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BS: World's Best Coffee?

DigiTrad:
A PROPER CUP OF COFFEE
I'D RATHER MAKE COFFEE THAN LOVE
MAKIN' COFFEE


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olddude 06 Aug 11 - 02:27 PM
John on the Sunset Coast 06 Aug 11 - 02:24 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 06 Aug 11 - 01:22 PM
Jack the Sailor 06 Aug 11 - 12:59 PM
Dave Hanson 06 Aug 11 - 12:40 PM
Bill D 06 Aug 11 - 12:14 PM
Bill D 06 Aug 11 - 12:07 PM
Cats 06 Aug 11 - 11:36 AM
Mrrzy 06 Aug 11 - 11:23 AM
Mrrzy 06 Aug 11 - 11:05 AM
John on the Sunset Coast 06 Aug 11 - 11:04 AM
Charley Noble 06 Aug 11 - 10:12 AM
Bobert 06 Aug 11 - 09:54 AM
Jack the Sailor 06 Aug 11 - 09:33 AM
frogprince 06 Aug 11 - 09:25 AM
MarkS 06 Aug 11 - 09:02 AM
Lox 06 Aug 11 - 08:28 AM
Jack the Sailor 06 Aug 11 - 08:27 AM
mrdux 06 Aug 11 - 02:01 AM
saulgoldie 06 Aug 11 - 12:43 AM
EBarnacle 05 Aug 11 - 11:22 PM
Charley Noble 05 Aug 11 - 11:19 PM

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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: olddude
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 02:27 PM

Tim Horton ... love the stuff ... my own is the best, it will dissolve the spoon it is so strong


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 02:24 PM

The truth is I suspect none of us REALLY knows what the WBC is, as few of us have tasted them all, but since Mrrzy has shared a story, so shall I.

I started drinking coffee on a regular basis around my senior year in high school. Often I had it at my friend Ray's house. His great-grandmother was the primary barista (a term not yet in use in Culver City) who used a 12-cup percolator. So, for example, on Monday she would brew the coffee all day. Tuesday she would refill the basket, and replace evaporated water.

On Wednesday you drank coffee...and God help you if you added sugar and/or cream. Nobody can ever since (except in Mexico) make coffee I can't drink.

I'm not sure what they did for coffee during the two perking days, as I only ever saw one percolator there.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 01:22 PM

Coffee from the mountain slopes of western Chiapas, Mexico. I spent a few days at one of the plantations there.
I have done before, but again I will recommend the town of Tapachula for a laid-back atmosphere, few tourists and a grand climate. At one corner of the plaza is an excellent place to get fruit 'shakes' (osterizer mix, choice of familiar and unfamiliar fruits)) and enjoy the early evening. A market town, it has everything from a pizzeria to a good French restaurant. Good small hotels, but eat around as you get recommendations.
Argovia with trips to rain forest nearby.

Adjacent Guatemalan coffee has a very similar taste.

Occasionally get Ethiopian for a change.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Jack the Sailor
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 12:59 PM

My honey likes Folgers


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Dave Hanson
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 12:40 PM

Nescafe.

Dave H


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Bill D
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 12:14 PM

"Blue Mountain is excellent but for an intense flavour fairtrade from Machu Pichu"

ummm. "Machu Picchu" is nowhere near Jamaica, and I suspect that someone is mixing two famous names in order to market coffee.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Bill D
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 12:07 PM

Be careful of 'çlaims' re:Jamaican Blue Mountain. The total amount for sale seems to exceed the total amount grown. As of a few years ago, most of it was sold to Japan. You 'might' get some pretty good Jamaican coffee, grown near the Blue Mountain area, and unless you were a real expert, not know the difference.

My favorite for everyday use would be Guatemala Antigua.... but Harar and a Ugandan coffee I had once are great treats for special times.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Cats
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 11:36 AM

Blue Mountain is excellent but for an intense flavour fairtrade from Machu Pichu


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Mrrzy
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 11:23 AM

Oh, but I have to tell a story of the UNIVERSE's best coffee.

Picture this: Burma, early 80's, pre-dawn and freezing but you have to bare your feet to enter the temple, where we'd been told the party started for the annual mendicant monk alms-giving, when ALL the men and boys who happen to be monks that year in the whole country come to be given something. We'd been misled - the predawn hour was when all the women and girls in the village started cooking in their own homes, but we didn't know that yet - so we sat in a corner of a room where there were some monks sitting on the floor around a big, low table where scuttling acolytes were attempting to rush into and out bearing food for the table, all while not letting their heads be higher than the heads of the sitting monks, so it was quite a show, which the monks completely ignored, and we waited for things to start happening. Then at one point the acolytes kind of all scuttled in, lifted the table between them all, and then set it back down, at which point the monks began eating. It ws really neat to see, especially with the heads-lower bit. But then one of the monks started yelling at the acolytes and gesturing toward us, so we figured we were busted and would have to leave, or worse take our freezing feet out of my companion's purse, but then instead one of the acolytes came running over to us... with coffee.

It had chicory or something in it, and brown sugar, and condensed milk or something, it was thick and hot and sweet...

...and it was by far the most delicious coffee (or anythhing, for that matter) either of us (and she was French!) had ever, ever had, since of course we had gotten no coffee yet getting up at 3 am with no room service...

Man. I wish I could taste it again, and find out what was in it.

The alms-giving was interesting, too: all day (from like 11 am on!) a wavering line of monks of all ages (note being a Buddhist monk isn't a life decision until you're older but you have to be one for a total of 2 years before turning 18, so you do it a few months at a time starting from very little) wandered through the center of town where each was handed something that we gather was supposed to get them through the year. Each family member from the village apparently contributed something, so some monks got big things that were hard to carry and apparently contained many foodstuffs and other items, and others were handed little pots with a single plant in it or something, and that was that, luck of the draw for however long it had taken you to walk from wherever in Burma you were to Pagan, which has more temples per square inch than anything I've ever seen, they're like haystacks at harvest time or something. We just happened to visit that day, too, since Burma didn't advertise such things.

But that coffee lives on in my dreams.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Mrrzy
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 11:05 AM

VERY clean equipment.
NEWLY ground beans.
Brought to you by someone else while you're still in bed, but ready to wake up.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 11:04 AM

JOE, a 100% arabica medium roast from Trader Joe's stores. I brew in French Press, adding about a quarter measure per 12oz mug for perfection.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Charley Noble
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 10:12 AM

How much Kopi Luwak
Could a civet cat quaff,
If its coffee were served in a carafe?

Clearly the "coffee question" is not one which will generate consensus.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Bobert
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 09:54 AM

I'll be the first to admit that I am a "coffee snob"... With that said I am currently enjoying my second cup of "Cerro Las Ranas" (El Salvador) ground "Turkish"...

B~


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Jack the Sailor
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 09:33 AM

I was involved in some earlier thread on it. I am intrigued, but I don't know if I could bring myself to try it.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: frogprince
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 09:25 AM

JTS, there was some discussion about that Kopi Luwak here awhile back. Sounds like some good shit!


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: MarkS
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 09:02 AM

Sumatran Has almost a "winey" flavor.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Lox
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 08:28 AM

Its all about Jamaican Blue Mountain.

More expensive, but in the hands of a skilled coffee maker nothing comes close!


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Jack the Sailor
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 08:27 AM

My favorite is just a nice normal Columbian Supremo. But the best and most expensive coffee is rumored to be Kopi Luwak. What makes it special, I will leave you to Google for yourselves. I don't think that you would believe me if I told you.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: mrdux
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 02:01 AM

morning glass coffee and cafe on east manoa road in honolulu.


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: saulgoldie
Date: 06 Aug 11 - 12:43 AM

I really enjoyed Starbucks 2010 Christmas blend. Still savoring the last few bean's worth.

Saul


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Subject: RE: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: EBarnacle
Date: 05 Aug 11 - 11:22 PM

A mix of Celebes Kalossi and Kenyan, 50 50.


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Subject: BS: World's Best Coffee?
From: Charley Noble
Date: 05 Aug 11 - 11:19 PM

Well, this topic definitely belongs below the line although there have been many songs dedicated to the subject.

Coffee is of course an addiction and there tend to be ardent advocates for any particular blend. Here's mine, and why it's mine:

Ethiopian Horse Harar, available from website via www.FairwayMarket.com

I got addicted to this coffee while I was in the Peace Corps in Ethiopia, 1965-68, and was delighted to find that the Fairway Market in the Redhook neighborhood in Brooklyn had a continuous supply of the beans. Typically this bean is mixed with other beans and is marketed as "Mocha Java" but I prefer it straight. I love a highly acidic coffee. It's now running about $12 per pound.

Harar is an ancient walled city in the eastern highland area of the Ethiopian plateau. The French poet Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891) was resident in this city, in his role as gun runner, and became addicted to this brand of coffee as well, not to mention hashish and khat.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Mudcat time: 11 May 6:49 PM EDT

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