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Specialty Coffee Archives - Page 29 of 40 - The Curb Kaimuki

Coffee Design: Tocaya Torradores De Café In Minas Gerais

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The coffee roasting company Tocaya Torradores de Café in Itajubá, Minas Gerais serves single-origin specialty coffee from Brazil. The majority of the coffee comes from the Mantiqueira de Minas region and the founder Juliana Ganan maintains relationships with many of the producers they source from. The packaged debuted on July 4th, 2018 as a total rebrand with help from three of Juliana’s friends. We spoke with Ganan to learn more.

Tell us a bit about your company.

Tocaya Torradores de Café is a small coffee roastery located in Itajubá, Minas Gerais (in the Mantiqueira de Minas microregion). I’m actually located in the building right next to the one that used to house my father’s roastery. He roasted commercial-grade coffee produced on our farm until the year he passed away in 2000. Many people still knock on the door because of the smell thinking we are the same company, then I’ll go and explain that I’m his daughter and this roastery only roasts specialty coffee and so on.

Who designed the package?

The package was designed by three friends I made when we did a creative entrepreneurship course together in São Paulo, back in 2015: André Abe, Cristiane Calegaro, and Katia Oliveira. They each work individually as freelance designers but they got together as a collective to create my brand from scratch. Since they already knew me and the previous brand, it only made sense they were the ones responsible for the new packages. Abe is our web designer as well.

What coffee information do you share on the package? 

In the front, we have varying colored labels (following Fabiana Carvalho‘s research mentions on the relationship between color-expectation of taste) showing the farm name, city/state, producer name, variety, elevation, drying process, and roast date. In the back, we share a little bit of our story and encourage customers to pay more attention to coffee quality.


We wanted to show the origin and processing information to the customers. Although we live in a producing country, it’s still somewhat unusual to actually know where your coffee came from. Sometimes they will say the region/state, but it won’t be so accurate as to determine the farm/producer. We are a part of a small group of roasters that want to change that perception. In the back we make a plea: “wherever this coffee takes you, may the efforts of its producing chain be properly acknowledged.”

Why are aesthetics in coffee packaging so important?

Because it’s the first thing you pay attention to. When we participate in events to the general public, sometimes people approach us for the packages, then they get to know what’s inside. In my opinion, aesthetics are a way of honoring what is inside, too.

Where is it currently available?

All our current coffees are available online here.

Thank you!

Disclosure: Juliana Ganan is a contributor for the Sprudge Media Network.

Company: Tocaya Torradores de Café
Location: Itajubá, Minas Gerais
Country: Brazil
Release Date: July 2018
Designer: André Abe, Cristiane Calegaro, and Katia Oliveira

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

Konbi: The Next Great LA Cafe Is A Japanese Lunch Counter

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konbi los angeles california

konbi los angeles california

Photo courtesy of Alicia Cho

Blink as you drive by and you might miss it—hit the United Oil station and you’ve gone too far—but tucked onto a corner of Sunset Boulevard as it winds its way through Echo Park is Konbi, an extraordinary new Japanese sandwich and coffee shop. This part of the city is no stranger to good coffee; the original LA location of Intelligentsia is just down the way, and within a few miles either direction there are spots like Dinosaur Coffee, Winsome, Eightfold, Triniti, Dayglow, Woodcat, FrankieLucy Bakeshop, and many more, not to mention the Go Get Em Tiger on Hollywood, just past where Sunset curves west. And yet here, in this tiny little narrow room that feels flown in wholesale from Japan, owners Akira Akuto and Nick Montgomery have created a unique concept that’s already doing the rarest thing in spoilt-for-choice Los Angeles: drawing a crowd.

The first thing one notices walking in is the size. Much like the famous konbinis of Japan this cafe is long and narrow, pleasantly streamlined to keep the focus on the meal. Guests sit at a low lunch counter, facing into a long galley kitchen where the food is prepared. Coffee service at the front window is achieved in an incredibly efficient space. Their under-counter Mavam Espresso machine, Mahlkönig EK43 grinder, and Curtis brewer are all perfectly staged to minimize movement for the barista and keep the focus on customer needs as well as barista comfort. It’s like a tiny, efficient little miracle that this place works at all—and yet it does.

After the design, the second thing one notices is how quiet Konbi is. Even during the lunch rush, refrigerator doors don’t slam, kitchen wares don’t bang together, voices stay pleasant, and the atmosphere remains tranquil. This is all borne of intentional practice that is reflected in every corner of the restaurant—the walls are white, light wood abounds, and the space uses only natural colors.

konbi los angeles california

Photo courtesy of Alicia Cho

konbi los angeles california

Photo by Alicia Cho.

The menu at Konbi is tautly focused. Sandwiches take center stage, including the rightly lauded (and heavily Instagram’d) pork katsu sandwich, which pairs perfectly with a small cup of miso soup. I actually preferred the egg salad sandwich—fluffy, ethereal, served on perfectly light bread from Bub and Grandma’s. Williamsburg Japanese tea stars Kettl Tea provides the shop’s range of tea offerings, including iced sencha and a stand-out houjicha latte, a tea-based steamed milk drink which lands somewhere in the realm of a chai latte, albeit less sweet and more roundly complex, with earthy, toasty notes.

Coffee service at Konbi comes courtesy of Camber Coffee, a boutique roaster based in Bellingham, WA and featured previously on Sprudge. Beverage Director Jacqueline Vaca (Intelligentsia, DTLA Cheese) vows to only serve coffees that are approachable—high quality drinks with accessibility at the forefront. Currently, Konbi is the only Camber-exclusive account in LA, but don’t come looking for retail whole bean sales just yet. “Where would we put it?” Vaca laughs—the restaurant is just that small. Each cup sparkles, brewed with the kind of conscientious precision that can only come from expertise and careful attention. Vaca wants every level of coffee and tea consumer to feel welcome at Konbi, and so each interaction is intentional, focused on helping the customer get the drink they want with a personal and intimate service style that’s a perfect match for Konbi’s intentional, seasonal food and traditional pastries.

konbi los angeles california

Photo by Alicia Cho.

Akuto and Montgomery both have strong restaurant backgrounds. They’ve worked as chefs in both LA and New York (including at Momofuku), but neither had worked in specialty coffee. Nevertheless, they intended to hold the beverage program to the same standards of excellence and knew they needed someone from the industry to helm it. They brought on Vaca as their Beverage Director, who first learned coffee in Melbourne 10 years ago. Today, there are only three full-time baristas on staff, and together they have an astounding 30+ years combined experience serving coffee, but they aren’t resting on their laurels. If someone is interested, Vaca has an open door policy about coffee education for everyone on the team. They’re all happy to pass along the wealth of knowledge that comes with such a remarkable level of experience.

konbi los angeles california

Nick Montgomery and Akira Akuto.

konbi los angeles california

Photo by Alicia Cho.

Akuto and Montgomery believe a “staff-focused” approach is part of what makes Konbi special. “This is an egoless environment,” Akuto tells me—a tiny boat the team is all on together, where anyone is free to make suggestions. “Our motto is to make Konbi better every day,” Akuto adds. So far it’s working.

After a wildly busy fall opening (the restaurant literally ran out of food), today the neighborhood has settled in around the shop, albeit with a firmly Echo Park vibe. Regulars have long since become friends, but you never know who is next though the door. The nomadic foodie crowd has officially discovered Konbi, and people come from all over the world now, sometimes with their luggage in tow, each one finding their place in the narrow little room to eat delicious daytime foods, take in the calm, intentional vibe, and drink great coffee.

Konbi is located at 1463 Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Valorie Clark (@TheValorieClark) is a freelance journalist based in Los Angeles. Read more Valorie Clark on Sprudge.

All photos by Alicia Cho.

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Source: Coffee News

Take It Down A Notch, Australia

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Australia, I love you, you know I love you, but some of y’all need to be on a daily regimen of high-dose chill pills.

Case in point: a recent article in The Guardian examines how World Coffee Research is planting 35 different coffee varieties in 23 countries to see how they perform in different climates. WCR’s goal, according to the article, is to find potentially suitable new coffeelands to meet a growing demand all the while climate change shifts where coffee can be produced. Now, one of these 23 countries is Australia. So what’s the headline for this article? “The end of coffee: could Australia save the world’s beans?” And the lede line? “Climate change may devastate the globe’s major coffee-growing regions through extreme weather events – but Australia could be the solution.”

Wut?

If that makes you not want to read the article, I get it, I’m right there with you. But I did anyway because, y’know, it’s my job. The article includes such very Australian assertions like how this trial may be “Australia’s most significant contribution to coffee since the flat white” (a drink created in New Zealand). But it does somehow keep from patting itself on the back for coming up with the American invention of avocado toast, which I guess counts as restraint these days.

The article’s argument in favor of Australia’s coffee savio(u)rdom points specifically to two things that the country lacks: coffee leaf rust and coffee cherry borers, two scourges to coffee in already established producing countries. Which is true, these things don’t exist in Australia, a country that doesn’t currently produce in any marked quantities the thing these two blights feed upon.

But what of the 50 or so farmers in Australia currently growing coffee? Surely, they will be some sort of bellwether for this great white hype. One grower, Zeta Greely, describes the “increasingly difficult” conditions she is facing.

“In the past we had fabulous conditions, a lovely microclimate for coffee,” she says. “It used to look rainforest-y around here, now it’s very sparse. It has been a gradual change – where once we’d be getting two metres of rainfall, [across 2018] we had less than one.

“Our crop actually didn’t happen this time, we had overripe cherries and completely green cherries, flowers on the tree – not what we want. So we decided to strip the trees and get them ready for next year.”

It’s almost as if Australia will face all the same problems with climate change that the rest of the world is poised to undergo.

Now, I’m not wishing any sort of ill on any Australian coffee farmers nor am I saying that we shouldn’t be exploring potentially new areas for production. In fact, I hope that coffee trees take in Australia and it becomes a thriving new origin. I also hope the coffee plants do well in the 22 other countries the WCR is currently researching, the ones that aren’t talking about saving coffee.

Australia, you have some of the best coffee cities in the entire world, it’s an undeniable fact and anyone who says otherwise is either delusional or bitter. A lot of what you do trickles out to the rest of the world and makes all of our coffee scenes better places. I’ve got nothing but love for you (and maybe a smarmy tone from time to time). All I’m saying is, just relax. The rumors of you saving coffee have been greatly exaggerated.

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

The Coffee Lover’s Guide To Nashville

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nashville tennessee coffee guide

Barbecue joints, honky-tonks, and line dancing often come to mind when thinking of Nashville, but that’s changing. The past five years have seen unprecedented growth. What was once a sleepy town with an electric center is becoming a bustling cityscape, complete with a rising downtown skyline and standstill freeways. Bachelorette parties may now be rivaling country music for our main draw, but the cultural shift has also brought a formidable coffee scene to Music City.

Coffee shops have quickly become popular places to escape shrieking car horns and brake dust. With discerning palates rising in the greater population, Nashville cafes see an increased willingness by the customer to give their barista time to complete a pour-over or assemble an intricate seasonal drink. This has allowed shops to devote attention to drink quality and overall atmosphere.

The following is a list of some of Nashville’s most noteworthy coffee shops, places which provide a menu and an experience unique and carefully tailored to their space. These shops span the length of the city, bringing solid coffee options to a variety of neighborhoods. No matter where you find yourself, a good cup is nearby.

nashville tennessee coffee guide

Stay Golden Restaurant & Roastery

Stay Golden Restaurant & Roastery may have opened as recently as August, but its roots in the Nashville coffee scene run deep. Co-founders Jamie Cunningham, Sean Stewart, and Nathanael Mehrens also helped bring another Nashville staple, Steadfast Coffee, to life.

The marble coffee counter greets you as you walk in the door. It leads around the corner to eight stools along the bar with hi-top tables and booths behind. A balcony looms above with more seating. The robin’s-egg-blue accents on the white walls match a La Marzocco Linea PB espresso machine, which sits next to two Nuova Simonelli Mythos One grinders.

Their own Chin Up Blend is a nice mix of Peruvian and Guatemalan beans, which comes through both mellow and sweet in a cappuccino. However, the specialty drinks alone are worth a visit. The team behind Matchless Coffee Soda brings its creativity to a host of “augmented drinks.” These include the Calypso, which is a mix of flash-chilled coffee, falernum, aromatic cream, and pineapple dust, and is downright delicious. The Coffee Mint Julep is a coffee cocktail made with frozen coffee crushed to order with a hammer, brandy, demerara sugar, and is garnished with mint. Each drink is thoughtfully prepped, constructed, and presented—making Stay Golden worth the fanfare.

Stay Golden Restaurant & Roastery is located at 2934 Sidco Drive #130, Nashville. Visit their official website and follow them on Instagram and Facebook.

 

nashville tennessee coffee guide

Sump Coffee

Sump Coffee became a destination for serious coffee drinkers as soon as it opened the doors to its Nashville location in late 2017. The company’s St. Louis location and roastery had already drawn nationwide praise for its attention to detail and flavor profiling.

Sump Nashville is spacious. High ceilings and tall windows blur the lines between the concrete floor of the space and the green field just beyond the patio seating. A couch and coffee table made of reclaimed wood anchors the center of the inside seating area, rounded out with small tables and a few stools along the bar.

Their roasts lean toward the lighter side of the spectrum, to the point of occasionally being referred to as “sushi coffee.” This allows for the skill of the barista and the quality of the coffee bean to show through. We recently sat down with owner Scott Carey to discuss Sump’s first year here, and the lessons Nashville has taught him.

Sump Coffee is located at 8 City Blvd, Nashville. Visit their official website and follow them on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

 

nashville tennessee coffee guide

Crema Coffee Roasters

Crema Coffee Roasters sits just beyond screaming distance of downtown Nashville’s famed Broadway Street. The wooden patio out front affords a beautiful view of the Korean Veterans Bridge spanning the Cumberland River.

Inside, you’ll find the counter to your right, a plethora of seating to your left, and the roasting room just beyond. The décor is subtle, with one wall covered in portraits and the opposite housing retail items. The customer’s attention is mostly drawn to gaze out at the beautiful view beyond the patio, through large windows which span an entire wall.

A La Marzocco Linea PB sits atop the counter. The Yachi Kachise espresso from Ethiopia is as smooth as it is sweet. The serving tray is perfectly cut to fit the saucer, demitasse spoon, and glass for sparkling water. The presentation is as deliberate and precise as the coffee.

Crema is the oldest shop on our list and is often credited as the first shop in town to bring a higher level of intentionality to coffee service here in Nashville. A visit, if for no other reason than to show respect, is necessary.

Crema Coffee Roasters is located at 15 Hermitage Avenue, Nashville. Visit their official website and follow them on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

 

nashville tennessee coffee guide

Barista Parlor

The original Barista Parlor (there are now five locations) opened in 2012 in the heart of East Nashville. The repurposed transmission shop is marked with a giant anchor over the garage doors where large, illuminated letters spell the cafe’s name.

Inside, you’ll find giant slabs of reclaimed wood acting as tabletops, and hi-top tables mounted along the walls. Swinging Edison bulbs provide light even when the weather allows the garage doors to be raised.

Barista Parlor’s coffee is roasted at their Golden Sound location, which leaves room here for motorcycles to line the front and a full kitchen hidden behind a half-wall toward the back. Dual wooden countertops in the center of the cafe allow the customer to watch every move as the baristas navigate their stations. A Slayer Espresso V3 sits on one side with two Mazzer Luigi grinders. The opposite counter houses the pour-over station, a FETCO urn, and five Yama cold brew towers. A high standard for drink quality has gained nationwide attention and necessitates a visit when in town.

Disclosure: my workplace, Drug Store Coffee, is affiliated with Barista Parlor.

Barista Parlor is located at 519B Gallatin Avenue, Nashville. Visit their official website and follow them on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

 

nashville tennessee coffee guide

Retrograde Coffee

Retrograde Coffee is tucked away in the back of the Cleveland Park neighborhood. The empty lot across the street and adjacent auto shops are shadowed by a future condo building, which perfectly symbolizes the direction of the neighborhood.

The shop itself stands out with a vibrant mural facing south. Inside, white walls are accented with dark green to match the cafe’s La Marzocco GB5. A FETCO XTS batch brewer sits beneath shelves of retail and bags of coffee. A white marble countertop separates the baristas from the ample sitting space, where music plays softly over two large, white speakers.

Retrograde is the only multi-roaster on the list, employing Onyx Coffee from Fayetteville, Arkansas for espresso. Quills Coffee from Louisville and Brash Coffee from Atlanta currently hold down the pour-over offerings.

The Kenya Gachata OT-8 espresso from Onyx is smooth and served with crushed dark chocolate and sparkling water on a wooden tray. The Equinox is an espresso-based drink with honey and sweet potato marshmallow and is delightfully balanced.

Retrograde Coffee is located at 1305 Dickerson Pike, Nashville. Visit their official website and follow them on Instagram and Facebook.

Josh Rank is a freelance contributor based in Nashville. Read more Josh Rank for Sprudge.

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Source: Coffee News

Juan Valdez Is Dead

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Carlos José Sánchez Jaramillo, the actor most famously known for playing Juan Valdez, has passed away at age 83. The New York Times reports that the Colombian actor and painter died on December 29th in Medellín.

Confirmed in an email from the Colombia’s National Federation of Coffee Growers, Sánchez’s death comes some 12 years after his retirement from the role of Juan Valdez, a character he donned for almost 40 years. As the NYT notes, the Valdez character—and by extention Sánchez—was “an indefatigable farmer with a warm expression, a lush mustache and a mule named Conchita” that “became an avatar for the farmers who harvested Colombia’s coffee beans and a positive depiction of a country that was often equated with terrorism and drug trafficking.”

“I presented the image of the Colombian coffee grower, an honest man, hard-working, traditional,” Mr. Sánchez told The New York Times in 2001. “Juan Valdez would get up early, pick coffee, and what happened in time is the character became mythologized.”

The character took home multiple advertising awards and was the mascot for multiple cafes in America named after him, according to the article. It was a role that Sánchez defined, and after 36 years playing him, Valdez became part of Sánchez as well. He described the idea of losing the role—which became a very real possibility when coffee prices dropped in the late 90s—as akin to losing a limb.

“I feel like a flag,” he said at a news conference. “I feel like I’ve represented the country.”

Carlos Sánchez is survived by his wife and two children. Though his spirit lives on through actor Carlos Castañeda, who assumed the icon role back in 2006, there will never truly be another Juan Valdez.

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 the New York Times

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Source: Coffee News

The Tenth Annual Sprudgie Award Winners—Presented By Oatly

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Welcome to the winners announcement for the 10th Annual Sprudgie Awards presented by Oatly, honoring the very best in coffee.

Nominees for each category were chosen by a worldwide public ballot. Public voting for the Sprudgies took place over several weeks in December 2018, with the ballot box closing at 11:59 PM on Friday, January 4th, 2019.

Thanks to the tens of thousands of voters who helped make this the biggest voting field in Sprudgies history. Congratulations to all the nominees—to us, every single 2018 finalist was a winner.

Here they are: the winners, honorees, and finalists for the 10th Annual Sprudgie Awards, presented by Oatly!

Notable Roaster

Winner: Go Get Em Tiger (Los Angeles, CA)

Honoree: Red Bay Coffee (Oakland, CA)

Finalists: Devoción (Brooklyn), Black & White Coffee Roasters (Wake Forest, NC), Square Mile Coffee (London), Gardelli Coffee (Italy), Sey Coffee (Brooklyn), Coffee Manufactory (San Francisco & Los Angeles).

Best New Cafe

Winner: Dayglow Coffee (Los Angeles, CA)

Honoree: Misión Café (Madrid, Spain)

Finalists: Ladder Coffee (Spokane, WA), Mane Coffee (Boca Raton, FL), Provider (Indianapolis, IN), Rosslyn Coffee (London, UK), Center Coffee Myeongdong (Seoul, South Korea), Stumptown Coffee Cobble Hill (Brooklyn, NY).

Sustainable Cafe

Winner:  Smith Canteen (Brooklyn, NY)

Honoree: Isla Cafe (Berlin, Germany)

Finalists: Casa Quilha (Brasilia, Brazil), Bar Nine (Los Angeles, CA), Madcap Coffee (Grand Rapids, MI), Houndstooth Coffee Walnut Hill (Dallas, TX), Kokako Organic (Auckland, New Zealand), Miir Flagship (Seattle, WA).

Best New Product

Winner:  Modbar AV

Honoree:  Umeshiso Cupping Spoons

Finalists: Minor Figures Oat M*lkAtmos Vacuum Canister by Fellow ProductsMelodripYes Plz Coffee SubscriptionDrinkTrade.comHuskee Cup.

Best Coffee Video/Film

Winner: Gender In Coffee

Honoree: James Hoffmann on YouTube

Finalists: Chris Baca on YouTubeAeroPress MovieGo Get Em Tiger on YouTubeCafe Imports Roasting Concepts SeriesFlower Of Flowers by Stumptown CoffeeUnpacking Coffee.

Best Coffee Writing

Winner: Sabine Parrish for She’s A Lady (originally appearing in Standart Magazine)

Honoree:  Dear Coffee Buyer by Ryan Brown

Finalists: James Hoffmann for JimSeven.com, Jenn Chen for Newsletter and Collected Works, Ashley Rodriguez for Barista Magazine OnlineThe Monk Of Mokha by Dave Eggars and Mokhtar Alkhanshali, RJ Joseph for The Knockbox, Phyllis Johnson for Strong Black Coffee (originally appearing in Roast Magazine).

Notable Coffee Producer

Juan Peña (via Cafe Imports)

Winner: Juan Peña, Hacienda La Papaya (Ecuador)

Honoree: Aida Batlle, Aida Batlle Selections (El Salvador)

Finalists: Daterra Coffee (Brazil), Benjamin Paz (Honduras), Long Miles Coffee Project (Burundi), Gesha Village (Ethiopia), La Palma y El Tucan (Colombia), Gilberto Baraona (El Salvador).

Best Coffee Magazine


Winner: Standart (Slovakia)

Honoree: Coffee People Zine (USA)

Finalists: Roast Magazine (USA), Pour Over by Califia Farms (USA), Barista Magazine (USA), Caffeine (UK), Solo Magazine (Spain), Drift Magazine (USA).

Best Design Packaging

Winner: Coffee Manufactory (San Francisco and Los Angeles, CA)

Honoree: Onyx Coffee Lab (Bentonville, AR)

Finalists: Sweet Bloom Coffee Roasters (Lakewood, CO), Brandywine Coffee Roasters (Wilmington, DE), Kaffa (Oslo, Norway), Fjord Coffee Roasters (Berlin, Germany), Lüna Coffee (Vancouver, Canada), Friedhats (Amsterdam, The Netherlands).

Best Coffee Podcast

Winner: Cat & Cloud

Honoree: Boss Barista

Finalists: Keys To The ShopThe Coffee PodcastCoffeaCoffee People MXCoffee With AprilSproCast.

Best Instagram or Twitter Account

Winner: @symmetrybreakfast

Honoree:@coffeefeedpdx

Finliasts: @umeshiso_@dapperandwise, @catcloudcoffee@coffeetablemags@perfectdailygrind@fellowproducts.

Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Excellence

Photo by Josh Zloof.

Winner: Umeko Motoyoshi

Honoree: Agnieszka Rojewska

Finalists: Phyllis Johnson, Michelle Johnson, T. Ben Fischer, Adam JacksonBey, Colleen Anunu.

Lifetime Achievement Award

Erna Knutsen

The 10th Annual Sprudgie Awards are presented by Oatly.

See all past winners of the Sprudgie Awards.

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Source: Coffee News

Wilbur Curtis Company Acquired By French Groupe SEB

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wilbur curtis company facotry coffee brewer machine los angeles california sprudge

wilbur curtis company facotry coffee brewer machine los angeles california sprudge

Coffee’s 2019 mergers and acquisitions watch is officially underway with breaking transatlantic news as Groupe SEB has acquired the Wilbur Curtis Company. The news came down via a press release published earlier today, January 8th.

While itself not necessarily a household name in the US, the French-based Groupe SEB counts company like Krups and Tefal amongst their conglomerate of brands. And now they have added “the second largest American manufacturer of professional coffee goods” to the list.

In the press release, Thierry de La Tour d’Artaise, Chairman and CEO of Groupe SEB, had this to say:

Following the acquisition of WMF in 2016, Groupe SEB confirms its determination to pursue expansion in the professional coffee industry, which offers great development opportunities worldwide. As a specialist in filter coffee machines in the United States, Wilbur Curtis represents for the Group -that is already present on this market with Schaerer and WMF full-automatic espresso machines- a very valuable strategic complement to its product offering and customer portfolio. As a result, Groupe SEB becomes one of the leaders in the professional coffee business in the United States.

The acquisition is expected to be finalized some time later next month after passing the “customary regulatory clearances.” The total amount of the sale has yet to be disclosed as well as any potential plans for the Montebello, California-based Curtis production facility—and its 300 employees—profiled here on Sprudge.

We’ve reached out to the Wilbur Curtis Company for comment and will provide any updates in this article. For more information, read the official statement from Groupe SEB here.

This story is developing. Check back for updates.

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

Disclosure: Wilbur Curtis Co is an advertising partner with the Sprudge Media Network.

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Source: Coffee News

Commodity Coffee Prices Expected To Rise In 2019

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A big topic of conversation in 2018 was the abysmally low coffee prices on the commodities market. The per-pound price didn’t just dip below a dollar, but stayed there, bottoming out around the 94 cent mark. The prices have since started to move in the right direction, though very slowly, and currently sit above the dollar mark at $1.04, which is still untenably low. But according to Bloomberg, the 2019 forecast is a bit brighter as coffee prices are expected to average $1.24 per pound.

The predicted price is up nine cents over last year’s average, but the reason for the increase isn’t necessarily a positive one. According to Bloomberg, the historically low prices of 2018 are likely to reduce the incentive for coffee farmers to expand their production. And with a coffee arms race brewing in China, demand is expected to increase while the supply stagnates, leading to the inflation in price.

While this not entirely modest increase is welcomed, the forecasted price is still a far cry from a sustainable level. According to research performed by the SCA, the price threshold for profitability for a coffee farmer sits around $2.50 per pound, double the projected average.

The expected price increase is nonetheless a step in the right direction, be it a baby step. It is still going to take many giant leaps for coffee prices come anywhere close to healthy levels.

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 Tanawatpontchour/Adobe Stock

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Source: Coffee News

Write For Sprudge! We Want Your Stories In 2019

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Writers! Photographers! Illustrators! Videoists! Lend us your pitches—this is an all-call for new content contributors on Sprudge Media Network, home to Sprudge, the world’s most popular coffee publication.

Since 2009 Sprudge has pioneered original coffee journalism from around the world, and today our global network of writers and photographers help lead the way for how coffee is understood by the world at large. For 2019—our tenth year in the biz—we’re seeking to widen our pool of contributors around the world, and in the process continuing to advance the field of coffee writing to include new voices and perspectives.

We’re looking for smart, thoughtful, original writing and vivid photojournalism from writers and photographers this world over. Whether you’re a pro freelancer with a hundred clips under your belt, or an emerging voice looking for that very first paid feature assignment or photo commission, we want to hear from you today as we set our editorial calendar for the year to come.

So pitch us! We love all kinds of story ideas so please don’t be shy. But to help hone your concepts, here’s a couple things we’d love to see:

Original longform journalism — This can be focused on any sort of big idea, meaningful node or cultural trend, but we’re especially keen to hear pitches focused on telling stories from coffee growing countries.

Cafe spotlights and city guides — Tell the world where to go in the places you know best. Travelers use and trust our city guides as an essential resource, and we’re looking to aggressively grow this part of our coverage platform.

Intersectionality — Coffee is inherently interrelated to social categorizations such as race, class, and gender. In 2019 Sprudge will continue its work exploring the overlap between coffee and society, and we want your pitches on these and other topics tied into coffee as an interdependent cultural system.

News — We’re expanding our daily news coverage in 2019 and looking to add to our team of regular contributors. This means writers with their finger on the pulse of the industry and a burning desire to contribute regularly.

Gear — We’re taking submissions on the latest and greatest in coffee gear and tech, and seeking contributors who might be able to walk the show floor for us at upcoming coffee trade shows.

Photojournalism — We regularly pair up writers and photographers to produce industry-leading coffee journalism around the world. In addition, we’re seeking contributors with a unique visual eye to help guide our ongoing series of Instagram takeovers. If you’re a journalist with a keen visual perspective please, get in touch.

Artist collaborators — Sprudge works with (or seeks to work with) a wide network of creatives, including visual artists, designers, videoists, cartoonists, musicians, impressionists, poets, fiction writers, social critics, new media Dadaists and general coffee provocateurs. If you can dream it, pitch us—there’s no idea too bold. (Well, maybe some, but we want to hear those the most.)

Pitch us at submissions@sprudge.com—that’s submissions@sprudge.com—and we’re looking forward to speaking with you more in 2019. Sprudge is an independently owned, content-driven publication, operated by editors and founders who live and breath coffee culture. Come be a part of our contributor corps, and together let’s tell the coffee stories that matter.

That email address again is submissions@sprudge.com.

The post Write For Sprudge! We Want Your Stories In 2019 appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News

Coffee, Alcohol, And A Few Extra Pounds May Be The Key To Long Life

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After a delightful holiday season, I’m feeling well-rested if not a bit doughy around the edges, thanks in no small part all the eating and drinking (and coffee) entailed in what is essentially an extended month-long hang with friends and family. Normally, at the strike of the New Year, I’d decided it’s time to get my literal ass in shape, but after reading a study from the University of California, Irvine, I’m saying, “nah.” As detailed by Travel + Leisure, the study suggests that drinking coffee and alcohol (and having a little extra weight) may lead to a longer life.

Performed by UCI’s Institute for Memory Impairments and Neurological Disorders, the 90+ Study is the work of Claudia Kawas, MD; Maria Corrada, ScD; Annlia Paganini-Hill, PhD; and Dana Greenia, RN, MS. In it, they followed the lives of over 1,600 nonagenarians starting in 2013 through a series of biannual checkups to help “determine which factors and life choices made people more likely to live past 90.”

The researchers found that participants who consumed two cups of coffee a day were associated with a 10% decrease in mortality, and those who drank “only two glasses of wine or beer” per day were associated with an 18% decrease. Interestingly enough, they also found that people “overweight in their 70s lived longer than normal or underweight people did.” But Travel + Leisure does note that exercising regularly and “maintaining a regular hobby” helped individuals avoid premature death.

So eat, drink, and be merry, and rethink what a “beach bod” is. You can’t go to the beach if you’re dead. Happy New Year!

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

The post Coffee, Alcohol, And A Few Extra Pounds May Be The Key To Long Life appeared first on Sprudge.

Source: Coffee News