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Specialty Coffee Archives - Page 17 of 40 - The Curb Kaimuki

“An Exciting Time For Brazil” At The First-Ever Caparaó Coffee Showcase

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bcsa brazil showcase

bcsa brazil showcase

Growing up on a small coffee farm in Minas Gerais, Brazil, I have to say I always viewed coffee as something that “had to be cultivated in large amount in order to be profitable”—my father’s words—as well as something bitter, meant to be taken with sugar. But as an adult living in the United States, I saw many of my late father’s farmer friends’ names on bags at specialty coffee roasteries across the country and quickly realized that their coffee wasn’t bitter. (Nor were these coffees nutty, creamy, and chocolaty—like most coffees from Brazil are assumed to be in the rest of the world.)

“It’s an exciting time to be a coffee farmer in Brazil,” Fazenda Ambiental Fortaleza‘s Felipe Croce tells me. Croce—along with the Brazilian Specialty Coffee Association (BSCA)—organized the BSCA Micro Region Showcase, an event that brought 23 foreign roasters and four Brazilian roasters together for a nano-lot late-harvest auction with the aim to demystify the country’s terroirs. The event took place in Caparaó, a mountainous area just shy of 3000 MASL encircling a national park belonging to the states of Minas Gerais and Espírito Santo. I had the opportunity to speak to some of the roasters—and the producers from which they purchased the lots—to get both sides of the perspective.

bcsa brazil showcase

Lulu Wang from Taiwan was impressed at the coffees she found on the calibration table. A renowned coffee professional and trainer who also comes from a producing country, Wang described some of the lots as “floral, juicy, with a slight lactic acidity, something I had never tasted before in a Brazil.”

Seth Taylor, from Seth Taylor Coffee by Design (Toronto), came to the auction as a buyer but has been flirting with Caparaó for a long time. He got to know coffee from Espírito Santo in the previous years at Coffee Lab (São Paulo), and now he finally had the chance to choose a local lot to roast back in Canada. The lot he first had his eyes on got outbid at the very last second (let me tell you, watching that auction was beyond interesting, geopolitically speaking—it was like watching the world play politics through a coffee auction—but I digress.) In the end, Taylor and Olga Karakozova, from Smart Coffee (Russia) ended up splitting a lot between the two of them, since both of them already knew the young farmer, Luana de Paula. De Paula’s lot was harvested under rain, and what saved it, according to her, was the greenhouse where she put it to dry. It yielded less than 100 kilos, and she is very excited to have the coffee served in both Canada and Russia. (De Paula has recently started taking English classes in order to follow all the social media posts about her coffee!)

bcsa brazil showcase

Olga Karakozova, Luana De Paula, and Seth Taylor

Sebastian Freidzon, from All Saints in Buenos Aires, had never worked with Brazilian coffee at his roastery. So for his first time, he wanted it to be special. At the auction, he found just what he wanted. “Since we already have a customer base interested in exotic flavors, African and Central American coffees, it will be easy to sell this coffee as a single origin in filtered methods.” Freidzon bought the lot from Maria Aparecida dos Reis, from Sítio Água Limpa farm, who’s been working with specialty coffee since 2016. The nano-lot was dried in African beds, Dos Reis tells me, and since it was the rainy season, during the night she covered it to protect it from the rain. De Paula, her neighbor, encouraged her to send a sample for the auction and so she did. From now on,” she says with a smile, “I will never miss a call for competition or auction.”

Arthur Audibert, owner at L’Alchimiste (Bordeaux), was visiting Brazil for the first time and also doing his first direct trade transaction with a Brazilian farmer through the auction. Up until now, he had been buying Brazils as mostly nutty, mild coffees to be part of his espresso blends. In here, he was quite surprised to find distinct, vibrant flavor profiles at the auction and also at some of the farms visited. Audibert makes a parallel between coffee and wine when we spoke about stereotypes in flavor profiles: “In Bordeaux, many of my customers approach me saying they like ‘Brazilian coffee,’ meaning that they like intense, heavier-body espressos. I have to deconstruct that idea for them, and it’s hard. To me, that’s the same thing as someone telling me they like French wine. It doesn’t mean anything. It can’t mean anything. We need to bring up the terroir talk more often.”

bcsa brazil showcase

John Johnson, director of coffee at City of Saints in Brooklyn, New York, ended up buying a natural lot from Fazenda Ninho da Águia, run by producer Clayton Barrossa—a former surfer, but that’s another story. Johnson was glad to have visited the farm before the auction, and to have had the opportunity to try some of Barrossa’s coffees at the farm as well.

Barrossa’s coffees are known for their late-harvest lots; some roasters even wait until the last minute to see what the Ninho da Águia harvest will bring. This auction lot was harvested in December: a natural red Catuaí, dried on African-style beds. “It was creamy, very citric, and floral—very hard not to please,” describes Barrossa. The entire Ninho da Águia farm follows the agroecology model and has been divided into “sustainable gardens,” as Barrossa likes to put it: smaller plots of land surrounded by native vegetation plus a mix of fruits and vegetables that are cultivated by his family. They’ve also built a roastery on the farm, and since 2012 they have been offering tours for people who visit the nearby Pico da Bandeira. A significant part of their production sells to the domestic market.

bcsa brazil showcase

It’s an exciting time to be a coffee farmer in Brazil. And thankfully, it means so much more than producing nutty, round, chocolatey coffees. Farmers like the ones mentioned above are working hard to prove it’s so.

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

Photographs by Tony Chen.

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Source: Coffee News

SCA Game Night: A Chill Alternative To Post-Expo Partying

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Who’s ready to party hardy at the Expo in Boston next week? The answer to this mostly rhetorical question is: not everyone. There’s certainly nothing wrong with crowded spaces filled drinking, dancing, and loud music, but it isn’t necessary the atmosphere all individuals want to find themselves in after a long day at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. Some want something more laid back.

That’s why coffee-person-extraordinaire (and really, you can take the “coffee” part out of that sobriquet and it will be equally as accurate) Jenn Chen has put together SCA Game Night. Taking place Saturday, April 13th at Pavement Coffeehouse’s 415 Western Ave location, SCA Game Night is a way of mingling with your fellow coffee professionals in a laidback atmosphere without the pressure of drinking.

Now in its third year, the SCA Game Night is Chen’s answer to the typical post-day-at-Expo festivities. “The goal of the night is still the same as it was last year and the year before: to have a ‘party’ that is a quieter alternative to all the other ones out there. I don’t mind going out on SCA nights but crowds of people, loud spaces, and lots of emphasis on drinking just isn’t my thing.” Chen tells Sprudge. “During Game Night, you get a chance to meet industry peers without music drowning out the conversation. It’s a laid-back atmosphere with no pressure to drink alcohol or force conversation beyond talking about your next game move.”

And what would a Game Night be without games? Boxes and boxes of games. Thanks to the generous donations of Pacific Foods‘ Customer Marketing Manager for Specialty Coffee and Head Judge and Committee Chair for the US Barista Championships Nathanael May, there will be “five (5) moving boxes full of games.” And if you happen upon a game you like, you are more than welcome to take it home with you. Or if you’re up to it, throw a board game or two into your luggage and bring it Game Night. I’m packing the ever-portable Hey! That’s My Fish that I copped last time I was at Coral Sword. Sprudge Live lead photographer Charlie Burt will probably be bringing a suitcase full of Magic: The Gathering cards if you want to challenge him.

Soft drinks and plant-based snackies will be provided by your favorite coffee journalism, news and culture website Sprudge. Though there will be no kegs or signature cocktails or any other drinking compellers, SCA Game Night isn’t requiring any teetotaling. Alcoholic beverage are available on a BYO basis.

SCA Game Night kicks off promptly at 6:00pm at Pavement Coffeehouse on 415 Western Ave. The event is free to attend and welcome to all Expo attendees and local coffee professionals. For more information—and to post what games you are bringing—visit the SCA Game Night’s Facebook event page.

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 Jenn Chen

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Source: Coffee News

In Dallas, Tracking Merit Coffee’s Texas-Sized Expansion

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merit coffee deep ellum dallas texas

merit coffee deep ellum dallas texas

Merit Coffee’s Deep Ellum cafe.

They say there is no rest for the weary. There is also, unsurprisingly, no rest for those unwilling to slow down. Few know this better than Robby Grubbs, the owner of San Antonio’s Merit Coffee, who has overseen significant statewide expansion in the last 18 months, first into downtown Austin, and now into Dallas. Turns out Merit has a whole lot in store for the Big D, including a stunning new coffee 2,500 sq. ft. coffee bar in the Deep Ellum district of downtown, and overseeing a brand new cafe in the tony Highland Park neighborhood, open this very day of publishing, April 2nd.

merit coffee deep ellum dallas texas

Let’s start with Deep Ellum first. The neighborhood is a Dallas cultural epicenter, but as a district it’s been historically rough on coffee shops (or anything that isn’t a concert venue, bar, or tattoo parlor for that matter). A dearth of nearby housing has for the longest time relegated one of the only walkable areas of the city to a nighttime only destination. A lack of daytime foot traffic is death to coffee shops. But Deep Ellum is seeing that axiom bend—if not break entirely—thanks to revitalization efforts bringing in more businesses and eateries over the past few years that require an audience during sunlight hours.

The newest edition to these efforts is Merit, who is betting big on this changing tide. Working with Austin-based architect Michael Hsu—whose previous work includes Austin favorites Uchi, La Condesa, Sway, and the iconic burger stand P. Terry’s—Merit has transformed the space that was previously home to funky antique store Lula B’s into a modern cafe. What was once a warehouse-like space has been given a total overhaul, including near-floor-to-ceiling windows comprising a majority of the southern- and eastern-most walls that allow in lots of natural light throughout the day, imparting a sense of openness to the cafe.

merit coffee dallas texas

Inside, the space’s antique shop past life is equally unrecognizable from the clean, buttoned-up cafe in its place. Through the front doors, guests are greeted by white counter-topped light wood bar offsetting the not-quite-navy-not-quite navy backsplash tiles, a nod to Merit’s preferred color palate. A matter-of-fact white lettered, light-wooded menu board along with the pastry case full of tasty treats from local Bisous Bisous Pâtisserie give subtle cues to how, where, and what to order. Following the bar space back, a pour-over station consisting of two Modbar modules jut from the clean counterspace, where baristas make single-serve coffees via Kalita Wave brewers with coffee ground through the white Mahlkönig EK-43 sitting at the right angle bend of the bar, the demarcation between the brewed coffee and espresso sections of the bar. For espresso-based drinks, Merit has stuck with the white Mahlkönig/Modbar combo but have switched it up to include to PEAK grinders, three espresso modules, and two steam valves from Modbar’s new AV line.

The remainder of the space is divided between tables, zig-zag bench seating, and a glass-encased training center where Merit will host wholesale clients and other training classes.

merit coffee deep ellum dallas texas

There are no half-measures in this build-out. No bets have been hedged. Even as a relatively unknown brand to the Dallas consumer—save for the occasional guest spot at Communion in Richardson—and opening in a difficult part of town for coffee shops, Merit is going all-in. For Grubbs, a former Dallas resident whose ties include opening the Texas’ first Starbucks here some two decades ago (not to mention meeting his spouse just a few blocks away), the timing was right for the move. “Dallas felt like the natural direction to go,” Grubbs tells Sprudge. “The opportunity presented itself thru the Developer, Asana. We met them through a deal in Austin and we fell in love with their portfolio and their history of doing things right. We realized that we are a little early in what we believe is a killer transition in Deep Ellum, which made it even more attractive. We are super stoked about attracting more daytime traffic here.”

The Deep Ellum cafe is just the first step in Merit’s plan to grow their presence in Dallas. The second Dallas outpost is located in the Highland Park neighborhood—next to what Grubbs tells me is the “busiest Drybar in the country”—opens today. Building two shops simultaneously in a brand new city is an aggressive growth strategy, but as Grubbs explains, “We knew we wanted at least two locations. It just so happened Deep Ellum and Highland Park came on the radar at the same time and both were too good to pass up.”

merit coffee dallas texas

Merit Coffee’s now-open Highland Park location.

Merit will also ramp up wholesale efforts in Dallas once they’ve gained a bit more of a footing in the city. In order to meet the demand, the San Antonio-based roastery commissioned a 45-kilo Probat roaster, up from the two 25-kilo and one 12-kilo Probats they currently run.

Once the two new cafes get up and running and the wholesale program is humming along, surely Grubbs is going to slow down, right? Nope. Even with all this Dallas activity, Merit has been simultaneously developing a third Austin location. That will bring the total count of locations for the Merit/Local family of coffee bars up to 11 here in 2019, making them inarguably the most prolific and expansive of the new generation of Texas independent coffee companies. That it’s all come at such a blistering pace over the last two years is nothing short of astonishing.

Grubbs closed my interview with him by teasing further Texas expansion, as well as continued growth and development within the three cities they currently call home. One thing is for certain: Merit is putting a premium on growth, even if it comes at the detriment of sleep. If the opportunity too good to pass up comes along during the planned and much-need breather, well, then it’s like Grubbs says: “Plans schmans.”

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

Introducing Hot Sprudge

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We are excited to announce a new era of our publishing platform with a brand new product that we’ve been developing for the ten years we’ve been around. It is our namesake, and it’s something that we think will change the way you eat—and perhaps the way you live. We’re calling it Sprudge.

Sprudge chocolate coffee fudge drizzled upon a scoop of coffee ice cream.

It starts with espresso and chocolate fudge using the finest coffee and bean-to-bar chocolate. We use a time-tested recipe in development for nearly a decade to bring you a rich, flavorful, and yes, plant-based coffee fudge.

Sprudge smothers and covers a rich bowl of chocolate brownies.

We take this fudge and transform it into a remarkable dipping and dripping sauce, now available to ship worldwide. Hot Sprudge Sauce, the world’s first single-origin espresso bean-to-bar chocolate sauce. Drizzle it upon just about anything. But we warn you—it’s truly decadent.

Heating tips: always remove lid before heating. Do not overheat product. Jar may be hot after heating; handle with hot pad. As contents are used, less heating time is needed. Microwave: place open jar in microwave at high (100%) 1 minute; stir. Heat at high an additional 20 seconds at a time until warm; stir after each heating. Stovetop: place open jar in pan of simmering water; heat 3 to 5 minutes until warm, stirring often.

Available now in the webshop. Limited quantities—so act now!

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Source: Coffee News

The Coffee Sprudgecast: US Brewers Cup Champs Kaley Gann and Rose Woodard

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We’re back in Kansas City for part two of our special SprudgeLive Coffee Sprudgecast series. These episodes will take you to the event floor at the 2019 US Coffee Championships in Kansas City. There we join multimedia director Elizabeth Chai, who—in addition to helming our must-follow Instagram coverage of the event—taped a series of original interviews for this week’s episode of the podcast.


Check out The Coffee Sprudgecast on iTunes or download the episode hereThe Coffee Sprudgecast is sponsored by  Oxo, Urnex Brands, Hario, IKAWA Sample Roasters and Swiss Water Decaf

In this episode, Chai talks to 2018 United States Brewers Cup Champion Rose Woodard. Woodard used the final three minutes of her routine to call for equality and fairness for all competitors. “The standards these competitors are held to are that of a white, male, heteronormative perspective,” Woodard told the judges. “That’s a major issue that needs to change before we can make progress in this industry.” Read more about this routine here.

Kaley Gann performs at the 2019 United States Brewers Cup (Photo by Elizabeth Chai)

Chai then interviews 2019 United States Brewers Cup Champion Kaley Gann (Messenger Coffee). Chai spoke with Gann on finals day—moments before learning she’d become this year’s champion. Gann will compete in Boston at the World Brewers Cup Championship in a few short weeks.

Sign up now as a subscriber to the Coffee Sprudgecast and never miss an episode. 

Listen, subscribe and review The Coffee Sprudgecast on iTunes.

Download the episode here.

Sprudge Media Network’s coverage of the 2019 US Coffee Champs is made possible by Joe Glo and Mahlkönig. All of SprudgeLive’s 2019 competition coverage is made possible by Acaia, Baratza, FaemaCafe Imports, and Wilbur Curtis.

Sprudge is an official media partner of US Coffee Championships.

Follow @SprudgeLive on Twitter and never miss a moment from the shows, and cruise over to SprudgeLive.com to read routine recaps, and enjoy dynamic full-color photos.

2019 Sprudge Live coverage is produced by Zac Cadwalader. Our lead photographer is Charlie Burt. Multimedia direction by Elizabeth Chai.

See y’all in Boston!

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Source: Coffee News

Austin: Rover Concept Mingles Coffee With Progressive Fine Dining

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Coffee dinners are not a new concept. We’ve covered quite a few of them on Sprudge over the years and they all have a similar underlying mode: a coffee company teams up with a chef or restaurant to bring the two worlds together. Sometimes this means pairing coffee with food, sometimes it means using coffee as a component of a dish, sometimes both. But generally, it is a person from the coffee world working with someone from the culinary world to find the middle ground.

But a new dining experience is happening in Austin where the coffee person and the culinary person are one and the same. Created by former Fleet Coffee barista and ninth-place finisher at the 2018 US Barista Championship Brandon Acuña, Rover Concept is a “progressive American ultra-fine dining experience” and they are now taking reservations. Oh, and it’s a pop-up.

Inspired by James Beard Award-winning chef Grant Achatz of Alinea in Chicago, Acuña tells Sprudge he wants to use Rover as “a way to show a new type of thinking,” one that “looks at every detail equally,” from the food to the spoons used during service to the light to the temperature of the room. The idea for Rover began to codify for Acuña while working at Fleet preparing his routine for the US Barista Championship. Working with Lorenzo Perkins and Patrick Pierce, Acuña wanted to do something different than the regular routine, to find the gray areas in the rules and do things that weren’t necessarily allowed but weren’t specifically disallowed. It was this same sort of thinking he wanted to apply to the culinary world. After placing ninth, Acuña was given the opportunity to work the front-of-house at Alinea for a few months before returning to Austin to begin his ambitious new project.

As a dining experience without a permanent address, Rover is Acuña’s answer to the question “how can I take a Michelin-level concept to the consumer without an address?” Being held at a currently undisclosed location on Austin’s east side—an event space “a lot of people visit frequently” that Acuña doesn’t want to name because he “[doesn’t] want people to have a preconceived idea of what to expect”—a total of 10 dinners will take place between May 23rd and June 9th.

“Stone Fruit”

Each dinner will feature a 10 to 14 course tasting menu, each with coffee playing a factor. For some courses, it’s about rethinking how coffee is served (Gesha snow, anyone?). In others, it could be playing off a word or phrase common in the coffee world, like the “Stone Fruit” course. Using the idea that a stone fruit is a drupe as is the coffee cherry, this course involves a white flesh peach poached in sous vide burnt heavy cream, served on top of a cultured version of that same heavy cream, with an Ethiopia YirgZ espresso thickened with a cold soluble form of gelatin and molded into the shape of a peach pit.

Tickets for Rover Concept’s “Coffee” experience are available via their website for $150 and include wine and cocktail pairings. If all goes well with this first installment, Acuña says he would like to take Rover on the road and is currently eyeing 10 cities in the Midwest and on the coasts. Currently, the first two dates have already sold out over a month in advance, so signs are looking good that this new coffee concept may be coming to a city near you. For more information, visit Rover Concept’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.

All photos by Nicholas Friesen for Rover Concept.

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Source: Coffee News

Coffee Design: CBD-Infused Abracadabra Coffee Chill Brew

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Who among us doesn’t like cracking into a beautifully designed can of cold brew? Our friends at Abracadabra teamed up with Vermont’s Luce Farm to create a crushable coffee chill brew infused with 20mg of hemp-derived CBD. Abracadabra asked designers Dang Olsen and Andrew Plotsky to help design the can—using magical elements and a psychedelic color story. Olsen designed Abracadabra’s cold brew cans all the way back in 2017. This time around, the cans are brighter and a little more colorful and even sport a custom typeface. We spoke with Clint Hunt to learn more.

Tell us more about the collaboration between Abracadabra and Luce Farm.

Our relationship developed over a nasty winter last year when mass amounts of CBD and coffee were pivotal to our happy survival. Our companies immediately vibed and we knew a collaboration was brewing. Our businesses are very similar in regards to sustainability, quality, and transparency. We are super passionate about sourcing, roasting, and brewing the tastiest, nuanced, out of this world coffees. Luce Farm is involved fully from growing their own dope ass hemp plants organically on their farm in Vermont, to extracting and producing their delicious full spectrum nectar with intense love and care.

How long was Chill Brew in development before its launch last summer?

We started experimenting in December 2017 with different single origin coffees, processing methods, brew ratios and CBD dosages. We canned a multitude of test batches which we tried throughout the winter months before deciding on the final recipe.

There’s 20 mg of hemp-derived CBD in each can. What does it taste like?

We chose this specific coffee to pair with CBD because of how well the taste and aromas complimented each other. This Ethiopia Gedeb coffee is super juicy and clean and when combined with the dank CBD creates an experience that keeps your eyes wide and your vibes chiiiillllllll. Notes of tangerine, caramel, chamomile, and spruce tips levitate from this can.

It’s been out for nearly a year. How has it been received?

It’s been fanfrickingtastic! We have been super stoked and overwhelmed by the positive feedback both in terms of taste and experience.

Tell us about the beautiful packaging—who did the art?

Our art and design boiz Dang Olsen and Andrew Plotsky cold crushed it. We took an image of a shirt, hand tie-dyed by Dang, to use for the soft colors of the background. Dang hand drew the squiggly alphabet for us which Andrew used to create the official ABRACADANG font. Dang drew all the dreamy psychedelic illustrations you see throughout the can and Andrew combined all the magick elements together.

Is CBD-infused coffee the future?

CBD coffee is now…THC coffee is the future.

Where is it available?

We just recently made it available via our website. Get it offline y’all. We distribute throughout Vermont, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island currently and are looking to expand into all of New England and the world, and beyond the world, we’re looking at you outer space.

How much is it?

You can cop a can for $8 or a 4 pack for $28. Cheap coffee ain’t good and good coffee ain’t cheap.

Thanks!

Company: Abracadabra Coffee
Location: Vermont
Country: USA
Designer: Dang Olsen & Andrew Plotsky
Release Date: 2018

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

Linea Caffe Returns Home For A New San Francisco Location

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Linea Caffe La Boulangerie de San Francisco

Linea Caffe La Boulangerie de San Francisco

Exciting news coming out of San Francisco as Linea Caffe has announced a new location opening in the Potrero Hill neighborhood. According to a press release, the 5,000-square-foot cafe/roastery is expected to open June 1st.

For Linea Caffe owner Andrew Barnett, the recently announced Mariposa Street location is a homecoming of sorts. Back in 2009, Barnett had just sold his previous business, Ecco Caffè, to Chicago’s Intelligentisa, who at the time were trying to break into the Bay Area. The plan was to for Intelli to open a shop in this exact same location, which Barnett would use to roast The Ecco Project, “designed to showcase the rare varietal, the auction lot, or the result of an experiment hatched between producers who met at our Extraordinary Coffee Workshop,” as Intelligentsia’s then-Director of Marketing Stephen Morrissey told Sprudge at the time.

That cafe never fully came to fruition. Instead, in 2017 Intelli turned it into a roasting space and training lab for their wholesale clients. A year later, the roasting facility shuttered.

The space has now come full circle, with Barnett nearly a decade later finally getting to open the roasting space he had wanted. From the press release:

It’s always been my dream to roast coffee in San Francisco, and to have a place where we could create an experience where our guests can see and smell beautiful coffees being roasted, and appreciate the finished product all at the same time.

The new Linea Caffe will be home to a “vintage German Probat UG-22” as well as the brand new, ergonomics-forward La Marzocco KB90 espresso machine. The space won’t stray too far from its past life as a training facility, with Barnett planning to continue to offer educational opportunities for wholesale clients and retail customers alike. According to the press release, the new café will offer “pastries from Dogpatch baker, Neighbor Bakehouse, whole leaf teas from Song Tea and matcha from Mizuba, and organic milk and alternative milk options from Straus Family Creamery and Oatly.”

It appears that good things do come to those who wait, even if sometimes, the good thing was what you thought you had 10 years ago. For more information, visit Linea Caffe’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 Better Together: San Francisco’s Linea Caffe And La Boulangerie Team Up

Disclosure: Linea Caffe is an advertising partner with the Sprudge Media Network

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Source: Coffee News

Counter Culture Goes Pop-Up With New York City Cafe Series

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I don’t think I’m telling any tales outside of school when I say that New York City has one of the best coffee scenes in America. The number of high quality cafes in the Big Apple could easily number in the hundreds, a fact that even as I write this I can’t help but balk at. But there’s a problem: NYC is so big that even the most well-traveled coffee seeker may not have experienced some of the best shops the city has to offer. That’s why Counter Culture is hosting Pop Culture, a brand new pop-up series taking place at their Broome Street Training Center in New York. Starting in April, Counter Culture will turn over the keys to shop to different NYC cafes to bring a world of different coffee services under one roof.

For the inaugural Pop Culture, Counter Culture has teamed up with six different cafes from around New York City, who will each get two consecutive weekends to display their particular brand of coffee service as well as do a few experimental things they may not normally be able to do in their day-to-day cafe life. “New York has got so many visions for what coffee service can and should look like,” Counter Culture’s Matt Banbury tells Sprudge. “[Pop Culture] gives us the opportunity to showcase what makes our partnership unique with these shops.”

Shops participating in this series include: Little Collins, Little Skips, Southside Coffee, Everyman Espresso, Chalait, and Swallow. Each will be interpreting their time at the Training Center however they see fit. Little Collins, for instance, will be serving different toasts as well as heralding the oncoming summer months with an affogato made with Counter Culture’s natural processed Buziraguhindwa from Kayanza, Burundi. There’s even talk of a bit of a fun educational angle about potato defect in coffee and it may or may not include a side of potato chips. Everyman Espresso, on the other hand, will be turning the Training Center into more of a gallery space. Serving a menu focused on Ethiopian coffee, Everyman has plans of bringing in clothing designers and hosting an event with Sarina Prabasi, author of the soon to be released The Coffee House Resistance: Brewing Hope in Desperate Times.

And speaking of clothing, Counter Culture will be releasing a series of limited edition shirts and merch celebrating Pop Culture, which will only be available for purchase at the NYC Training Center.

Branbury tells Sprudge that if all goes well, he’d like to see Pop Culture travel to other Training Centers around the country, perhaps even bringing non-local Counter Culture accounts to takeover for a weekend. But for now, some really great New York shops and giving a whole new set of New Yorkers a chance to see and taste what they are all about.

For more information on Pop Culture and updates on the different pop-up events, make sure you are following Counter Culture on Instagram.

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

All images via Counter Culture

Disclosure: Counter Culture is an advertising partner with the Sprudge Media Network

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Source: Coffee News

Inside Bosgaurus, Ho Chi Minh City’s Stunning Multi-Story Cafe

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bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

Opened in February 2016, Bosgaurus was built on the space of a modern mansion facing the Saigon river in the Saigon Pearl neighborhood—a 15-minute commute from Ho Chi Minh City’s District 1. The city has many already established specialty coffee shops, namely The Workshop, Shin Coffee, and Saigon Coffee Roastery, but there are reasons that merit one’s trip out to this part of the city for a latte. Good coffee and beautiful aesthetics: Bosgaurus has both.

Nguyen Canh Hung, owner and roaster of Bosgaurus, formerly worked as an engineer before his European business trips guided him to specialty coffee: “I drank a lot of coffee during my stays in different cities in the world, but only after I had been to Berlin and Amsterdam did I know about specialty coffee,” he says. Despite being a “coffee layman,” as Nguyen puts it, “I could sense the fruitiness and sweetness aftertaste in my cup of filter coffee. That was an experience I didn’t have in Vietnam—despite it being a coffee-producing country.”

bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

Nguyen signed up for some SCAE courses and went on to hone his roasting skill with roasteries around the world, including Boot Coffee, Maruyama Coffee, and April Coffee Roasters before he opened Bosgaurus. Nguyen named his coffee shop after a species of bison native to Southeast Asia facing the risk of extinction; Bosgaurus the cafe similarly carries a dream of keeping Vietnamese coffee on the world map.

The cafe resembles a laboratory, with tones of grey and white made up by transparent frameless glass walls and stainless steel bar, tables, bar stools, and chairs. This design might startle locals, as the classic Vietnamese cafe tends to be filled with wooden tables accompanied by yellow ambient lighting, which casts a warm glow upon the sitting areas. But at Bosgaurus, it works, thanks to the nearby parks and trees with vibrant green foliage that brings a refreshing feel to the space.

You’re at first greeted by baristas standing behind the counter of Bosgaurus’ most astonishing piece of design: the flybar. Made from unibody stainless steel, the flybar is 9.6 meters long and 0.8 meters wide, and weighs almost 800kg, suspended from the ceiling of the first floor, yet remains surprisingly sturdy. It bears the additional weight of coffee equipment, including Synesso Hydra and Mahlkönig grinders. Filter selections are offered via Hario V60.

bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

I had the pleasure of spending a long week frequenting Bosgaurus. At the time of my visit, the cafe was offering tasting flights with several single origins from Ethiopia, Kenya, and El Salvador sourced from Project Origin, a pulped natural Catuaí from Brazil, and exclusive lots of anaerobic and aerobic washed Catimor from Vietnam through a direct trade relationship with Pham Manh Hung.

While espresso-based beverages were served with a Colombian blend, all filter roasts were also available as espresso on request. At Bosgaurus, every detail matters, so coffees are dialed in every morning with a refractometer, and recipes are written down to keep track of the changes. Taking a step down to the basement, guests can see the glass warehouse where all the coffee is stored. The warehouse is constantly kept at a temperature of 20–22˚C with humidity around 50–60%.

Maintaining consistent quality in specialty coffee is a challenge, yet Nguyen has partners to back him up. Bosgaurus is home to talented baristas, notably Tran Han—two-time Vietnamese Barista Champion. Vu Tran Nguyen Anh, the reigning Vietnamese Barista Champion, also worked and trained by Bosgaurus at the time of her winning.

bogaurus coffee ho chi minh city vietnam

Typically, coffees at Bosgaurus are roasted light, as Nguyen prefers to showcase a coffee’s flavor complexities while preserving regional characteristics. But Nguyen also offers dark roasts for customers who want a traditional espresso. “I’ve got something for everyone, as I don’t want a new customer to be intimidated by this whole new coffee concept,” said Nguyen. Dark roasts are also used in Ca phe Sua da, a traditional coffee drink in Vietnam brewed on Phin with a layer of condensed milk in the bottom. Aside from coffee, brunches and tropical fruit juices are also served at Bosgaurus—and don’t miss out—they also have one of the best waffles in town.

Tung Nguyen is a freelance journalist based in Vietnam. Read more Tung Nguyen for Sprudge.

The post Inside Bosgaurus, Ho Chi Minh City’s Stunning Multi-Story Cafe appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News