Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Espresso in Cape Town, South Africa

Quick!: name a city that’s surrounded by the exquisite natural beauty of mountains and seas, with brightly painted houses that decorate quaint neighborhoods, with great food everywhere you turn, with a nearby wine country consisting of hundreds of vineyards and many nationally renowned restaurants, with hipsters who frequent farmers’ markets in transitional neighborhoods, with a diverse racial mix from black to white to Indian to Southeast Asian, with the nation’s most vibrant gay population, with a touristy waterfront featuring seals on piers and a ferry that takes you to a famous prison island, and with a whole lot of really good coffee.
Why, it could only be Cape Town, South Africa.
Alright, that was a trick question: San Francisco’s Pier 39 has sea lions, not seals per se. But the point being that for anyone from our fair city, many aspects of Cape Town will seem very familiar. But there are also significant differences.
Cape Town from Table Mountain Cape Town and Table Mountain from Robben Island
Cape Town's Bo-Kaap neighborhood Cape Town's Victoria Harbor
World Cup events in Cape Town's V&A Waterfront on the day of the Final, July 11, 2010If you’re talking liberal laws, it’s probably not a major surprise that gay marriage is legal in South Africa. What may be more of a surprise is that, for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the South African constitution had to be temporarily suspended around the soccer stadiums for FIFA security purposes. (We can’t say enough good things for how festive the South Africans were as hosts to the World Cup, btw.) Years of abuses under Apartheid made many personal searches — ones we’re quite accustomed to in the U.S. — illegal. The 14-year-old South African constitution is one of the most liberal in the world.
On the other hand, there’s the old local joke that rock and roll never dies, it just tours South Africa. (“Hey, was that really Bryan Adams I just saw in town the other day?”) And given the nation’s history of economic disparity and its 25% unemployment rate, there are the major issues of poverty and security.
Cape Town's FIFA Fan Fest for Germany vs. Argentina, July 3, 2010 Nelson Mandela mural along Church Street, Cape Town
Soccer fever hits Cape Town for the World Cup
Some expected us to witness crushing poverty and aggressive homelessness in Cape Town, but it’s hard to say that it is any worse than SF. In the month we spent around Cape Town’s central business district (CBD) — a.k.a. the City Bowl — we were approached by all of one person for money. Yet security is a big concern among the locals and it’s an even bigger industry.
Even with all the truly great options in town to satisfy any SF food snob, food is handled a bit differently here. Some of the best sushi in town can be found in Italian restaurants — sushi being a decidedly California thing in Cape Town, and less of a Japanese thing. Which also explains why the grocery stores sell flour tortillas under the name “California wraps”. (To make matters worse, in turn, one of the more famous Italian restaurants in town has a German name.) This theme of playing a bit fast and loose with labels and names will again come up with coffee later in this post.
Beach mansions in Cape Town Springbok, the national animal (and a tasty one at that), in the fields hours outside of Cape Town
To be a young black man anywhere, including Cape Town, has its issues Only the World Cup tourists needed this sign of etiquette
Speaking of coffee, like Italy or Australia or New Zealand, the baseline quality standards in South Africa are clearly better than in the U.S. You can walk into just about any random store and trust that you’ll get a rather acceptable espresso, whereas this practice is still ill-advised even in San Francisco. But, as in places such as Italy, examples of very good espresso are a rarer find — even in the biggest cosmopolitan cities. But with a little research and a few contacts, we were able to identify some of the best places in Cape Town.
A few things come to mind specifically about the espresso here. WEGA machines are ubiquitous. The coffees tend to emphasize more rich-bodied flavor than the wilder, bright coffees you may come to expect from Africa, but there are exceptions. And the cappuccino here almost always comes with a very Portuguese dusting of cocoa powder; you quite literally ask to have for one without it.
And somewhat contrary to an earlier post of ours, you can find the cappuccino quite often on café menus — even perhaps moreso than flat whites, and especially at the cafés that are a little less obsessed about their coffee. However, most places do treat the cappuccino and flat white interchangeably. Which leads us to our next topic of discussion…
Cappuccino at Espresso Lab Microroasters Origin Coffee Roasters' drink menu
Camps Bay and the 'Twelve' Apostles, suburban Cape Town Hout Bay from Chapman's Peak, suburban Cape Town
After spending a month in South Africa, it made sense that this is the nation that gave us “red espresso” — or Roobios tea. Even if you like the tea, as we do, the term “red espresso” comes off as unnecessarily deceptive and has never sat well with us. Just because you can stick something into an espresso machine does not make it espresso. Which reminds us a little of eggspresso — or should that be “yellow espresso”? And yet “Red Cappuccino” is also a registered trademark.
Now if you thought coffee’s wine analogy was a bit over the top, over the past several years South Africa has developed something of a niche market for coffee-flavored wine. They’ve been growing wine grapes around Cape Town since 1655, but it wasn’t until 1925 that a Stellenbosch professor crossed the fragile pinot noir grape with the heartier cinsault (known locally as hermitage) to create a local cultivar called pinotage.
In 2001, noted pinotage maker Diemersfontein Wines came out with the original “coffee chocolate pinotage”, and they’ve popularly released one every year since. Meanwhile, imitators came to the fore in the form of Cappupinoccinotage from Boland Cellars, Café Culture from KWV, the Vrede en Lust Mocholate (a malbec), etc. The original Diemersfontein coffee pinotage wine maker, Bertus Fourie — literally nicknamed “Starbucks” for that reason — has moved on to Café Culture and now Barista Wine (we are not making this up), where he holds the title of “Head Barista” and their Web site offers a Nespresso Le Cube D180 sweepstakes.
Stellenbosch wine country, outside of Cape Town The Vida e Caffè in Stellenbosch
Coffee pinotage is sometimes called the red wine for coffee addicts, and it certainly doesn’t come without some controversy from the purists, but it’s really more the red wine for coffee drinkers who don’t like red wine. That said, there’s room for everybody’s tastes. We’ve long stated that Starbucks’ stroke of genius was in convincing millions of customers who don’t like the taste of coffee that they actually do. While coffee pinotage doesn’t use any actual coffee for flavoring, the taste aims for the consumer are the same.
Wall of coffee cups at Mugged on RoelandNow despite all the wine-growing activity around Cape Town and a number of its very good wines, many South African wines are still (IMO) global underachievers and/or acquired tastes. Having tried a 2007 Diemersfontein coffee pinotage and a 2009 Barista pinotage, we were reminded of all the beer + coffee combinations that have failed over the years … the “coffee stouts” where the results were second-rate as a beer and second-rate as coffee, rather than something better than the sum of its parts.
Of course, we live in a diverse, global culture that sometimes wants their wine (or beer) to taste like coffee, their coffee to taste like chocolate and hazelnuts, and their chocolate to taste like bacon. So why not skip the middleman and market bacon wine? Sure, it might be a curious novelty to hear Céline Dion perform an album of songs by fellow Canadians Death from Above 1979, but it’s no stretch to presume that it will optimally satisfy neither fans of Céline nor Death from Above 1979.
As Oscar Wilde famously once said, “Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.” This South African dimension to the coffee-wine analogy largely fails coming from a different angle.
Origin Coffee Roasting's three stories of coffee heavenA little more towards the authentic in the African continent, in the category of “now why don’t we do that in America?”, we did enjoy the occasional Ethiopian coffee ceremony — even if it originates on the continent’s opposite side of the equator. At a restaurant such as Cape Town’s Addis in Cape, we enjoyed an odd mix of Frankincense, popcorn (?!), and coffee served from a Jabena pot.
While the coffee undergoes some of the oldest and crudest handling and brewing known to man, the resulting cup is quite flavorful. Perhaps more importantly, the ceremony uniquely resonates with coffee culture, capturing much of the wonder that’s truly native to coffee without the creatively lazy marketing contortionists who squeeze coffee’s square peg into wine tasting’s round hole through the mutant coffee cupping fad in America. But alas, Californication applies to coffee cupping here just as it does to sushi and flour tortillas in South Africa.
At the coffee chain level, Vida e Caffè serves as an example of how Starbucks and even Peet’s fall short. Even Woolworths W Café serves both espresso and cappuccino in a paper cup that run circles around Starbucks.
While at the “artisan” end, there are places like TRUTH. that seem to go through the Third Wave motions, but with much success. And then there are places like Origin Coffee Roasting, who not only broke quality coffee ground in Africa in 2006, but they established a roasting and training operation that most American coffee entrepreneurs have only talked about. And then there’s Espresso Lab Microroasters, who show some of the most cohesive and comprehensive vision for what a quality coffee operation could be — while making espresso as good as anything in SF.
The wine may have room for improvement compared to what San Franciscans are used to, but everything else about Cape Town makes it a fantastic and compelling place to be — including the coffee.
Jabena, Frankincense, popcorn - an Ethiopian coffee ceremony at Addis in Cape TRUTH.coffeecult kiosk in Cape Town's V&A Waterfront
Woolworths surprising W Café Vida e Caffè espresso with Portuguese pasteis de nata

Shop 10a, Gardens Shopping Centre, Mill St. Shop 11, Gardens Shopping Centre, Mill St. Shop 5, Buitenkloof Studios, 8 Kloof St. Shop number F&B1, Cape Town International Airport Shop No. 6160, Lower Level, Victoria Wharf Shop 6195, Lower Level, Victoria Wharf Shop 1, Perspectives Building, 37 Roeland St. Shop 4, Quay 5, Victoria Wharf, V&A Waterfront Shop 1, Mooikloof, 34 Kloof St.
Tags: cafe_reviews, cape_town_cafes, cappuccino, coffee_cupping, ethiopian_coffee, flat_white, flavored_coffees, origin_coffee_roasting, peets_coffee, quality_standards, south_africa_coffee, Starbucks, WEGA, wine_analogy, world_cup
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Espresso 101 Barista Training DVD

Espresso 101 Barista Training DVDEspresso 101 is a complete training course in espresso and brewed coffee. This award-winning professional video training tool is the industry standard for training you and your employees. This DVD will cut the normal 20-hour employee-training cycle down to three or four hours. This tool pays for itself with the first employee trained. Each package includes a study guide, multiple-choice test with answer key, barista diploma and a durable library case.

This informative DVD covers: A Brief History of Coffee, Coffee Bean Roasting and Blending, Espresso Equipment, Extracting Perfect Espresso, The Art of Steaming and Foaming Milk, How to Prepare Espresso Bar Drinks, Fundamentals of Brewed Coffee Preparation, Cleaning, Safety and Maintenance.

What industry experts say about Espresso 101: An excellent training resource designed to provide solid background information on coffee as well as practical demonstrations on correct preparation of espresso-based beverages. This entertaining video should become part of the training program for every new barista entering the coffee industry. - Ted Lingle, Executive Director, Specialty Coffee Association of America

Price: $89.95


Click here to buy from Amazon

Monday, September 27, 2010

Lavazza Super Crema Espresso Whole Bean Coffee, 2.2-Pound Bag

Lavazza Super Crema Espresso Whole Bean Coffee, 2.2-Pound BagThe Lavazza super crema, whole bean, 2.2 pound bag are a premium blend of 80% sweet arabicas and 20% robustas producing a rich, intense flavor with a thick espresso crema that holds up well in cappuccinos and lattes. Super crema can also be used with all other brewing methods for an extremely rich, flavorful coffee.

Price: $24.82


Click here to buy from Amazon

Click Espresso Protein Drink Powder 16 oz (448 g)

Click Espresso Protein Drink Powder 16 oz (448 g)Espresso Protein Drink™
Double Shot Espresso Coffee
15 Grams of Lasti
Price:

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Timothy's World Coffee, Rainforest Decaf Espresso Extra-Bold for Keurig Brewers, 24-Count K-Cups (Pack of 2)

Timothy's World Coffee, Rainforest Decaf Espresso Extra-Bold for Keurig Brewers, 24-Count K-Cups (Pack of 2)Smoky, Sweet, Smooth
Price: $27.90

Click here to buy from Amazon

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Espresso drinks – the classic category

The focus here is to look at the various espresso based drinks that therefore provide a complete list of the "Classic" espresso drinks made up of classic Italian and Italian American drinks.


Espresso is an Italian term that refers to a specific type of brewing method. Here some very hot but not boiling, water is forced through freshly ground coffee under a lot of pressure. Espresso has grown immensely popular over the years, that it is more than just a way to make coffee. It is a complete coffee cuisine. And espresso technology that other countries and cultures outside Italy. The basic component of this cuisine is always the coffee brewed the espresso way. Variation is in the other components, which added to the coffee: milk, chocolate and in the United States, always richer syrups and side dishes.


The various espresso cuisine include:


1. Classic northern Italy style;


2. Italian-American style (developed by Italian Americans in the United States);


3. Postmodern style (USA Seattle style cuisine);


4. The Cuban style and


5. other Latin American cuisine


This article is to concentrate espresso-based variations that make up the first two kitchens.These can be described as the classic espresso drinks:


The classic category:


1. - Espresso: just 1 oz as a 'Shot' black coffee and is usually drunk with sugar.


2. Espresso Ristretto (US); short (Pacific) Corto (Italy): æ half a standard espresso shot.Therefore also called "shortened" Espresso. Some like the "small is beautiful" espresso feeling it is more aromatic than the original espresso.


3. Espresso Lungo (Italy, USA), long (Pacific): an extra long pull of about twice the amount of water through 1 standard shot, give a relatively over extracted and weaker tasting drink. This term not often in United States since by Italian standards most American portions are considered long.


4.-Espresso-Romano (US; Italian-American): Standard espresso, but with a slice of lemon on the side of the Cup.


5. Espresso Con Panna (Italy, USA): 1 standard shot, topped with whipped cream and crowned an optional unsweetened chocolate powder.


6. Double (US); Doppio (Italy): 2 espresso shots into a Cup. Also known as double shot.


7. - Cappuccino: 1 standard shot espresso, topped by hot steamed milk and milk froth. A classical Italian cappuccino consists of approx. 1 / 3 espresso, 1 / 3 milk and 1 / 3 pretty stiff foam. In Cappuccino, the hot frothed milk is added directly to the hot espresso coffee. It is usually drunk with sugar.


8. Café latte (USA): 1-2 shots of espresso and 3 times as much hot milk. Latte has a high ratio of milk to coffee than a Cappuccino does. A Latte is made by pouring the coffee and the milk at the same time from both sides of the cup.


9. Espresso macchiato (Italy, USA): 1 standard shot but crowned with a small amount of steam milk foam.


10. Latte macchiato (Italy: Hot Frothed milk is first in the glass, followed by slow pour of espresso into the cup. The idea is the the coffee 'stains ' the milk. The difference is with a Cappuccino, milk and froth are added to the coffee; with a Latte, the milk and coffee are poured at the same time; a Latte Macchiato, the milk is poured first then the coffee is added. This creates a layered effect you can see through the serving glass.


11. Cafe Mocha (US): in the Italian American cuisine is mixing 2 oz thick strong hot chocolate with 1 standard shot of espresso. This is topped with hot frothed milk. Most of the American cafes are making what they call a Mocha, by adding chocolate fountain syrup to a cafe latte.


Michael Russell


Your independent guide to espresso [http://espresso.tips-and-supplies.com/]

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Photos - Latte Art How To: Part 1 - Milk Texture



Latte art is one of the fun parts of being a barista. We get to show off a little and beautiful drinks always make people smile. Latte art takes a while to learn, but once you get the basics down it doesn't take long to master the different designs.
Photos By Devorah Freudiger, Gimme! Coffee



Use a pitcher that is the right size for your drink, at gimme we have three different pitcher sizes for our different sizes of milk drinks. This way you can fill each pitcher to proportionally the same level, but have more or less milk. Also, having a good spout on your pitcher makes certain designs possible. You want room to stretch the milk, so start with cold milk at a level below the beginning of the spout, about an inch below is correct for most drinks.


Always purge your steam wand before starting to steam your milk. You don't want to put a burst of water into your milk. You can also look to a make sure that steam is coming out of all the holes in the tip of the wand. If it isn't, you have some major cleaning problems. Start with the tip of the wand submerged just below the surface of the milk.


The secret to great milk in is in the angles. Rest the shaft of the wand in the point of the pitcher spout going into the center of the pitcher. Then tilt the pitcher about 45 degrees, you can move the pitcher to the right or left. I work only with this angle, never tilting my pitcher forward or back. If you keep the wand halfway between the center of the pitcher and the edge, once you turn on the steam pressure you will notice that your milk starts to spin around in a circle.


Having the wand just below the surface of the milk will allow some air to mix in, it should sound gentle, like tearing paper. If it sounds like blowing bubbles you are too close to the surface. If it sounds like shreaking you are too deep into the milk. You want to add air during the first part of the steaming, until the pitcher starts to get warm to the touch. Then submerge the tip of the wand a little, to let the milk swirl around, breaking down the bubbles into smaller and smaller ones.


You can change the depth of your milk vortex by moving the tip of your wand closer or further from the edge of the pitcher. Closer to the edge makes a steeper vortex, more in the center or a pitcher makes a gentler roll. If you have large bubbles stuck in the center a steeper vortex will cause them to pop. Wipe down your wand and blow some steam out after every drink.


Your milk will have grown from adding air to your milk to create foam, how long you add air to your milk will determine the thickness of the foam. Different cafes have different standards for drinks. At Gimme we look for half an inch or less on Lattes, half an inch to an inch for our Cappuccinos. In the time that you took to clean your steam wand the foam will have risen to the top of the milk, forming a separate layer.


To pour good latte art you need well incorperated, creamy foam. You get this by swirling the milk in your pitcher until it shines. We call this polishing and do it before pouring every drink. Your well polished, textured milk should look like wet paint. Don't be scared of polishing too much, you aren't going to hurt your milk.


Polishing incorporates the foam into your milk, allowing you to pour both at the same time. Skim and soy milk, because they have less fat, will separate quicker and require a little more polishing to get smooth.


Once you have smooth milk, pouring beautiful designs is just a few steps away!

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Sep 23, Is coffee fattening?

by Rebecca C.
(Ormond Beach, FL, USA)
QUESTION:
A friend at work told me that drinking too much coffee is fattening. Is this true?
ANSWER:
Coffee itself is not fattening at all.
There are only about 5 calories in a 6-ounce cup of black coffee.
That same cup of coffee contains zero carbohydrates, no fat and zero sugars.
In other words, coffee is a wonderful beverage when it comes to watching your weight.
BUT...
That coffee can become a HUGE source of calories when you start adding cream, sugar, syrups and sprinkles.
As an example, a 12-ounce White Chocolate Mocha Frappuccino contains about 370 calories.
How about a regular cup of coffee with cream and sugar? A 6-ounce cup with cream and one sugar is about 50 calories.
Coffee itself isn't fattening at all.
Just be careful how you prepare it!
You'll find some additional information on the health benefits of coffee on our coffee and health page.

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Sep 23, Are there many calories in coffee?

When it comes to the calories in coffee, there?s good news and bad news.
The good news is that if you drink your coffee black, there are very few calories indeed.
So you can feel pretty good about yourself. Coffee is a mild stimulant, is packed with antioxidants and can stand head to head with most other ?health? beverages in your local health food store.
The problem with the calories in your coffee is not about the coffee at all. It?s about what you add to your coffee.
The sugar, milk, cream, soy and syrups can all add a lot of extra calories.
Here is a rough breakdown of the calories you can expect to consume, according to how you like to take your coffee.
The figures listed below are for 12-ounce servings.
10 calories - Regular cup of coffee, no cream or sugar
110 calories - Regular cup of coffee, plus cream and sugar
120 calories - Cappuccino
200 calories - Latte
310 calories - Mocha with whipped cream
370 calories - Starbucks White Chocolate Mocha Frappuccino
As you can see, the fancier the coffee concoction, the higher the number of calories.
So, while there are very few calories in coffee itself, the calories in a coffee beverage can be quite high.
 Use good water
Find out about carbohydrates in coffee...
More health benefits of coffee...
 


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Sep 23, Carbohydrates in Coffee, Calories and more good news

That?s right, there are no carbohydrates in coffee, and so few calories you could burn them off with a walk around the block.
Of course, these figures are for a cup of fresh-brewed coffee, from beans, and without cream or sugar. The way you like to fix your coffee with cream and sugar will certainly have an impact on the final amount of carbohydrates and calories you ingest.
But compared with most beverages around the house, coffee is very light on the bad stuff, and bursting with good stuff.
Coffee is one of the nutritional ?good guys?...
* Coffee contains no cholesterol and no saturated fat
* Coffee is low in sodium

* Coffee beans contain no sugar

* Coffee is high in magnesium, pantothenic acid, potassium and riboflavin...all of them good for you.
Compare that with a few cans of soda, and you?ll see that coffee gives you all the kick, without the drawbacks.
Coffee is a natural stimulant too...
We all know how caffeine gives us a kick when we drink coffee. But you may not know that caffeine is also the principle active ingredient in a lot of weight-loss supplements.
Can coffee really help you lose weight? In spite of its widespread use, there is considerable debate about whether caffeine really does help you lose weight.
So let?s split the difference, and relax in the knowledge that coffee won?t make you fat. As for carbohydrates in coffee, that?s one thing you don?t have to worry about at all.
Next Steps...
Browse through this site for help in choosing some wonderful gourmet specialty coffee beans, advice on buying the best coffee makers and help in selecting a good burr coffee grinder.
We'll also give you some tips on how to make coffee.

Find out about the calories in coffee...
Coffee & Your Health...


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Starbucks Launches “Starbucks Reserve”

Starbucks has announced the introduction of an ultra premium coffee, Starbucks Reserve, to their menu.  A 12 oz cup will sell for nearly $3 in Seattle and other select markets.  The coffee will be released on August 31st.

Starbucks has chosen to pitch the product in New York City, San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, Washington D.C., Boston, Seattle, Portland, Ore., Chicago, Dallas, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Miami.  Starbucks will preview the coffee in select markets on August 28th.

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Welcome

Welcome to my Coffee blog.  In this blog, I plan to talk about news and various topics related to coffee.  I love coffee and basically drink it all day long.  So, I have decided to put this caffiene addiction to good use and talk and share information about coffee and coffee related products and news.

If you have ideas or suggestions on topics you would like to hear about, please let me know.