up, and most recently a runner-up at the 2017 New York Coffee Masters. In short, she has amassed one of the most impressive and varied résumés in barista competition history.

Rojewska’s multi-faceted skillset suited her well in Coffee Masters, a competition testing a broad range of barista skills, ushering her into the top eight before she bested Romania’s Daniel Horbat in the semi-finals on the way to beating out Rob Clarijs of The Netherlands for the title (and another notch on an already well-notched belt) of 2018 London Coffee Masters Champion.

With the win, Rojewska earned a £5,000 cash prize, which she says she will use primarily to fund future barista competitions. To learn more about the big win, and what it means, Sprudge co-founder Jordan Michelman caught up with Agnieszka Rojewska.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Hi Agnieszka! Congratulations on your big win! By way of introduction, what do you do professionally in the coffee industry in Poland?

For now I call myself an unemployed freelancer. There is no specific job I do. Most of the time I train baristas in barista skills, brewing, and latte art, and sometimes I do guest shifts at coffee shops. I also help people with opening or improving their businesses. I used to co-own a coffee shop, but because of number of travels I’ve had lately, I had to give that one up. But it is still in good hands.

You’ve won £5,000 for winning the Coffee Masters. How will you be spending your prize?

Well there is still a big kid inside me, so some part of it will definitely go to useless stuff, like new video games, funny socks, or sneakers. But definitely most of it will be an investment into my next competition later this year. Competing internationally is a big investment.

Talk us through your signature drink creation for the Coffee Masters. What did you do? Did this differ from years past?

I was looking for an idea that we are all familiar with and a beverage that wouldn’t be very complicated. It just struck me at some point that most coffee people like gin and tonics. Going from gin and tonic, we get tonic espresso, so we have a common ingredient.

My biggest problem with most gin and tonics and also tonic espressos is that there is too much bitterness and then this sugar-like sweetness in tonic. So I prepared my own tonic base, which still had those botanical notes, but I added more acidity and citrus flavours. It is basically made of orange, lemon, lime, grapefruit, and lemongrass with pepper, cardamon, anise, allspice berries, and quinine bark. From those ingredients I created a syrup, which I added to sparkling water in a 1:1 ratio.

Because it has a lot of citrus acidity I chose a different gin and infused it with Turkish quince juice to get an apple and pear sweetness. A gin and tonic made from those ingredients is more refreshing and has more acidity than regular ones.

For the coffee, I didn’t want to use espresso because it would be to intense for that drink. That’s why I used a natural-processed Ugandan coffee (Arabica). It has an extremely big body with flavors of prune, rum, and black cherry. It fit the rest perfectly.

This was a new approach for me. Most of the time I start with the coffee and then try to find matching spirits, but this time I wanted to take something from a bartender’s world and adjust the coffee world to it.

You placed second in the New York tournament last year, squaring off against Erika Vonie in the finals. Take us back to that moment: what did you learn from it? How did your Finals appearance help you win in London?

New York was a great experience, and I went there with no expectations. I was a bit surprised with my good performance through almost the whole tournament, but I think I lost focus in final moments. Erika was at her very best in the finals, when I was already going down. Looking back, it was a compilation of mistakes at every step. I didn’t handle the pressure. I learned there that you can only relax or let go a bit when you cross that finish line, not before. I learned that even if you are very good, it doesn’t mean that someone won’t be better, so you should prepare for every discipline; I’m talking here about losing latte art battle in NY 🙂

Editor’s note: Rojewska didn’t make the same mistake twice, winning every latte art battle she was a part of at London Coffee Masters.

In London I already knew how it goes, I knew more less what to expect and how demanding every day is, so I could just prepare myself a lot better.

Is this a major moment in your career thus far?

I think so. This is the first huge international competition I managed to win. I was always near the top, but never succeeded. I started to think that I might not be able to deliver that at some point, that maybe I will always be just inches from the top. It was the moment when I felt like all those years of trainings weren’t for nothing. Might be a breaking point in my career, who knows 🙂

What’s something about competing in Coffee Masters that new competitors might not know? What have you found surprising about the tournament?

A lot of competitors think that this will be similar to other competitions like, the Brewers Cup or Barista Competition. The big difference is that for Coffee Masters, you can’t actually prepare, you know nothing that will be happening there besides your signature beverage. We enter the competition with the same preparation: we don’t know the coffees, we have no idea how to brew them. So it all goes back to how you handle pressure and stress. Are your skills and knowledge good enough the handle the unknown? At first I was telling my friends that on the CM stage you have to be a little coffee McGuyver—in a new environment, you have to make coffees taste great while knowing almost nothing about them. It challenges your skill like no other.

Rojewska’s coffees from Caravan’s The Niners Series chosen on the spot for her custom blend.

You’ve been part of the tournament now for several seasons. Does it feel to you like Coffee Masters is growing?

Oh yes. Just look, for example, at the numbers of competitors. It’s 24 now. And not just the number of competitors is growing but the level as well. Look at the results in first round, we were all very close; baristas are getting better and better and there is no place for mistakes in the competition.

What’s the one thing about Coffee Masters you’ve enjoyed the most? 

It would be hard to choose one thing… I think that the interactions we have with judges, other competitor on stage, emcees, and the crowd: talking, asking questions, joking, etc. It just makes you want to never leave that stage.

Describe the moment of victory in your own words.

The feeling is hard to describe. Of course I was pretty nervous before. I have already been in that place and lost, so the pressure I put on myself was a bit bigger. But the moment they showed my name as a winner I was just extremely happy; all that stress was gone, my mind was calm. I think I was smiling for next three days.

Is there anyone special you’d like to thank? 

Of course!!! Special thanks to my teammate Paula. She is always there for me, drinking all those good and bad versions of my beverages, taking care of the cuppings.  She is able to handle my whining, anger, depression. She is my team, none of this would happen without her help!

Thanks Agnieszka, and congratulations again on the big win!

Check out our complete coverage of the 2018 London Coffee Masters on Sprudge Live.

Jordan Michelman is a co-founder and editor at Sprudge Media Network. Read more Jordan Michelman on Sprudge.

Photos by Zachary Carlsen and Zac Cadwalader for Sprudge. 

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Source: Coffee News

Big Spoon And Equator Coffees Join Forces For An Espresso Nut Butter

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Just when I thought I was out, the butter beat spoons me back in. I was content to hang up my top hat and monocle and leave coverage of the nexus of coffee and legume-based spreads to the next generation of hungry nut butterists, but when given the opportunity to take first scoops from the chaste nut butter news of the day, how could I refuse a dip?

It was a little over a year ago when we first reported that Big Spoon Coffee Roasters teamed up with Intelligentsia Coffee for a special release an espresso nut butter made with Black Cat espresso. But now the North Carolina-based artisanal butterist is back to one up their peanut, almond, and espresso spread (espreadso?). In collaboration with the Bay Area’s Equator Coffees & Teas, Big Spoon has just announced the release of an almond hazelnut butter made with Equator’s Tigerwalk Espresso.

Like with all of Big Spoon’s edible spreadables, the new collab is light on ingredients; it’s made up of only “fresh-roasted heirloom California Mission almonds, Oregon Barcelona and Clark variety hazelnuts, [raw organic] coconut crystals, [organic Madagascar] vanilla, [Vietnamese] cinnamon, and sea salt with Equator Coffees & Teas’ flagship Tigerwalk Espresso,” per a press release.

“Equator is excited to collaborate with Big Spoon Roasters on their latest Espresso nut butter,” said Ted Stachura, Director of Coffee at Equator Coffees & Teas. “We tasted different espresso blends in combination with variations of nut butter before landing on this recipe, which features our flagship Tigerwalk Espresso. This well-balanced blend is sweet and creamy, yielding a broad range of delicate fruit flavors that complement this special nut butter recipe perfectly.”

The special release nut butter retails for $12.50 for a 10-ounce jar and can be purchased via Big Spoon’s and Equator’s respective webstores. And starting today, for the next two weeks the Proof, Miller, Larkspur, and Fort Mason Equator locations will be offering $3 off a 12-ounce bag of Tigerwalk Espresso with any purchase of a jar of the nut butter collaboration.

For more information, visit Big Spoon’s official website. Or, you know, just buy a jar. Seems like everything you need to know is under that lid. It’s good to be back on the butter beat.

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and butt nutter enthusiast.

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Source: Coffee News

Black Coffee: The Live Podcast Is Now Available

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Black Coffee, the new event series from creative director Michelle Johnson (The Chocolate Barista) premiered last week at the Clinton Street Theater in Portland, Oregon. Hosted by Michelle Johnson, Ian Williams (Deadstock Coffee), and Gio Fillari (Coffee Feed PDX), this event centered the voices and experiences of Black coffee professionals and enthusiasts alike, all with unique perspectives that spanned intersectional identities and roles on the retail end of the value chain.

The guests for the first podcast included D’Onna Stubblefield (Counter Culture Coffee), Ezra Baker (Share Coffee Roasters), Zael Ogwaro (Never Coffee), Adam JacksonBey (The Potter’s House), and Cameron Heath (Revelator Coffee Company), with a live DJ performance by |Fritzwa|.

You can now listen to the podcast! Download it here and subscribe.

Black Coffee PDX was made possible by La Marzocco USA, Stumptown Coffee Roasters, Oatly, NXT LVL, and The Ace Hotel Portland. Ticket proceeds are being donated to our charitable partners Sankofa Collective and Brown Girl Rise.

Listen to the podcast now! Video of the event will premiere in the next week. More events are on the horizon in 2018—stay tuned.

During Black Coffee PDX the @Sprudge Instagram account was taken over by Shaunté Glover—in addition to the images above, here’s a few key images live from the event evening.

It’s getting real Portland! Let’s go! Takeover: @shaunte

A post shared by Sprudge (@sprudge) on Apr 24, 2018 at 7:24pm PDT

H I S T O R Y. #blackcoffeepdx Takeover: @shaunte

A post shared by Sprudge (@sprudge) on Apr 24, 2018 at 8:44pm PDT

All images by Shaunté Glover.

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Source: Coffee News

The Cafe Imports US Tour Is Coming

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Cafe Imports is getting the band back together and hitting the road one more time. This May, the 2018 Legendary Coffee Tour is heading to 10 cities around the US, and they are bringing with them their “greatest hits, brand-new releases, and even a few deep cuts from the archive.”

Kicking off on May 4th in Minneapolis, the Cultivar Caravan will focus on “the history and significance of coffee varieties,” which will of course be presented along with a cupping. Along with a “set list of favorites,” including heirloom Ethiopian types, Typica, and Bourbon, Cafe Imports is bringing a completely unknown variety that came their way via a Banexport cupping in Pitalito, Huila, Colombia (which co-owner/green coffee buyer Andrew Miller described as “Holy *@!&” and scored an astounding 94 points).

The Cultivar Caravan will also include not coffee things to taste, “as a way of exploring and understanding the ways that different varieties can contribute to diversity of flavor, as well as to simply show some love to the diversity of flavors this weird, wild world has to offer us at every turn.” The event will then be followed with free food and drinks for all attendees.

The full list of stops for the 2018 Legendary Coffee Tour are:

May 4: Minneapolis, MN, Cafe Imports Warehouse
May 7: Kansas City, MO, Messenger Coffee
May 8: Springfield, MO, Classic Rock Coffee Co.
May 10: Chicago, IL, Metropolis Coffee Roasterie
May 15: Coeur d’Alene, ID, Evans Brothers Coffee Roasters
May 17: Tempe, AZ, Tempe Public Market Cafe
May 23: Austin, TX, Wild Gift Coffee
May 25: Dallas, TX, Communion Cafe
May 30: Boston, MA, Pavement Coffee
June 1: Philadelphia, PA, Rival Bros. Coffee

The Cultivar Caravan is free to attend, but space is extremely limited, so an RSVP is required. To reserve your spot, follow the links above to your stop on the tour.

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

*all images via Cafe Imports

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Source: Coffee News

Teaching Barista Skills To Refugees At A Beautiful Mess In Amsterdam

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refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

The last time Sprudge reported on how the coffee world was helping Syrian asylum seekers in the Netherlands, a simple, very human-level initiative was underway. The objective was to pair refugees and longtime Dutch residents with similar professional interests, encouraging the two parties to go on a coffee date and trade career tips. The setting was the Amsterdam Zuid franchise of cafe Anne & Max, which provided free beverages and an inviting third space.

Today, nearly two years later, thanks to a program offered by the Amsterdam foundation Refugee Company, this same segment of the population, which once may have accepted a coffee gratis, is learning how to make coffee professionally. And it is not just any coffee, but specialty coffee by Dutch roaster Bocca.

A nationwide coffee supplier and trainer, Bocca partnered with the Refugee Company shortly after the foundation moved its operations into the Bijlmerbajes in July 2016. The country’s most renowned bajes—local slang for “jail”—had recently been vacated and turned over to Lola, an organization that repurposes empty buildings. Entrepreneurs and small businesses moved in, and alongside their offices and ateliers, Lola birthed various refugee-staffed enterprises, including a hotel, a boxing school, the acclaimed restaurant A Beautiful Mess, and Kahwa coffee bar.

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

Kahwa was also where Bocca taught the refugees the fundamentals of being a barista. The lessons began in January 2017. Back then, the former prison felt far more spartan, as Bocca account manager Jeroen Vos observed last August.

“You have to imagine that when they started here, there was nothing in this building,” says Vos. “There was no wood, there were no plants, there were no colors. It was cold.”

He was addressing the dozens of people who had filled the half-garage, half-foyer-like space for a graduation ceremony. Sixteen refugees from Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, and Syria had freshly completed the training.

“In five months’ time, they exerted a lot of effort, did a lot of work, and it became a very successful little business here,” Vos adds.

Boris Montanus, Bocca’s head trainer for the project, called the students one by one. Abiding by the community’s convention, he used only their first names. They were handed diplomas and—no Dutch festivity goes flowerless—cellophane cones holding a fuchsia gerbera daisy or pink and white lisianthus. Depending on a recipient’s preference, Montanus spoke English or Dutch, and shared a personal anecdote or accolade about them.

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

“You were here when the machine broke down, right?” he said to a graduate named Kosai. “He lifted up the cover of the machine and he put his hands inside it, to help,” he explained to the audience. 

He described another barista named Rafi: “He was really, really tense every time I tried to examine him, but he kept sending me beautiful pictures of latte art, so I knew he could do it.”

“Samir may be the loudest barista I’ve ever met,” Montanus said, laughing. Turning warmly to the diploma recipient, he added: “Here you are, man.”

Onlookers stood clapping and digitally documenting. Some leaned on the wood furnishings, rudimentary though brightened by photography, paintings, and pillows. Two geometrical pendant lamps twinkled over Kahwa’s two-group La Marzocco Linea Classic and Ceado E37S grinder. Passing through the machines was a seemingly bottomless supply of Bocca’s Fatima espresso, washed Catuai and Bourbon beans from Brazil.

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

The ceremony dovetailed with a meet and greet, allowing members of the city’s horeca industry to get acquainted with the graduates as potential hires. In intimate group conversations, refugees gave glimpses of their past lives.

“I know coffee. I come from East Africa,” noted a former security guard from Eritrea, while also sharing a newfound appreciation for the drink’s taste. “The way they roast the beans is very nice.”

An Iraqi talked of having had some coffee-serving experience back when working at a shisha lounge, though he lost the opportunity after the venue was bombed. “Alles is weg,” he said—Dutch for “Everything is gone.”

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

Months after the graduation ceremony, a second group of refugees was in the thick of the barista course. Montanus had just returned from a trip to Ethiopia and was showing photos of coffee. Yosief from Eritrea and Ben from Zambia politely glanced at his phone, though the red cherries and green beans appeared far less exotic to them than to Montanus’ usual Dutch trainees.

“You’ve seen more coffee than me,” said their teacher, reminded that at Kahwa he could usually zoom through the course’s agricultural history, given the students’ backgrounds. Anyway, demanding more visual attention that day were the steamed milk hearts that Yosief and Ben were working on.

“First, swirl. All the bubbles out.”

“Start high and then bring it low in one go.”

“Most Dutch people will find this to be too little milk.”

The constant feedback had a positive effect on the forms appearing in the foam.

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

Kahwa was as hospitable a place as it had been in the summer, but the sun set early during these fall afternoon lessons. The season’s quickly cooling temperature made attendance seem like even more of a commitment. Many visitors would reach the Bijlmerbajes by metro. The stop is about a 15-minute walk from the Refugee Company’s headquarters, though arriving as such means having to follow an awkward path. It is so narrow that two pedestrians can barely pass each other without one having to step off the pavement into the marshy flora. On wet days, small black slugs speckle the way. Should anyone forget that the hunkering six towers once housed the country’s most notorious convicts, the moat and the concrete wall serve as reminders.

The barista class met twice weekly, but it had to be woven into the time-consuming bureaucratic requirements that asylees must simultaneously navigate. Ultimately, they are expected to pursue Dutch language and integration courses, settle into permanent housing, and secure work. Behind the bar, students had to demonstrate the ability to pull an espresso, steam and pour milk, clean an espresso machine, and dial in a grinder. A form hanging on the wall listed these skills and, if they struggled, “we just did it again and did it again,” Montanus said. “It was a bit like pre-runs for a barista competition.”

Besides common English and Dutch words in “hospitality slang,” as another posted printout termed them, the trainees were kept up to speed with specialty coffee lingo (the synonym-spawning flat white was particularly conducive to quiz material).

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

In December 2017, Yosief, Ben, and two Syrian classmates had their own graduation. That made for a total of 20 refugees who, within the year, completed the training with Montanus or his former Bocca colleague, Jasper de Waal.

One especially passionate diploma-holder was Rafi, the tense yet talented latte artist Montanus had praised at the August ceremony. When Sprudge caught up with him half a year later, the 24-year-old was balancing intensive Dutch classes with work as a part-time barista and waiter at Restaurant Merkelbach.

“Bocca gave me everything to really make me a barista, so I can say that I’m really a barista,” he says, sipping an espresso at Merkelbach on a day off.

refugee barista training amsterdam netherlands

Before moving to the Netherlands, Rafi had what he described as an internship with Costa. But before transitioning into a job with the multinational coffee company, he had to flee, leaving his hometown of Lattakia, Syria. After finishing his current studies, he hopes to attend hospitality school and pursue a career in coffee.

“I want to have my own cafe. That’s my dream,” Rafi says. Ideally, he added, his business would yield a whole chain of cafes, spanning the Netherlands, Lebanon, and one day, Syria, too.

In the meantime, a new hospitality course for another group of refugees has begun at the Bijlmerbajes. Bocca continues to provide the barista training, though Kahwa as its own entity no longer exists. Earlier this year, the bar merged with A Beautiful Mess and reopened in March as part of the restaurant’s vibrant renovation.

A Beautiful Mess is located at H.J.E. Wenckebachweg 48, 1096 AN Amsterdam. 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

4 Coffee Things People Are Buzzing About This Week

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What a week we’ve had in the coffee world. Monday feels like weeks ago, but it wasn’t. It was on Monday. So instead of throwing anything else new at you, we’re going to take a look back at the things that got people buzzing on the social medias.

#BlackCoffeePDX: With a sold out show in Portland, Oregon that raised $2000 for Brown Girl Rise and Sankofa Collective NW, the #BlackCoffeePDX event from Michelle Johnson was a smashing success, with much of the conversation continuing on Twitter.

For those unable to attend, the audio podcast and video will be dropping very soon, so watch this space!

Coffee ASMR: Some call it creepy (me), some call it tingly (me again, but in an uncomfortable way), but autonomous sensory meridian response (or ASMR, as in, “sucks to your ASMR“) videos are here to stay. And now, there are ASMR videos for coffee lovers. So if you want to fall asleep I guess, or whatever it is you do to these videos, now you can do it with coffee.



Compostable Bags: Staff writer Anna Brones, whose excellent piece on compostable coffee bags ran a little over a year ago, checks in on the degradation process after some six months in the compost heap. The results thus far have been mixed.

Stirring Coffee: Early this week, we reported on the Stricle, an electronic coffee stirring devices looking to replace stir sticks. We weren’t super psyched on it because, well, it’s kinda dumb. The responses on social media haven’t been much better.

What a week. We’ll see you back here on Monday.

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

Green Coffee Movement: Royal Coffee In Tokyo

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royal coffee tokyo japan craig atkinson

royal coffee tokyo japan craig atkinson

Coffee is adept at crossing borders. From the coffee we drink to the machines we brew it on, this is one of the most international substances known to man. That’s part of the fun—the global connectivity, and the endless possibilities and outcomes contained therein. In late March 2018, our partners at Royal Coffee Inc. held their first-ever international outreach event series in Japan. This four-part event series was titled “Green Coffee Movement,” and hosted by Royal GM Richard Sandlin in Tokyo, Osaka, and Gunma.

royal coffee tokyo japan craig atkinson

Richard Sandlin (center) in Tokyo.

Sandlin is helping spearhead the company’s ongoing growth in Japan, with an eye towards more events and future expansion. In this way Royal joins an ongoing effort at cultural and business exchange between Japan and the United States, which has roots going back many years. On the American side, brewing products by Japanese brands like Hario, Kalita, and Takahiro have long been popular choices for brewing in the cafe and at home; beautiful cold drip towers and siphons made by brands like Oji and Yama continue to draw oohs and ahhs in American cafes; and Japanese entrepreneurs like Hiroshi Sawada and Hidenori Izaki have opened popular cafes and remain in-demand consultants. Meanwhile there are a growing number of American coffee brands branching out to Tokyo and beyond, including a growing number of proprietary cafes from Blue Bottle; a wildly busy Verve location at Shinjuku Station; and a dedicated wholesale partnership for Stumptown at Paddler’s Coffee, now with multiple locations in Tokyo. 

Into this milieu steps Royal, with Sandlin as a not-so-secret weapon. He’s lived previously in Japan; his spouse was born in Sendai; he speaks the language fluently, and has even contributed writing on Japan’s coffee scene to this website. This showed at Royal’s recent event series, attended by a relaxed mix of roasters, baristas, industry notables and coffee lovers, with whom Sandlin chatted with casually in Japanese.  

royal coffee tokyo japan craig atkinson

The Tokyo event was held at FabCafe, and Sandlin treated the crowd to a crash course on Royal’s services as a green coffee importer, including the company’s detailed record keeping on every facet of inventory. This information, as per Sandlin, helps inform Royal’s customers before, during, and after their purchasing of the beans. Joining Sandlin at the event was the microroasting brand Ikawa, and the application MineDrip. These two were introduced once Royal’s presentation was completed, after which the group broke out into a series of stations focused on Ikawa’s sample roasting prowess, a comparative tasting area, and a demo station for MineDrip. 

royal coffee tokyo japan craig atkinson

The evening in Tokyo closed with a cupping, featuring a half-dozen current offerings from Royal’s catalogue, available to potential customers in Tokyo. What followed was an open exchange of flavor perceptions, as much a chance to mingle as it was a formal evaluation. The Tokyo coffee scene, though deeply international, is also quite close knit, and during events like this one you see the familiarity and camaraderie that is happily part of coffee life here. It’s not just people in the same industry at the same event, going because they feel obligated, but people with the same love and passion for coffee. Into this steps Royal Coffee of Oakland; it’s a lovely fit.

Craig Atkinson is a freelance journalist based in Tokyo. This is Craig Atkinson’s first feature for Sprudge Media Network.

Disclosure: Royal Coffee Inc. is an advertising partner on Sprudge Media Network. 

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Source: Coffee News

Seattle’s El Diablo Coffee Needs Your Help

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el diablo seattle washington

el diablo seattle washington

El Diablo Coffee, a Seattle institution almost two decades old, is being forced to leave their space and find a new home. The coffee shop, located in Seattle’s Queen Anne neighborhood, has been serving coffee to their community since 2000. Recently, the building they’ve operated out of for the last 18 years changed hands, and they’ve received notice that they need to vacate the premises by the end of the month. In response, they’ve launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise $75,000 in order to cover the gap and keep their workers employed as steadily as possible.

Originally founded by Terri Sullivan, the shop was bought out by Jill Killen, who also owns Cloud City Coffee, in 2010; the original owners were looking to sell and found the ideal buyer in Killen, who was drawn to the space because of its community focus and friendly atmosphere. Over the course of Killen’s tenure there, she’s put a lot of money into improvements, including converting storage space into a kitchen, adding a back patio, upgrading the restrooms, and working to fix the electrical, which is still not reliable. “I’ve put probably $50,000 into the space that I won’t get back—it stays with the space,” she said. Over the last eight years, she’s also had three different landlords, whom she described as absentee. “They just want the space rented, then they sell the building. Rinse and repeat.”

el diablo seattle washington

Photo courtesy of Jill Killen.

Last year, Killen learned from the building manager that the building had changed hands. When she brought up a new lease agreement to the management company, she tried to negotiate as low a rise as possible due to the repairs she had had to make and some conditions that were still subpar. “I said I didn’t want to pay more without upgrades,” said Killen. “I was already at or above market rate, compared to buildings with new plumbing and new electric.”  The management company allegedly reported back to Killen that the new landlords agreed that the electric needed upgrading. “I asked again for a lease,” said Killen. “I asked many times over the spring and summer. They said to hold tight, the electric problem was complicated. I wanted to do upgrades to my space and was waiting to hear back so I could start. Things were falling apart.”

The notice to vacate came on April 2nd, with a deadline of 11:59 pm on April 30th. “The courier handed it to a barista and said ‘this has to be hung in the window.’ My barista called me freaking out. Rent was paid.” After calling the management company and her old landlord, she finally got ahold of the building manager. “After four phone calls, Ben returned my call and said it was true and that this was ‘the hardest part of his job.’ The landlord was doing improvements on the space and El Diablo was in the way.” When Killen asked why the notice was so short, the building manager allegedly responded that he was only required to give 20 days. “He said he didn’t agree with how it was handled, but he was just a broker doing his job and didn’t own the building. He said they wanted to move in a different direction.”

el diablo seattle washington

Neither the building manager nor Diablo Coffee’s landlord have responded to Sprudge’s repeated request for comment.

So what’s next for Killen and El Diablo? According to Killen, they just signed a lease on a space that used to house a Mexican restaurant. The shape of the new space, which includes a full-service kitchen and is about three times the size of the old space, will change their service model slightly, but Killen is resilient and ready to see potential changes as positives. “We’ll need an expeditor/delivery person and a system with table numbers, but it will allow us to do other things such as expand our menu,” says Killen. “We had run out of electric amperage and space in the old cafe. Many people left because of seating issues. So there’s lots of positives.” The obvious downside: “The cost of moving is enormous. Between physically disconnecting and moving things we have to build counters, add floor drains, and more.”

Killen is particularly concerned about service disruptions for her staff. “We just need money for the move. We weren’t anticipating this.”

el diablo seattle washington

She’s hoping El Diablo has proven its value over time and that the community will continue to invest in their continued existence. “I’ve come to love this neighborhood and our kind neighbors,” Killen tells Sprudge. “We’ve gained so much diversity and it makes me proud to come in and see a variety of clientele. The neighborhood has rallied around us in the past.” She’s hopeful that both the local community and the larger coffee community will lend a hand to keep El Diablo operating. So far, the support has been strong: the campaign is trending on Kickstarter and has raised nearly $20,000 of its $75,000 goal. To help El Diablo manage the gap and keep their employees as secure as possible, you can donate here.

RJ Joseph is a staff writer for Sprudge Media Network. Read more RJ Joseph on Sprudge.

All photos by Neil Oney unless otherwise noted.

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Source: Coffee News