Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Problem: Too much to choose from.


As I've blogged about earlier, I'm currently looking into starting roasting my own beans. Not that I have an urgent need because of the lack of freshly roasted beans, but just because the idea of roasting your own coffee is so intriguing.

I have run into a problem however. After surfing sites selling green beans, I've found that there is too much to choose from! Brazil Fazenda Cachoeira Canario Special, Colombia Cup of Excellence La Mina Estate, El Salvador Finca La Fany, Ethiopian Longberry Harrar, Indian Monsooned Malabar, Kenya AA Estate Gethumbwini.... The list goes on. They all sound so delicious! I feel like a kid in a candy store; wanting to buy it all.

I've read numerous forum posts, blogs and magazine articles about roasting, but this has only added to the dilemma. I've really gotten too much information. I have to start to forget what I've read if I'm ever going to get started. The information available is daunting, and the process of filtering what is the most important seeming an unassailable task.

Having set the time I'm going to buy a roaster to when we move into the new, bigger appartment, there is still much time to ponder about these things, and to maybe figure out what is my preference in types of beans. When I first started out I was sure that I liked the full bodied, nutty flavour of India Estate Bibi and the likes. This has developed however as I've tasted more and more different beans from around the world. I've started to appreciate the more subtle and more citrusy coffees as well.

So I guess what I'm trying to say is: Is there anyone out there who can help me figuring out what coffee should be the first to get roasted in my yet-to-be-purchased roaster? Is there perhaps a certain type of bean that is more forgiving and therefor more suitable for a rookie roaster?

And ultimately:
Is having so much to choose from necessarily a good thing?

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

I'm not a coffee-snob, I just care how it tastes! (Rant alert!)


For a while now I've been gradually getting more and more into the world of coffee. I've explored the different aspects of this wonderful beverage. From the plant to the cup a myriad of aspects influence on what the final product tastes like, and this interests me. I still only scraped the surface of the subject but seen enough to want to keep scraping. I don't expect everyone else to be as interested in all these aspects as I am, but expect people to care to at least a certain degree how it tastes. Sadly this doesn't always seem to be the case.

What is my main concern is that my interest in coffee actually has turned into a problem in some social contexts. As a wine-connoisseur people tend to see you as a resource and a person passionate about taste and the art of living. They ask for advice about wines and food and enjoy the lectures that ensue. However a coffee-lover is a hard-to-please problematic guest. "I guess this coffee isn't good enough for YOU." - said in a way you say to a little boy that doesn't want to eat the same food as everyone else. Not because the food is bad, but just because he's difficult and picky and doesn't want to try new things.

I must hurry to point out that I always drink whatever coffee I get served as a guest, and never complain even though it is luke warm and looks more like green tea than coffee. I don't look down on the people less into the world of coffee than me. I never lecture them on how they really should be making their coffee. Still this akward situation all to often arises. If you enjoy good wine you're a wine-connoisseur but if you enjoy good coffee you're a coffee-geek.

Some times I daydream that I never got interested in the world of coffee and the pleasures of enjoying a freshly brewed cup of newly ground, freshly roasted coffee. In these dreams I can be one of the people who can enjoy a luke warm cup of instant coffee. They don't know what they're missing out on but doesn't seem to care. Ignorance is bliss! At this point I usually wake up with a scream and go to the kitchen and make myself a cappucino.

However lately more and more friends and colleagues ask me for help about coffee and the brewing of it. There is a rising degree of interest in the making of quality coffee. I hope this could lead to that being a coffee-lover no longer will be a social stigma but a sign of a person who appreciates what life has to offer. I hope...

"Hope is the first step on the road to disappointment." ~ Librarian - Warhammer 40,000

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Has it really been that long?


As I first started to make this blog I promised myself to keep a steady stream of posts... I guess you can say it didn't quite happen. But it's never to late (I hope)! The lack of posts doesn't mean I haven't anything to write about. My coffee-life has been as active as ever.

I've been for a while butching myself up to start to try roasting my own beans. I've been collecting recipes and tips at different forums and have been looking at different roaster-alternatives. The thing is I'm a bit spoilt by having easy access to great freshly roasted beans. How can I ever hope to achieve something even remotely comperable? Not by bitching and moaning about it, thats for sure!

The thing is that for the moment I doubt the appartment me and my family live in is well ventilated enough to make coffee-roasting a sensible venture.

Until we move to a bigger place I'll continue to try to improve my coffee making skills and learn to appreciate more and more sides of the wonderful world of coffee. If anyone out there reading this post has a smart solution to the ventilation problem, apart from suggesting to do it outside (I'd hate to get the neighbours on my neck), I'd be very thankful for helpful comments!

Next post I'll moan about how difficult it is being a coffee-enthusiast (geek) amongst people who would drink instant coffee made with hot tapwater and think that thats what coffee has to offer. (I can feel my blood boiling already... It's time to let the pressure out.)

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Guest Blogging From New York City




Hey, everybody. This is Mark L. Feinsod. Ola asked me to contribute a few posts now and again. He wanted me to mention a few decent places in New York City to get a great cup of coffee. This isn't always as easy as you'd think, as the incredibly large number of Starbucks everyplace has really done a fair amount to destroy cafe culture in NYC. That said, it isn't dead. Let's start at the top, eh?

In my opinion, the best coffee in New York City can be found at The Grey Dog's Coffee (33 Carmine Street, between Bedford and Bleecker). Situated at the eastern edge of the gorgeous West Village, this place is a legend in downtown Manhattan. The iced coffee is the best I've ever tasted (it's not bitter in the slightest, and appears to be brewed especially for this purpose, as opposed to being leftover hot coffee dumped over ice), especially when a bit of soy milk is added. Also, the homemade raspberry lemonade is amazing (it even has whole pieces of berries in it). Their own special blend can be purchased for home grinding, although it's expensive and I haven't tried it.

Be forewarned that lines during the weekend can be long (it's a popular brunch spot), although there's a special line for coffee orders only (but it's hidden at the back by the entrance to the kitchen). Still, grab a beverage and (assuming it's either spring or summer or a warm autumn), hit the bench out front, fire up a cigarette, and enjoy a good conversation with a few friends while drinking the best coffee in the city (or at least below 23rd Street, which is New York to me).

Next time: cappuchino.

Monday, October 17, 2005

Better late than never...


So it took some time for me to write a new entry in my blog. I guess I over estimated my output of articles, but what the hey!

This weekend we went to a friends cabin in the mountains, and brought 250g of Ethiopian Yirgacheffe coffe. We didn't have a grinder but the ground beans kept well the whole trip and it was great coffee! I've read a lot about Yirgacheffe and had high expectations, and they came through.

Many consider Yirgacheffe to be the finest of Ethiopian coffee, and I can't disagree. It has a rich body and a floral bouquet (I thought I smelled some lavender in there somewhere) and smooth mellowness.

The barista at the coffeebar where I bought the Yirgacheffe also recommended an Ethiopian Harar which had a surprisingly distinct smell of wild berries, but in the end I opted for the Yirgacheffe.

The next time around I'll buy whole beans and grind them per serving (since I have a grinder at home). I think that will make it taste even better.

(I lifted the map above from another website... Hopefully they don't mind.)

Saturday, September 03, 2005

Todays coffee


Today I've only managed to down two cups of coffe (so far). They were quite nice, though, with rich crema and nice thick microfoam. I've also started using a new batch of beans I bought from my local roaster (called Java) the other day. The blend is called Crescendo and is quite light roasted being for espresso. I always make ristrettos in my coffee-drinks so it's full of taste, and if I drink it without milk (which I normally do after lunchtime) it's mellow enough not to burn away my tastebuds. (The picture is not of the beans I've been using, it's just an illustration.)

I'll make a note of trying to pry out of my roaster what types of beans they use in the blend.

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Hooray! Hooray! My blog is up today!


So this is the very first posting on my weblog. It's a good feeling to finally be able to share with you my thoughts and feelings. I don't know if you feel the same way, but hey, thats ok. You don't have to anyway. I really don't have anything to say, but hooray, hooray my blog is up today! A lot of rhyming, I know, but I do it anyway just because I can!

This isn't the standard as to what the rest of posts are going to be like, though. I'll try to get my act together and punch out some meaningful comments and thoughts.