Good Coffee

Posted by Abaco 4 years, 11 months ago to Entertainment
45 comments | Share | Best of... | Flag

So, I got up this morning to find that we were out of coffee. Oh...we have some smores-flavored coffee and a macadamia-flavored verson. My wife buys that crap and lets the french roast run out. So...I went to the local donut shop that has the best damn croissants in town - huge, fluffy - and brought some home with a cup of large french roast. Now...my wife is French. You'd think she'd understand. Nope.

Anybody else here need their real coffee?! I once cracked the guys at the club up when I said one morning before round of golf - "I like my coffee like I like my women...dark and full-bodied." haha...


All Comments

  • Posted by freedomforall 4 years, 10 months ago
    What Does The Coffee Supply Chain Look Like?
    https://www.visualcapitalist.com/wp-c...
    There’s a good chance your day started with a cappuccino, or a cold brew, and you aren’t alone. In fact, coffee is one of the most consumed drinks on the planet, and it’s also one of the most traded commodities.

    According to the National Coffee Association, more than 150 million people drink coffee on a daily basis in the U.S. alone. Globally, consumption is estimated at over 2.25 billion cups per day.

    Coffee From Plant to Factory
    There are two types of tropical plants that produce coffee, both preferring high altitudes and with production primarily based in South America, Asia, and Africa.
    - Coffea arabica is the more plentiful bean, with a more complex flavor and less caffeine. It’s used in most specialty and “high quality” drinks as Arabica coffee.
    - Coffea canephora, meanwhile, has stronger and more bitter flavors. It’s also easier to grow, and is most frequently used in espressos and instant blends as Robusta coffee.
    However, both types of beans undergo the same journey:

    1. Growing
    Plants take anywhere from 4-7 years to produce their first harvest, and grow fruit for around 25 years.

    2. Picking
    The fruit of the coffea plant is the coffee berry, containing two beans within. Ripened berries are harvested either by hand or machine.

    3. Processing
    Coffee berries are then processed either in a traditional “dry” method using the sun or “wet” method using water and machinery. This removes the outer fruit encasing the sought-after green beans.

    4. Milling
    The green coffee beans are hulled, cleaned, sorted, and (optionally) graded.

    From Factory to Transport
    Once the coffee berry is stripped down to green beans, it’s shipped from producing countries through a global supply network.
    Green coffee beans are exported and shipped around the world. In 2018 alone, 7.2 million tonnes of green coffee beans were exported, valued at $19.2 billion.
    Arriving primarily in the U.S. and Europe, the beans are now prepared for consumption:

    5. Roasting
    Green beans are industrially roasted, becoming darker, oilier, and tasty. Different temperatures and heat duration impact the final color and flavor, with some preferring light roasts to dark roasts.

    6. Packaging
    Any imperfect or somehow ruined beans are discarded, and the remaining roasted beans are packaged together by type.

    7. Shipping
    Roasted beans are shipped both domestically and internationally. Bulk shipments go to retailers, coffee shops, and in some cases, direct to consumer.
    Straight to Your Cup
    Roasted coffee beans are almost ready for consumption, and by this stage the remaining steps can happen anywhere.
    For example, many factories don’t ship roasted beans until they grind it themselves. Meanwhile, cafes will grind their own beans on-site before preparing drinks. The rapid growth of coffee chains made Starbucks the second-highest-earning U.S. fast food venue.
    Regardless of where it happens, the final steps bring coffee straight to your cup:

    8. Grinding
    Roasted beans are ground up in order to better extract their flavors, either by machine or by hand. The preferred fineness depends on the darkness of the roast and the brewing method.

    9. Brewing
    Water is added to the coffee grounds in a variety of methods. Some involve water being passed or pressured through the grounds (espresso, drip) while others mix the water and grounds (French press, Turkish coffee).

    10. Drinking
    Liquid coffee is ready to be enjoyed! One average cup takes 70 roasted beans to make.
    The world’s choice of caffeine pick-me-up is made possible by this structured and complex supply chain. Coffee isn’t just a drink, after all, it’s a business.
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  • Posted by Stormi 4 years, 10 months ago
    Must have my coffee or my eyes do not focus together! It better be coffee, not some sweet or flavored confection, real coffee. Folgers or McD! Recently, Frisch's put in new brew by order coffee during shut down, awful! Nasty. Even Burger King has stepped up and is better. No, whip creme, no almond flvor, just coffee! This gal is particular.
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  • Posted by Owlsrayne 4 years, 10 months ago
    I have a Keurig single which I will drop in a Mayan Blend, Donut Shop, or Breakfast Blend set on mug size slide in my insulated mug. When filled a teaspoon of sugar and a drizzle of goats milk can't tolerate cows milk. Then sit in my recliner take my meds, Then walk my anxious Australian Cattle dog, then returned to my coffee. Sometimes I will brew a second mug to get a buzz.
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  • Posted by bobsprinkle 4 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I only buy the Seattles Best when it is on sale. Like 2 for 1 at Publix market. I don't want to help Starbucks either.
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  • Posted by mccannon01 4 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    My wife and I used to be regular Starbucks customers and we'd always stop at the drive through at the beginning of any auto excursion just for something to sip while driving. Not anymore. We refuse to fund the company's commie causes.
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  • Posted by $ Radio_Randy 4 years, 10 months ago
    A Folgers man (with cream and sugar) for years.
    Every (and I mean every) morning, I have two cups and visit with my wife of 41 years. When I was still working, I had to stop at 1 cup.
    On weekends, we treat ourselves to coffee from a local roaster, Crandall Coffee of Kettle Falls, WA.
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  • Posted by $ Suzanne43 4 years, 10 months ago
    My husband and I do agree on politics and coffee. Politics are Conservative and Coffee has to be hot and black. Can’t start a morning without coffee and the Fox News Channel. I have a Cuisinart coffee maker and buy McDonald’s medium roast for it. We are addicted.
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  • Posted by lrshultis 4 years, 10 months ago
    At 80 I must be one of a very few who have never drunk coffee, although my dad was habituated to it. I do like the odor of brewing coffee though. Probably being border line asperger's syndrome, I never liked anything that seemed like fad. I have never had trouble functioning without caffeine, though maybe I could have gotten a PHD in math if I had indulged with the habit like my fellow grad students.
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  • Posted by Katrina41 4 years, 10 months ago
    Tea cream sugar. Coffee black. No instant, no no thick grue.
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  • Posted by ColHogan 4 years, 10 months ago
    Folgers is fine with me, but with a nip o' the Irish to pep it up.
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  • Posted by freedomforall 4 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "NOT worth making a pot"
    That's what the automatic espresso machine does for me, one great cup at the time. (With or without cream/steamed milk.)

    When I visited my aunt in NY years ago, she made the coffee so strong I needed the heavy cream to drink it. So I was up and out early to pick up heavy cream, fresh bagels, cream cheese, and Nova before she awakened. Fond memories.
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  • Posted by $ pixelate 4 years, 10 months ago
    I buy whatever coffee brand is on sale and get several tins. I tend to enjoy two large mugs each morning: two parts coffee, one part milk. It works its wonders in a medical way. I offer an attempt at poetry to clarify the picture:

    "Beautiful Moments"
    The sun has just cleared the horizon.
    My mind ventures back to a time not so long ago.
    And then I am brought back with a start.
    It is time.
    Heading to the water closet, I encounter a cat along the way.
    “Out of my way you louse” I curse while crossing the threshold into a room, its purpose is clear.
    Sitting now, eyes half closed, a moment of bliss.
    The last point of the alimentary canal is cleared.
    Such are these, beautiful moments.
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  • Posted by sgijantopaeth 4 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Hi WilliamShipley. My husband has the exact same set up. Coffee from almost anywhere other than home is extremely disappointing. Sweet Marias is his mistress I fear, but I can look the other way to get that delicious coffee.
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  • Posted by Ben_C 4 years, 10 months ago
    My current coffee brand is Death Wish. It states it has the highest caffeine of any coffee on the planet - plus its organic (as if that matters). I brew it up every morning in a french press coffee maker and allow the caffeine to kick in for about thirty minutes. Heart and brain are in go mode and its off to work.
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  • Posted by ohiocrossroads 4 years, 10 months ago
    I'm not hardly a coffee snob, but lately I've been seeking out the machines that fresh-grind the beans for every cup. They're starting to appear in truck stops and gas stations all over the country. Speedways, Flying J's, Pilots, etc. There is normally a choice of three different roasts or flavor of beans in each machine. The flavor is much more full-bodied than the usual brewed stuff sitting in a carafe on a warmer.
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  • Posted by bassboat 4 years, 10 months ago
    Cuban style coffee is my go-to coffee. Espresso ground with a cream-based (International brand, Coldstone sweet cream) fluffed up with a frother is nirvana. A waitress at a small Cuban restaurant that I frequent showed me their secret to this fantastic cup of coffee. No more Starbucks for me. Sorry Howard, I've been looking for a way to get away from the tree-hugger crowd and now I've found it.
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  • Posted by skidance 4 years, 10 months ago
    I despise flavored or weak coffees. Like you, I favor a hearty French roast.
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  • Posted by Snakecane 4 years, 10 months ago
    What all these wonderful comments suggest is that we all LOVE our coffee in as many different types, and ways as there are commenters. Don't you love liberty and what it bestows upon us?
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