Sabtu, 30 Mei 2015

Ranking U.S. States by Readership

See Ranking of U.S. States by Coffee Review Readership

Yesterday, we shared some Coffee Review readership data by country in a piece called “Where is Coffee Hot in 2015: By Country.” Perhaps not surprisingly, the United States is the country with the greatest Coffee Review readership and readership per capita. Today, we take a closer look at how readership and growth varies by U.S. state.

Obviously, a big driver of traffic is the population of each state.  For example, you would expect California to have more readers than Hawaii just based on the large difference in population, roughly 38 million versus 1.4 million, respectively.  So, we normalized for population to calculate per capita readership, which is a better gauge of how passionate a particular state is about coffee.

Two notes about methodology: 1) Because we launched a new website in 2014, which had a dramatic impact on page views, we’re ranking states on the basis of page views instead of traffic, as we did in 2014; 2) For year-over-year growth, we used 2-month snapshot from January and February 2015 versus 2014.

Ranking by Per Capita Readership

The ranking of states by per capita readership has not changed dramatically since our last look in early 2014. The top ten spots have shuffled quite a bit but nine of the ten states remain are the same as 2014.

Hawaii remains in the No. 1 spot.  As we’ve noted in the past, that might seem surprising at first glance but, when you consider that Hawaii is the only state that produces significant quantities of coffee, it stands to reason that a lot of people have a vested interest in coffee news and reviews.

Minnesota made the biggest jump from 2014 to 2015, moving from the No. 10 spot to No. 2.  This likely a function of a vibrant and growing coffee scene in greater Minneapolis, with numerous quality roasters such as Paradise Roasters (a Coffee Review advertiser), Spyhouse Coffee, Bootstrap Coffee, Bull Run, True Stone, and Caribou Coffee.  It may also be a function of traffic directed to the site by roasters and local press that reported on the Top 30 Coffees of 2014 and other great reviews in January and February.

This is certainly the case for California moving up a spot to No. 5.  Thirteen of the Top 30 Coffees of 2014 were roasted in California and local media, particularly in Sacramento, provided a lot of well deserved coverage.

Illinois jumped into the top ten at No. 9.  New Hampshire, which had been No. 7, dropped out of the top ten.

It’s interesting to note that Vermont (No. 4 to No. 8), New Hampshire (No. 7 to No. 15), and Maine (No. 24 to No. 39) showed some of the largest year-over-year drops.  I wonder if the incredibly harsh winter played a role in reducing readership?

Ranking by Per Capita Page Views (2014 rank in parentheses):

1. Hawaii (1)

2. Minnesota (10)

3. Massachusetts (3)

4. Washington (2)

5. California (6)

6. Colorado (8)

7. Oregon (5)

8. Vermont (4)

9. Illinois (12)

10. New York (9)

11. New Jersey (16)

12. Virginia (11)

13. Maryland (15)

14. Connecticut (14)

15. New Hampshire (7)

16. Pennsylvania (23)

17. Nebraska (19)

18. Florida (27)

19. Alaska (26)

20. Georgia (32)

21. Rhode Island (18)

22. Missouri (29)

23. Kansas (17)

24. Arizona (28)

25. Oklahoma (30)

26. Texas (34)

27. Michigan 31)

28. Tennessee (27)

29. North Carolina (35)

30. Kentucky (36)

31. Wisconsin (20)

32. Nevada (22)

33. Delaware (31)

34. Montana (13)

35. Ohio (33)

36. South Dakota (45)

37. Wyoming (38)

38. North Dakota (43)

39. Maine (24)

40. Indiana (35)

41. New Mexico (39)

42. Utah (44)

43. Louisiana (46)

44.  Iowa (41)

45. South Carolina (50)

46. Alabama (42)

47. West Virginia (48)

48. Idaho (40)

49. Arkansas (47)

50. Mississippi (49)

Ranking by Percentage Growth

We also looked at percentage growth from early 2014 to 2015.  On average, page views increased 42% from 2014 to 2015.  It stands to reason that states that had greater than 42% growth rose in the per capita rankings and those with less than 42% growth fell.  The fastest growing state in terms of Coffee Review readership was South Dakota, with a growth rate of 91%.  Yes, it was off a small base, as was the case for several of the fastest growing states.

Ranking by Percentage Growth from 2014 to 2015:

1. South Dakota

2. Minnesota

3. North Dakota

4. Hawaii

5. Louisiana

6. Tennessee

7. Kentucky

8. Florida

9. Georgia

10. New Jersey

11. Pennsylvania

12. West Virginia

13. Texas

14. California

15. Missouri

16. Utah

17. Wyoming

18. Alaska

19. Maryland

20. Massachusetts

21. Nebraska

22. Colorado

23. South Carolina

24. Illinois

25. Arkansas

26. New York

27. Ohio

28. Oklahoma

29. Arizona

30. Rhode Island

31. Vermont

32. Iowa

33. New Mexico

34. Alabama

35. Indiana

36. Delaware

37. Michigan

38. Connecticut

39. Mississippi

40. North Carolina

41. Oregon

42. Wisconsin

43. Virginia

44. Nevada

45. Maine

46. Washington

47. Kansas

48. Idaho

49. New Hampshire

50. Montana

Ron Walters, co-founder of Coffee Review, manages business operations, including CoffeeReview.com, marketing, and social media. He conceived of and helped pioneer the development of 100-point reviews in the specialty coffee industry. For the past twenty years, he has been engaged in strategy, marketing, and management of specialty food and beverage businesses.

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April Fools’ Coffee: 100-point O’Ima Lion Farms

April Fools' Coffee: O'Ima Lion Farms

Yesterday, in the spirit of April Fools’ Day, we posted a 100-point review for O’Ima Lion Farms April No. 1 Natural by San Veritas Roasters.  In case you missed it, the spoof appears below:

Coffee Review has never awarded 100 points to a coffee.  Since 1997, twelve coffees have earned a score of 97 points.  Of the twelve, four are geishas, three were Kenyas, two were Ethiopias, two were Guatemalas (both bourbons), and one was a Kona natural.

The 97-pointers are as follows:

Klatch Coffee – Panama Ironman Camilina Geisha, September 2014

Barrington Coffee Roasting Co. – Perci Red Panama Gesha, December 2012

Caribou Coffee – Roastmaster’s Reserve Esmeralda, September 2012

Terroir Coffee – El Vergel Guatemala, March 2012

Wood-Fire Roasted Coffee – Kenya Nyeri AB Gichatha-ini, November 2011

Temple Coffee & Tea – Guatemala Hunapu Antigua Bourbon, October 2010

Simon Hsieh Aroma Roast – Ethiopia Washed Yirgacheffe, Koke Grade 1, December 2009

Hula Daddy – Kona Sweet 100% Kona, December 2008

Terroir Coffee – Kenya Mamuto, March 2008

The Roasterie – Esmerala Especial Best of Panama, October 2007

Paradise Roasters – Kenya AA Wagamuga Auction Lot, August 2007

Paradise Roasters – Ethiopia Biloya Special, May 2007

******************************************************************

San Veritas Coffee Roasters – Portland, Oregon

O’Ima Lion Farms April No. 1 Natural

Reviewed: April 1, 2015

Price: >$1000.00/16 ounces (at auction)

Origin: O’Ima Lion Farms, Pacific Ocean, east of the Hawaiian Islands.

OVERALL RATING: 100

Notes: San Veritas Coffee is a previously unheard of boutique coffee roaster that claims to roast exotic coffee beans one at a time. O’Ima Lion Farms is located on a recently formed volcanic island approximately one hundred miles southeast of Hawaii. It is located on the slopes of the older part of the island, which was formed ten years ago. The residual heat from the lava rock is said to encourage a particularly lush growth. Shade is provided by volcanic haze. Only one pound of this coffee was produced and will be sold at auction.

Blind assessment: So good, we almost peed in our pants when we tasted this coffee.

Who should drink it: Coffee lovers who appreciate April Fools’ jokes, a decadent American tradition. If you found this review amusing, or even if you found it irritating, please consider making a small donation to www.groundsforhealth.org or HawaiiCommunityFoundation.org to help support these fine charitable organizations.

Ron Walters, co-founder of Coffee Review, manages business operations, including CoffeeReview.com, marketing, and social media. He conceived of and helped pioneer the development of 100-point reviews in the specialty coffee industry. For the past twenty years, he has been engaged in strategy, marketing, and management of specialty food and beverage businesses.

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2015 World Barista Champ Crowned

Map of Seattle

The 2015 World Barista Champion is Sasa Sestic from Ona Coffee in Canberra, Australia.

A total of 49 National Barista Champions competed in the 16th World Barista Championship, which took place over four days in Seattle this past weekend, as part of the Specialty Coffee Association of America annual coffee conference.  The World Barista Championship is an annual event for national barista champions.  In each competition, with numerous local and regional preliminary events, baristas prepare espressos, cappuccinos and original espresso signature drinks to exacting standards for a panel of international judges.

Charles Babinski, from Go Get ‘Em Tiger in Los Angeles, represented the United States of America and finished as the runner-up.

Third place went to Ben Put from Monogram Coffee in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Congratulations to Sasa, Charles, and Ben, as well as the rest of the incredibly talented competitors.

Ron Walters, co-founder of Coffee Review, manages business operations, including CoffeeReview.com, marketing, and social media. He conceived of and helped pioneer the development of 100-point reviews in the specialty coffee industry. For the past twenty years, he has been engaged in strategy, marketing, and management of specialty food and beverage businesses.

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What’s In a Name?

Flag Of Kenya

It would come as no surprise to industry professionals or even your average coffee lover that specialty coffees have become, well, more specialized over the years.  Nowadays, coffees are segmented and differentiated by every conceivable measure: by country of origin, farm, varietal, crop year, processing method, micro-lot, altitude, roast, blend… you name it.

That’s a good thing.  It’s a sign that the coffee industry is evolving and maturing, providing consumers with more choices that can better meet their personal tastes and preferences.  We’ve moved beyond the days of offering consumers breakfast blend, french roast, espresso blend, and decaf.

It stands to reason that coffee names would now require additional information to describe more differentiated coffees.  To test the theory, we compared the names of coffees in our March 1997 tasting report of Straight Coffees from Africa with the names of coffees in March 2015 tasting report of Macro-Lot Coffees. Arguably, macro-lot coffees might even have relatively shorter names, given that they aren’t “micro” in some sense.

In the March 2015 tasting report, the average length of a coffee name was 28.3 letters, not counting the name of the roaster.  All of the coffees carried the country of origin, which accounted for an average of 7.7 letters.  So, roughly 21 letters were needed to describe the coffee beyond its country of origin.

I had to chuckle when I looked at the coffee names from March 1997.  Six of the twelve coffees were named “Kenya AA.”  That’s it.  “Kenya AA.” Two were named “Ethiopia Yirgacheffe” and two others were called “Ethiopia Sidamo.”  One of the coffees – Cafe del Mundo’s Smaldeel Estate – carried the name of the farm where the coffee was grown.  That was quite a novel concept at the time.

In any case, the average length of the coffee name in the March 1997 report was 12.9 letters.  The country of origin, when it was included, was 6.4 letters.  An average, roughly 7 letters were needed to describe the coffee beyond its country of origin.

Some will argue that this is a sign that coffees have become too fussy.  However, I appreciate the extra information and transparency.  It allows interested consumers to identify and purchase more differentiated coffees, arguably better quality coffees.  In many cases, consumers will pay more for these distinguished coffees, which in turn helps reward the growers and roasters who invest time, energy, passion, and money in producing these coffees.

Ron Walters, co-founder of Coffee Review, manages business operations, including CoffeeReview.com, marketing, and social media. He conceived of and helped pioneer the development of 100-point reviews in the specialty coffee industry. For the past twenty years, he has been engaged in strategy, marketing, and management of specialty food and beverage businesses.

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Jumat, 29 Mei 2015

Meet Meredith Taylor, Counter Culture Coffee’s New Sustainability Coordinator

What is sustainable coffee?

As a member of the Specialty Coffee Association of America Sustainability Council, Meredith Taylor says this question, as simple as it sounds, is somewhat unanswerable.

“We’ve wondered in the sustainability council if we should define sustainable coffee,” Taylor recently told Daily Coffee News. “But is that our job to do? Is it possible to do? I know it’s going to be difficult for us to know what we’re talking about as an industry if we’re not transparent about this.”

Transparency is among the key charges for Taylor in her new role as sustainability coordinator for Durham, N.C.-based roaster and wholesaler Counter Culture Coffee. CCC has long been one of coffee’s most forward-thinking companies, but its 8-year-old sustainability department has essentially been manned by one person until now, green coffee buyer and sustainability manager Kim Elena Ionescu.

meredith taylor counter culture Counter Culture Coffee Sustainability Coordinator Meredith Taylor

While Ionescu’s sustainability efforts have naturally leaned toward supply sustainability and issues at origin, Taylor says she hopes to help the company grow a more well-rounded sustainability approach.

“Think companies like Patagonia, Seventh Generation or New Belgium — when people think of sustainable companies, we want to be on that list,” says Taylor, who got her start in coffee as a barista then manager at Washington D.C.’s Peregrine Espresso. “We’ve done a lot toward sustainability in the coffee world, but not much outside the coffee world.”

To this end, Taylor says the company plans to look deeper inward. “This new position is meant to do a lot of the projects that have been thought of, but that have been put on hold,” she says. “We’re trying to figure out all the sustainability metrics we want to track internally and figure out procedures to measure those.”

For example, under Ionescu’s leadership, CCC has measured seed-to-cup greenhouse gas emissions for several years, but it has not yet tracked internal water usage. The idea is to develop a sustainability approach that reaches every part of the company, from origin to roastery to board room to wholesale delivery.

“We’re also figuring out good ways to report all this stuff,” says Taylor. “We want to be increasingly transparent, and part of that involves getting that raw data and transforming it into something usable, interesting and digestible.”

That digestible data, she says will improve both internal and external communications regarding the company’s sustainability plan. Says Taylor, “I’ve been talking a lot with marketing about how to better communicate the sustainability of our coffees, not necessarily to consumers, but to our employees and our partners.”

This goes back to the problematic question of defining sustainable coffee.

“How do we communicate that sustainability is a spectrum?” Taylor asks. “A lot of times, sustainability is presented as a dichotomy — ‘Is this coffee organic or is it not?’ Well, there are farms that are organic but not socially or environmentally sustainable. There is no clear definition of sustainable coffee, and we need to evolve our collective understanding of the spectrum.”

Taylor is spending some of here existing time simply brushing up on buzzwords and other corporate-speak — the unfortunate result of sustainability increasingly making good business sense. “There is a lot of that corporate-speak and jargon,” she says. “I think it’s important for us to understand how other companies talk about sustainability, even if we don’t want to use that language.”

CCC has launched a new sustainability section on its site, including several new blog posts from Taylor on the company’s sustainability program, as well as coffee sustainability issues, at large.

Author: Nick Brown Nick Brown is the editorial director of Daily Coffee News by Roast Magazine. Feedback and story ideas of welcome at publisher@dailycoffeenews.com.

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Minggu, 24 Mei 2015

A Specialty Coffee Guide to Boise, the Gem State Capital

neckar coffee boise Grant Shealy of Neckar Coffee. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

Snugly hunkered up against the arid western foothills of the Rockies is the lush, low-key metropolis of Boise, Idaho. Geographically remote and politically conservative, the walls of this valley tend to resist winds of change, although with each generation comes some progress.

Coffeewise, this was manifested in the 1990s through a handful of early independent shops that staked their claim prior to the Starbucks invasion, and these remain the go-to shops for Gem State capital loyalists. Today, the sprouts of another generation in coffee are unfurling in the light of the high desert sun.

It is an electrifying time for artisan gastronomy in the Treasure Valley. Crafty, Northwest-style breweries are proliferating, the Treefort Music Fest is fast becoming an annual pin on the nation’s indie music roadmap, and in just the past few years Boise has cut ribbons on its first Whole Foods and its first Trader Joe’s — all significant milestones for consumer culture here.

Brian Wight, owner of eight drive-thru Dutch Bros Coffee franchise locations in Boise, has observed “a dramatic upswing in consumerism” over the past five years. “Our volumes are up 30 to 40 percent across our stores,” Wight tells Daily Coffee News. In 23 years the Oregon-based drive-thru company has erupted into 245 locations spread out over seven states, and only four of these stores have seating. Dutch Bros’ fifth-ever — and first in Idaho — seated location is slated to open at the intersection of State and 15th near downtown this coming August — a well-researched indication as an uptick in coffee consumption here.

Boise is a well-established enclave among college football fans, retirees, Mormons, and the NRA, but it also seems like potentially fertile ground for burgeoning micro roasters. Grant Shealy, affable 26-year-old proprietor of Neckar Coffee, is just that. Shealy’s got big plans for a brick-and-mortar Neckar flagship somewhere in the downtown area within the next year or two, and the coffee business is poised to push quality forward for all of Boise.

In the meantime, the city’s solid showing of old-guard indie drink-builders and handful of inspiringly up-to-date go-getters keep the people abuzz and the local industry heading in the right direction.

Here’s a roundup of the Boise coffee scene as it stands today:

guru boise Guru Donuts. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

Yes, even Boise now enjoys a purveyor of rich, fluffy, yeasted vegan donuts, right alongside the maple-bacons and other inventive offerings in the downtown brick-and-mortar home of Guru Donuts, which opened in January 2015. An imaginative selection of fresh decadent square and circular sweets is available daily with coffee roasted by Hailey, Idaho-based Maps Coffee (not to be confused with the Kansas micro-roaster of the same name). “We decided to partner with Maps Coffee because they do offer a lighter, brighter roast,” manager Darryl Vickers told Daily Coffee News. “We wanted to be unique in the valley with that, and we feel it pairs well with our donuts.” Jens Peterson, son of the owners of longstanding Hailey roaster Grace Organics, is the skateboarder at the helm of Maps. Grace has been roasting for 25 years, but Maps, the boutique-style next generation, has gone from apprentice to primetime independence with Guru as its first commercial client.

Neckar Coffee Boise Neckar Coffee. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

Neckar‘s Diedrich IR2 lives happily behind the scenes in the Woodland Empire Ale Craft brewery space. These two businesses, along with the occasional food trucks that swing by to sling munchies to sudsy Woodland patrons, constitute an exemplary ground zero of Boise’s upward trajectory in creative sips and eats. You can find Shealy and company serving careful pourovers at the new Boise Farmer’s Market most Saturdays, as well as select streets and events around town. Within the coming months, pending requisite approvals from the city, Neckar intends to step up production to break into the metropolitan wholesale market.

crux coffee boise The Crux. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

The Crux is a cavernous coffeehouse by day and a venue by night, with gritty local art on every wall and most of the square footage wide open for performances. Local and traveling bands can rock out then return the next morning for some Hair Bender, of the dog. Owner Bob Cooper fell in love with the Stumptown coffee served to him by gifted baristas at the Albina Press in Portland, Ore., the city in which he still runs a hardwood flooring business from afar. Despite all training and scrutiny he, with some dismay, recalls going through in the process of earning Stumptown’s approval, he nevertheless jumped at the opportunity to be Boise’s exclusive brewer of Stumptown, a deal he believes the company would not have made today. Four years later, he’s still pretty sure he serves the best coffee in town, and it’s hard to argue. Bob is surprised that most sales are still just grab and go, but that’s life downtown. The upside is that for those that prefer to take it slow, there’s usually plenty of room on the Crux’s several couches and sunny storefront window tables.

Flying M Coffee Boise Flying M. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

The Flying M Coffeehouse is kind of like Boise’s Central Perk, only bigger and with less upholstery. Its doors first opened in 1995 and it quickly expanded from a small space into the larger space next door. Their perennial espresso blend and similarly enduring House Blend help maintain the M’s slot among shops most often recommended to visitors as either the best in town or at least better than the nationwide chains with which they would seem to compete. Also on offer is a consistent selection of single-origin coffees in whole bean form, in-house baked goods, and smoothies. Flying M’s zanily colored walls and furnishings, local art, and tchotchkes galore are rounded off with a cheeky novelty gift shop occupying a semi-cordoned corner inside the cafe. Meanwhile, behind the counter, a shiny new Nuova Simonelli Aurelia II rules, and if you squint through the towers of branded merch you may spy a WBC sticker on the back of one of their grinders. Service is speedy and friendly, the atmosphere is bustling, and the clientele is as eclectic as it gets here in Les Bois.

dawson taylor coffee Boise Dawson Taylor downtown

Dawson Taylor is the earthy farm-worker-themed mosaic counterpoint to Flying M’s hypercolor alternative vibe. Both opened in 1995, both have one downtown location and second locations at their roasteries, and both do wholesale, although DT is the company more likely to knock more than once in pursuit of your business should you be setting up shop anywhere around Boise. Artsy, unassuming, and mildly granola, the DT downtown shop is on the northernmost pedestrian block of 8th Street, which is lined with posh eateries, apparel shops, and nightspots. The ample front patio seating is a hub of community chitchat, and their paralysis-inducing selection of coffees includes no fewer than eight decafs, along with single-origins and blends. Brewed behind the counter there’s a daily rotation of three regulars and one decaf, plus all manner of espresso and milk drinks. It’s fascinating to note that, like the set of a Hollywood underdog movie, directly across the narrow pedestrian street is the lone Boise location of the sleek 16-store Washington-based coffee chain Thomas Hammer. It may take a harrowing dodgeball tournament to decide which one will ultimately prevail.

Afro Phil Boise Afro Phil, the man. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

Afro Phil is unapologetically Afro Phil. If you meet the man in any food-related context, he will probably introduce himself as Afro Phil, and, really, every town should have an Afro Phil. A West Boise nanoroaster with a driver’s license that actually reads Phil Tegethoff, Afro Phil roasts one kilo at a time on a diminutive Probatino in his home garage, surrounded by his kids’ toys and bikes. He’ll slide up the door and sell coffee right there, though he also sells online, ships through the mail, and will even deliver it locally. Afro Phil has been operating for about two years and maintains a few cafe accounts. He estimates his business is at this point roughly half retail, half wholesale, although he fell a bit behind in the wake of recent equipment snafus for which he found service and support to be painfully unresponsive. Now back in the saddle, Phil continues logging every roast in a spiral notebook and cupping obsessively throughout the day, striving for balance, consistency, and his marque “smoothness.” He also hosts occasional public cuppings in his backyard, in an effort to create a better informed and more zealous Boise coffee culture.

Java downtown boise Java Cafe downtown location. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

Java’s trademarked tagline reads “Wake Up and Live,” although as head barista and quality control tech Jude Claffey points out, their official coffee slogan is “Coffee That Rocks.” It’s a play on the volcanic coffee island moniker as well as the fact that Java’s owner, Todd Rippo, is a guitarist living in Sun Valley that has jammed with the likes of Bruce Willis. The drink on Java’s menu called the Keith Richards — a quad-shot Mexican mocha — is born from Rippo’s actual experience rockin’ out with Keef. Founded in Ketchum in 1991, Java has six total locations, two of which are fixtures of the Boise coffee scene. The downtown spot opened in the mid 1990s, followed a few year later by a second location in Boise’s quaint Hyde Park neighborhood. Downtown, Java has high ceilings, Warhol on every wall, and is the only Java not nestled in a repurposed house. The Hyde Park location is a freestanding house with a spacious patio and porch, and an interior with couches and a hearth providing living-room coziness. Both offer full breakfast and lunch, with organic, Fair Trade coffee by San Diego roaster Café Moto.

big city coffee boise Big City Coffee. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

Big City Coffee and Café is equal parts chow-house and coffeehouse. The tidiness of the shop’s façade and picnic-table sidewalk seating plays against the circus of old-timey signage exploding within, while in-house baked goods and a diner-style, all-day breakfast and lunch menu scores high marks with the locals. Its barn-like exposed wooden rafters and well-worn wooden furnishings are all country, though Big City Coffee is the go-to spot for a hot cup or capp in Boise’s thoroughly urban Linen District, as well as at the Boise Airport, where it recently established a presence. Big City’s coffees are roasted by Doma Coffee Roasting Company, the only Idaho roaster chosen as a finalist in the 2014 Good Food Awards. Doma also garners accolades for its beautiful packaging, part of its private label service for Big City’s retail packages, including Big City’s Joe Cans fundraising line, proceeds of which go to support breast cancer awareness and early detection efforts. Joe Cans include such feistily named offerings as the Big Titty Blend, Bra-zilian Brew, and Double D Decaf.

Janjou patisserie boise Janjou Patisserie. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

The interior of Janjou Patisserie is almost defiantly precise and pristine, in Apple Store-like contrast to the rest of the town’s rustic, mountain-sporty aesthetic. Since 2008, the artisan boutique bakery has served delicately crafted pastries alongside traditional espresso drinks, including a faithful 6-ounce cappuccino and 4-ounce macchiato, which are rarities in this town. Their coffee is roasted by Lizzy’s Fresh Coffee, an outfit based in Ketchum, Idaho, a few hours east of Boise. (See the “Firestarters” column of the January/February 2012 issue of Roast Magazine for more on Lizzy’s founder and roaster Liz Roquet.)

kahve coffee daily coffee news The Kahve Coffee sign, made by Boise artist Noel Webber. Photo by Howard Bryman for Daily Coffee News.

The Boise International Market is an exciting recent addition to Boise’s evolving culinary tapestry, with Kahve Coffee situated right up front. A coffee lover’s window to the world, Kahve might also be the closest thing Boise has to a multi-roaster café. Their Turkish comes from Turkey, their Arabic-style is made with coffee from Jordan, and their Cuban is, well, from Miami. For drip and espresso, Kahve serves fresh roasts from Full Circle Exchange, a non-profit social enterprise brand based in the neighboring city of Eagle, that is devoted to empowering women and lifting communities out of poverty through sustainable commerce. The gorgeous and intricately gilded glass “Coffee & Tea” sign hanging over Kahve was hand-made by legendary Boise sign artist Noel Weber over 30 years ago. The piece is so unique that Weber bought it back when its original home café shuttered, and it took a fair amount of convincing by Kahve to get Weber to part with it again. Or so the legend goes as told by Omid, the friendly and knowledgeable Kahve barista. In Persian, Omid’s name means “hope,” which makes him a fine representative of Boise’s budding coffee scene.


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Hario Introduces Wine-Bottle-Shaped Cold Brewer

hario filter in cold brew

In summer-fun accoutrements news, Japanese coffee brewing equipment manufacturer Hario has introduced a wine-bottle-shaped version of its cold immersion brewer, Mizudashi.

The brewer is a variation of Hario’s existing Mizudashi cold brewer, which maintains a cylindrical shape. The new model, called Filter-In Coffee Bottle, more closely resembles Hario’s bottle-shaped tea brewer, which was released in 2013.

hario filter in cold brew

Made at Hario’s manufactuing headquarters in Koga, Ibaraki, the Filter-In Coffee model includes a 650ml-capacity glass bottle, removable silicone rubber stoppers and spouts, and a polyester mesh filter with a plastic strainer. Hario suggests starting with cold water, and allowing for an eight-hour extraction time in the refrigerator.

hario filter in cold brew

Author: Nick Brown Nick Brown is the editorial director of Daily Coffee News by Roast Magazine. Feedback and story ideas of welcome at publisher@dailycoffeenews.com.

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