And Mocha's berry, from Arabia pure,
In small fine china cups, came in at last;
Gold cups of filigree, made to secure
the hand from burning, underneath them placed.
Cloves, cinnamon, and saffron, too, were boiled
up with the Coffee, which, I think, they spoiled.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Saturday, December 28, 2013
When Next We Meet
Aaron, Eric, and Joe
Starbucks Shared Planet
Building Relationships with Producers
Bishoy, Jackie, and Lauren
Ethical Sourcing
1 to 5
Greg, Eric, Amerelis, and Jonatha
Fairtrade
Farmer Support Centers
Investing in Community
12/17/2013 Project 2, Montvale, Lombardi, Kilmer, & Molly
12/17/2013 Project 2, Delaware
- Bourbon and Typica Original Arabic Species
- Caturra and Catuai are Hybrids
- 60% of the World's Coffee is Arabica
- Grows Best at High Altitudes
- Species Name Coffea arabica
- Bourbon Trees require higher maintenance and are lowest yielding
- Typica grows well in all types of topography and is higher yielding
- Hundreds of years ago as the first pure coffee trees were moved and transplanted around the world from Africa and Arabia to the French Caribbean Islands of Latin America
GROWING COFFEE
- A Coffee Tree is a fruit tree related to the woody gardenia. It's a evergreen shrub that flowers once a year, producing cherries nine months later
- Coffee Trees can live up to a hundred years, but their productive fruit bearing life span typically ranges from 20-25 years with pruning.
- Week 1 Seed Planted
- Week 2 Seed Germinates
- week 6 The stem rises from the soil, at this stage the plant is called a matchstick or solider because of the rounded cotyledon
- Month 2 The Cotyledon separates into two embryonic leaves that nourish the plant
- At this stage the plant looks like a butterfly, and it is strong enough to move to a nursery. Seedlings are transplanted into plastic bags and monitored daily for temperature.
- Month 4 The plant will produce the first branches. At this point the plant is monitored for plant size, leaf color, plant structure and distance between branches.
- 1 Year The young plants develop dark green color and healthy foliage and root system are transplanted into a field.
- 3 to 4 Years Coffee Trees mature and produce its first commercial harvest.
- At 3 to 4 in some cases fewer years when the coffee tree has reached maturity, it begins a yearly cycle of producing coffee cherries.
- A coffee tree is typically pruned at 5-6 feet (1.5-1.8meters) to make them easier to harvest.
- Pruning increases a tree's productivity or the amount of fruit it will yield.
Sunday, December 22, 2013
11 Reasons Why You Should Drink Coffee Every Day - The Huffington Post
1.
Americans get more
antioxidants from coffee than anything else.
2.
Just smelling coffee could
make you less stressed.
3.
Coffee could lessen the
symptoms of Parkinson's disease.
4.
Coffee is great for your
liver (especially if you drink alcohol).
5.
Coffee can make you feel
happier.
6.
Coffee consumption has been
linked to lower levels of suicide.
7.
Coffee could reduce your
chances of getting skin cancer (if you're a woman).
8.
Coffee can make you a better
athlete.
9.
Coffee could reduce your
risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.
10.
Drinking coffee could help
keep your brain healthier for longer.
11.
Coffee may make you more
intelligent.
Posted by Greg Szczecinski
Friday, December 20, 2013
Eric Felipe
Infographic: New York vs. London coffee war
New Yorkers drink 6.7 times as much coffee as people who live in other major cities, and other fun java facts
By Time Out editors
Wed Dec 18 2013
While Italy and Morocco come to mind when one thinks of good coffee, the folks at coffeemaker company Tassimo have taken it upon themselves to be the harbingers of a coming caffeine war between New York City and London. They analyzed the caffeine consumption habits of the Big Apple and the Big Smoke, providing tidbits of information about how much money New Yorkers and Londoners spend on coffee, as well as how many coffeeshops caffeinate the streets every day.
While a higher percentage of Londoners drink coffee on a daily basis, New Yorkers consume more cups every day, and we also have more coffeeshops. Tassimo also found that Gothamites drink 6.7 times as much coffee as people who live in other major cities—and we spend three times the national average on the brown stuff. Scroll down for more on the hard-working, wide-eyed denizens of NYC and London. Who do you think will win the coffee war of 2014?
Monday, December 16, 2013
Coffee Ceremony
In a Traditional Ethiopian Coffee Ceremony it is
considered impolite to have only one cup, also that it take place
generally 3 times daily. A Ethiopian women can pour from the Jabena into
the tiny cup from up to two feet away.
Posted by Aaron Lawson
Posted by Aaron Lawson
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Re-Using Coffee Grounds
Only about 20 percent of the coffee bean contributes to the flavor and aroma of the drink—the rest is tasteless plant fiber. That means that there’s a lot of stuff left over when coffee is produced—hundreds of thousands of tons of it a day. Scientists are working hard to come up with a useful way to use the waste.
Researchers at the Maine Technology Institute have investigated ways to turn spent coffee grounds into fuel pellets to be burned for energy, and one coffee production company already sends its waste to a nearby biomass plant to be burned along with wood.
Another group of scientists has devised a way to use coffee grounds to produce an alcoholic drink, by fermenting the grounds and distilling them in a method similar to the production of whiskey. The result is a beverage the makers claim has “organoleptic quality acceptable for human consumption.” They might need to work on a tagline. Posted by Greg Szczecinski
Thursday, December 5, 2013
This Is Your Brain on Coffee
This column appears in the June 9 issue of The New York Times Magazine.
For hundreds of years, coffee has been one of the two or three most popular beverages on earth. But it’s only recently that scientists are figuring out that the drink has notable health benefits. In one large-scale epidemiological study from last year, researchers primarily at the National Cancer Institute parsed health information from more than 400,000 volunteers, ages 50 to 71, who were free of major diseases at the study’s start in 1995. By 2008, more than 50,000 of the participants had died. But men who reported drinking two or three cups of coffee a day were 10 percent less likely to have died than those who didn’t drink coffee, while women drinking the same amount had 13 percent less risk of dying during the study. It’s not clear exactly what coffee had to do with their longevity, but the correlation is striking.
Other recent studies have linked moderate coffee drinking — the equivalent of three or four 5-ounce cups of coffee a day or a single venti-size Starbucks — with more specific advantages: a reduction in the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, basal cell carcinoma (the most common skin cancer), prostate cancer, oral cancer and breast cancer recurrence.
Perhaps most consequential, animal experiments show that caffeine may reshape the biochemical environment inside our brains in ways that could stave off dementia. In a 2012 experiment at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, mice were briefly starved of oxygen, causing them to lose the ability to form memories. Half of the mice received a dose of caffeine that was the equivalent of several cups of coffee. After they were reoxygenated, the caffeinated mice regained their ability to form new memories 33 percent faster than the uncaffeinated. Close examination of the animals’ brain tissue showed that the caffeine disrupted the action of adenosine, a substance inside cells that usually provides energy, but can become destructive if it leaks out when the cells are injured or under stress. The escaped adenosine can jump-start a biochemical cascade leading to inflammation, which can disrupt the function of neurons, and potentially contribute to neurodegeneration or, in other words, dementia.
In a 2012 study of humans, researchers from the University of South Florida and the University of Miami tested the blood levels of caffeine in older adults with mild cognitive impairment, or the first glimmer of serious forgetfulness, a common precursor of Alzheimer’s disease, and then re-evaluated them two to four years later. Participants with little or no caffeine circulating in their bloodstreams were far more likely to have progressed to full-blown Alzheimer’s than those whose blood indicated they’d had about three cups’ worth of caffeine.
There’s still much to be learned about the effects of coffee. “We don’t know whether blocking the action of adenosine is sufficient” to prevent or lessen the effects of dementia, says Dr. Gregory G. Freund, a professor of pathology at the University of Illinois who led the 2012 study of mice. It is also unclear whether caffeine by itself provides the benefits associated with coffee drinking or if coffee contains other valuable ingredients. In a 2011 study by the same researchers at the University of South Florida, for instance, mice genetically bred to develop Alzheimer’s and then given caffeine alone did not fare as well on memory tests as those provided with actual coffee. Nor is there any evidence that mixing caffeine with large amounts of sugar, as in energy drinks, is healthful. But a cup or three of coffee “has been popular for a long, long time,” Dr. Freund says, “and there’s probably good reasons for that.”
This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: June 28, 2013
The Well column on June 9 about the health benefits of coffee referred incorrectly to its popularity. Coffee has been one of the two or three most popular beverages for hundreds, not thousands, of years.
A version of this article appears in print on 06/09/2013, on page MM14 of the NewYork edition with the headline: This Is Your Brain on Coffee.
THOUGHTS FROM JOSEPH PRICE
Knowing that all coffee comes from the “Coffee Belt” was
very interesting but, what I found mind blowing was how much of a role
volcanic soil played in coffee growth. Learning that soil plays a HUGE
role in the taste, caffeine density, and growth of a coffee plant is
certainly something I’ll share with my staff! And I thought the art of
growing coffee was relatively easy…..
The Creation of Juan Valdez
The creation of Juan Valdez
Posted By Eric Felipe
Coffee Blight
CentAm coffee blight to cut 2013-14 output only 9.7 pct -ICAFE
Central American 2013/14 coffee output to drop 1.2 mln bags -ICAFE
* Benchmark coffee price seen below cost of production
NEW YORK, Dec 3 (Reuters) -
A leaf rust outbreak will cut Central American coffee production by 9.7
percent in 2013/14, a spokesman
for Costa Rica's national coffee institute Icafe said on Tuesday, a
fraction of the loss previously expected from the blight.
Ronald Peters, Icafe
executive director, said on a National Coffee Association of America
webinar that Central American coffee
production will fall roughly 1.2 million 60-bags, or 9.7 percent, from
the 2012/13 crop year (October/September), bringing production to
roughly 11.2 million 60-kg bags.
This lower coffee
production forecast for Central America, where an outbreak of a leaf
rust fungus known as "roya" is hampering
the harvest currently underway, follows sharply reduced output in
2012/13, when it dropped by roughly 20 percent because of the air-borne
fungus.
Central America produces roughly 10 percent of the world's coffee and grows a typically high-quality arabica bean in its high
altitudes and volcanic soil.
The International Coffee
Organization said in its October newsletter that the damage from leaf
rust in Central America was expected
to be more significant than the loss of 2.7 million bags of coffee in
2012/13.
Despite lower Central American production, a global abundance of beans due to large harvests in top overall coffee grower
Brazil, the world's biggest robusta producer Vietnam and the largest grower of washed-arabica Colombia, has pushed the
benchmark price to a five-year low.
"The cost (of production) is higher than the actual "C" contract price," said Juan Barrios, a board member of Guatemala's coffee
association Anacafe, also speaking on the webinar.
Roya first reached Central
America in 1976 but slashed 2012/13 output after rising to higher
altitudes than ever before, infecting
farms where producers were not accustomed to dealing with the disease.
The fungus attacks the underside of coffee tree leaves, appearing as
powdery orange spores, and ultimately turning them black and causing
them to drop. This either kills or significantly
weakens the tree, cutting yields and potentially affecting bean
quality.
Farmers have tried to combat the outbreak, the region's worst ever, with fungicides, pruning and cutting down severely infected
trees. The improved forecast shows that many of these measures have been successful.
In mid-November,
Guatemala's National Association of Coffee forecast its output will drop
by 3 percent to 2.9 million 60-kg bags,
after a 15 percent slide in 2012/13. Icafe projected Costa Rica's
2013/14 output would drop by 18 percent year over year. El Salvador was
seen dropping by 36 percent
Thank you to Mark Ormsbee for the Article
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
We Meet Again, November 7th, 2013
We got together today to share the knowledge we gained from our projects…………………….
Guatemala is the eight-largest coffee producer in the world
There are 90,000 coffee farms in Guatemala,
61,200 are small.
The name Guatemala means Land Of Trees in the
Mayan Toltec language
2009 Starbucks opened a support center in Costa Rica
Coffee from the Antigua region is grown at altitudes above
(1524 meters) 5000 feet
Costa Rica has a micro climate
We learned that the coffee trees need shade.
The trees are from Australia & have been there for
100 years.
Aaron, Joe, and Eric Told us about Elevation
Coffee grows bigger & faster in lower elevation
Arabic plants bear fruit once or twice a year depending
on rainfall.
Arabic beans thrive at the highest elevations.
The cooler evenings slow down the maturation of the
coffee cherries, allowing the flavors to develop.
Less oxygen the more dense the bean, richer the flavor.
1000-1200 Meters - Extra Prime Washed
1200-1300 Meters - Semi Hard Beans
1350-1600 Meters - Hard Beans
1600 Meters - Strictly Hard Bean
Eric, Greg Told us about Africa / Arabia
Coffees from this region often have floral and
citrus characteristics.
Ethiopia is the place where man first experienced
coffee's magic.
Twice a year, workers harvest coffee beans grown
the slopes that were first farmed by there ancestors.
Kenya is located close to the equator that to
experiences both hemispheres' seasons.
An elaborate coffee ceremony, which includes roasting,
grinding and brewing the coffee, is still a staple of the
social life today.
Amarilis, Jonathan Told us about Asia / Pacific
The mystery and fantasy of Indonesia are perhaps best
represented by one of it's oldest inhabitants, the
Komodo Dragon.
Sumatra is the most popular single origin coffee
2009 Indonesia produced 1406 million lbs of coffee.
Most coffees that are bought from this region are
processed using the semi-washed method.
Known for its full body and spicy flavors.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
The Prohibition of Coffee Drinking
In 1675, fearing potential political unrest, Charles the second issues a proclamation closing down the coffee houses. He already had support of the Woman of London, who in a strongly worded and lewd petition, claimed that it made the man inactive, spending too much time and money away from the home, as a result of which the 'entire race was in danger of extinction". At that time women where not allowed in the coffee houses.
Monday, November 4, 2013
Sunday, November 3, 2013
STARBUCKS WITH AN EXTRA SHOT OF HISTORY
Starbucks coffee transformed the way people think about coffee today. It took the love for brewed coffee and brought it home for people to share. The turning point was in 1987 when Howard Schultz took over Starbucks and opened stores in others states and Canada, then giving Starbucks 17 different locations. This paved the way to having Starbucks coffee houses on every street corner across the United States and other Countries. Starbucks also added to the pop culture dictionary with coined phrases such as barista, tall, venti, grande, double shot, half-caf, mocha, latta. By 1995 Starbucks had 677 different locations across the United States and Canada. They started serving Frappuccino blended drinks, yet again adding to the list of new words to the pop culture dictionary. Starting in 1994 Starbucks added to the ease of getting your caffine fix by establishing drive-thru stores. If it wasn't for Howard Schultz and his vision of making a coffee house culture in the United States we would not have such caffeine fulled society.
DID YOU KNOW?
Starbucks the world’s top coffee retailer.In fact I’m personally not a fan of Starbucks because of their self-service system. Anyways losing me as a customer, doesn’t effect their success in market that much. Starbucks is the largest coffeehouse company in the world, with 19,555 stores in 58 countries, including 12,811 in the United States, 1,248 in Canada, 965 in Japan, 766 in Great Britain, 580 in China and 420 in South Korea. You can’t trust these numbers because they are opening nearly 5 stores everyday. So better don’t try to find correct numbers. Their coffeehouse chain based in Seattle, Washington. Their main product is coffee as you know and even just with drinks, their sales number are better than Mcdonald’s food chain. Over the last 30 years their logo has changed 3 times while keeping the original Starbucks theme. If you are a fan of Starbucks, you would like to know these rare facts about them. Here are 10 Most Interesting Facts About Starbucks …
10 – New Stores Everyday
Starbucks has added an average of two stores on a daily basis since 1987.
09 – More Than 137,000 employees
Starbucks had 137,000 employees or “partners” as they call them in 2010. This is twice the population of Greenland.
08 – Starbucks Drinks
There are over 87,000 possible drink combinations at Starbucks
07 – Trenta Coffee
The Trenta is slightly bigger than your stomach with the capacity to hold 916 milliliters. The stomach on average has a capacity of 900 ml.
06 – Caffeine Level
A Starbucks grande coffee has 320 milligrams of caffeine, over four times the amount of caffeine in a Red Bull.
05 – Cinnamon Chip Scone
The Starbucks cinnamon chip scone has more calories than a McDonald’s quarter pounder with 480 calories.
04 – Healthcare Insurance
At $300 million Starbucks spends more on healthcare insurance for its employees than on coffee beans. They offer health insurance to all employees including part-time.
03 – Starbucks Milk Usage
Starbucks uses over 93 million gallons of milk per year, enough to fill 155 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
02 – Paper Cups
Starbucks uses 2.3 billion paper cups per year.
01 – Customer Per Week
They currently serve 40 million customers a week.
T
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