Showing posts with label java. Show all posts
Showing posts with label java. Show all posts

Sunday, June 14, 2009

How Fresh Is Your Coffee

To truly talk about fresh coffee we need to start at the beginning.

Green Coffee Bean Freshness
Fresh really begins all the way back to the day it is harvested from the coffee trees and how quickly the farmer gets it to market. The quicker it is sold at the auction, put on a ship to the US, unloaded, moved into a truck, delivered to a storage warehouse and sold to a roaster, the fresher the green coffee will be.

Roaster to Your House
TIME! Oh' so important for your roasted bean. There is a whole science experiment that could go with this part of it. How long does it take for your roasted coffee to degas? DEGAS? What? Yes, coffee beans do have gas. But you do want to be near them when they degas, unlike uncle Fred. It takes about 15 days for the degassing to be complete. It's all downhill from there. Deterioration starts, wonderful flavor is lost and aroma will start to diminish over time. If you pre-grind your coffee it will happen even quicker. So drink your coffee in the first 15 days and you will not have to worry about that. Now this is a problem I have with the big companies out there. They tell you that they vacuum seal your coffee to hold in the freshness. What a load of S****! (stuff) If you vacuum seal coffee before it is done degassing the bag expands and could even pop. So if it is in a brick, it must have been done degassing before it was even put in the package.

So what am I telling you here? Buy a 15 day supply, fresh from the roaster, take it straight home and put it into an air tight glass container. (Like a Ball Jar, but don't crank it down too tight.) Enjoy all the ever changing pleasant flavors that happen in the first 15 days, and then order your next batch and start all over again. Try a different origin or blend to mix things up a bit. Don’t get caught in a coffee rut, there are hundreds of origins out there just waiting for you to bring them home. Midwest Coffee Company has 15 to chose from and they are all grown and produced 100% chemical free.

Storage is a major element in freshness. The amount of oxygen exposure your beans have will speed up the deterioration process. Light and temperature also play a part in freshness. We are constantly asked about storing coffee in the refrigerator or freezer. EEET, wrong. No fridg, no freezer. Put in an airtight glass, stainless steel, ceramic, or an old coffee or cookie tin. Put it in your pantry. Cool, dark, airtight. Perfect. Ah! I feel better. I can tell you stories about ice crystals and onions and Jell-O and your coffee if you want, just let me know.

Now the last part of this FRESH story is all about BREWING and drinking your coffee.Grind it, brew it, and drink it. Don’t let it sit on the burner; put the leftover straight into a pre-warmed carafe or drink it all. Now in a perfect world we would all do this. Right? But some of us have to get up early and don’t function very well until we have had that first cup of coffee. Okay then, go ahead and grind it the night before, put it in your brewer with the timer set for way too early, and since it is not a perfect world and if your coffee has only been roasted for a few days, you may not notice that it sat in the coffee pot all night. But don’t forget to close the top on the brewer, the cat may lick it. You don't really know what they do when the lights go out. It could be a real cat party.

What to brew in? There are so many wonderful choices and they are all good in there their own way. All methods will bring out something different in you fresh roasted coffee. I use several different methods and I am willing to experiment with others. Do you have a suggested method or a serious preference? Let me know. I will try it.

This is just some extra information that we can’t really do anything about, but it can affect the quality and flavor of you fresh coffee. Things like, how long it sits on a hot ship, on the dock and in the truck, or how about a cold dock and freezing in a truck on route to the warehouse, all of these things affect the moisture content of the green coffee. These are elements that are out of the roaster's control. Several green brokers are working on storage and shipping solutions for the future of our precious coffee beans.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The French Roast Coffee Conspiracy

To French Roast or Not to French Roast? This is my questions, and brings many new ones to mind.

What is French Roast coffee? Well I know the answer to this, but I will prepare a written one just in case. That is really the first question to address.

What happens to a coffee bean when you roast it? And what is different about French Roasted Coffee?

Do I really want my coffee French Roasted, or did some well know roaster spend a lot of money to convinced us all that it is good and oh so chic that way?

Is the coffee really just burnt coffee bean or darn near burnt?

I am sure these questions will bring up many more as we investigate the French Roasted Coffee conspiracy.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Quilts & Coffee

Coffee Tasting at the Marion Public Library for the National Quilting Day on Saturday, April 25, 8-3 p.m. Quilt Show specials of several of fresh roasted coffees are available for purchase at $5 & $6 packages. During the show I will speak about who Midwest Organic Coffee Company is and what a difference fresh roasted coffee can make in your cup. More informations at: info@midwestorganiccoffee.com