Archive for the ‘Beans’ Category

No Time Like the Present.

Saturday, November 22nd, 2014

Q:   I would like to order the roaster that comes with beans.  I am not sure if I can order it now and the beans will be good still or if I should wait until closer to Christmas.  Please advise.

A:   It’s no problem at all to order now. When coffee is raw it’s like split peas or lentils, you could keep it for years.  It’s only when coffee is roasted that it should get used up within a week or so.

Generally, people don’t store raw coffee for years because just like split peas or lentils, coffee is on a yearly cycle. Another crop is not a long wait.

There’s some care to be taken in long term storing, but you’re totally safe to hang onto raw coffee for many months and they’ll be fine.  It’s one of the pluses that comes with home coffee roasting.

 

 

Aeropress surprise

Monday, June 23rd, 2014

Recently, we added the championship coffee used in the Rimini, Italy Aeropress competition to our site. It’s green, so you have to roast it.  Here’s a link to that.

The obvious question is, ” How was it roasted?”   If these contestants are from all over the world, how did that happen? So we asked,

“Hi Sally, (Sally is with Cafe Imports)  Do you happen to know who roasted the winning coffee?  or how it was roasted?  Does each contestant bring their own roast on the day? or is it supplied to them roasted so it’s all uniform?

And we heard back from Joe Marroco, (of cafe Imports)

“We do know who roasted this coffee. It was ME! We roasted it the same way for the competitors. They all received a sample pack prior to the event with which to practice. Then, at the event they were given the competition coffee. I also know how it was roasted.”

“I roasted, for best results, super fast and far lighter than I ever typically would. I literally dropped this roast about 30 seconds into first crack. It is a very weird coffee to roast.
 
Since this was being flown, off-gassing happens much quicker in a low pressure environment, I kept this very very light. It rested for about 4 days, which, due to flying, equals around 6-7 days.

 

So there you have it!   A very light roast was used.

Whew… need coffee.

Thursday, February 6th, 2014

Q: I am looking for some green beans to roast at home, but mostly for making green coffee extract drinks.  Good sencha is my thing, but in the kitchen I focus on nutrition and qualities that help those struggling with illness.  A light Google search indicates Robusta is the bean to use for green extract, and I suppose it will roast as well.  I only see one Robusta on your site, from India.  Do you have any others I am not finding?  Or additional info I should consider?  I’ve extracted pre-roasted but never green.

 

A: Robusta is generally not the kind of coffee you’d drink a cup of.  It’s best thought of as a condiment to steer things somewhere. it IS full of caffiene however, so depending on who wrote that about coffee extracts, they may have had a completely different idea about what Robusta is about.  Robusta is also generally the least expensive out there,  so that may have been a factor too.

Processing and origin make a huge difference in the taste of coffee, even before how you roast it makes it’s own huge difference.  So I’d suggest getting some small amounts of a few kinds of beans to see the wide range of what’s out there.

Normally I’d point you to a sampler if you were only roasting, but if you let me know what you want to spend, I’ll put together a range of beans you can try as extracts to see what range of tastes you get.

How much is needed to do an extract experiment?

 

Q:  the ingredient we are focused on seems to be  chlorogenic acid or GCA. At least 45%.   Given that everyone with an internet connection is an expert these days, it could well be the poster don’t know nuthin.   Could also be that Robusta does have a more extractable amount, I dunno. At any rate, the basic recipe I’m finding is ~2/oz green bean > 12/oz water, boiled 10-20 minutes, and steeped till you remember to stop steeping it…  Doses at 1/oz several times a day. 

My focus is on green, but thanks for the tip on Robusta, doesn’t sound like the one for roasting. I’m going to experiment with cold water extraction, as anything green looses much benefit with heat. Spending $25?

 
A:  The description sound just like what I’ve read. Boil the heck out of them, drink the water. Different kinds of coffee will have a different taste.

I do know the beans get soft again especially after steeping like that. You may even see a sprout. The only few times I’ve tried the process my first thought was to blend the soft beans into slush and then use a centrifuge type device to get everything out of them.  Even more than what leeches out like a tea. (An apple press might have the same result.)

Just don’t try to grind up dry hard beans! You’ll kill your grinder.  I’ve done it with an industrial grinder as an experiment, but it’s not practical.  If you are business minded though I bet you could cold steep the beans, grind them into a paste, re- dry the paste into powder and sell raw coffee powder as 100% raw coffee. (maybe?)

If you’d like I can send a Paypal request for $25. about 6 of that will be shipping, the rest will be random samples of different coffees that would give you an idea of processing and origin differences.

 

Q:  You have hit a sweet spot with the note on sprouting.  There is nothing more amazing in my experience of ‘repairative food’ than a sprouting seed.  I’m not a cheerleader about it but the transition phase between dormancy and active, call it the shoot phase, is nothing more than miraculous.  I shun processed and supplement type offerings for this reason.  I’ll need to get assured that coffee does not amplify ‘don’t eat me’ toxicity in the sprouting phase, but it seems any protective quality a seed may have is quickly transformed into raw living energy seeking light and growth.  this adds a whole new dimension to the project.

I’ll need to find what the traditional cultures of coffee have discovered and brought into their folk-practices, and expect to find green coffee, softened and sprouted from fresh. or at least active sprouting beans. will take a top notch.  the paste idea is a good one at this stage.  researching on the internet requires a stroll through the minefield of make a buck huksterism so thanks much for your candid discussion. which is rare indeed.

Please send a Paypal request for $30 (I’m living a little!) and at your convenience assemble a package that meets the spirit of our notes.  Please see that around 1/3 is of finest grade for roasting and enjoying the best of the drink, even if it’s a few beans, then the remainder a collection of organic, green, with the most potential for successful sprouting.  some I will use as hot extraction, most I will try to cold extract and spout.  please provide a bit of Robusta so I can try that out as a blending item.  from my resulting notes I’ll order selections next month.

thanks again, this is all pretty cool.

 

A:  Will do.   Also you may want to look into Qishr. It’s the husks of coffee left over from the parchment stage. Brewed into tea. Nasty without caradmom and other things. This is something that comes up on my radar sometimes, but having drunk it, not something I added to the website. Gotta buy like 50 pounds at a time brought in from Yemen.  Imagine the size of a pile of what 50 pounds of feathers might look like. Crushed up, not so bad. but still a big box.

Also Kati, made from the leaves themselves. Horrible like lawn clippings.
http://67.22.130.146/blog/?p=195

BTW… Ethiopians used to travel with a combination of coffee fruit (sans beans) and fat.  Balled up like meat balls and used for snacking on long trips.

Oh and sprouting a seedling from processed coffee is harder than it sounds.

Coffee sprouts for eating are unfortunately bound to be disappointing.  Boiling the seeds may force the endosperm out (the little tail, I think that’s the word for it) but kill any life left in them too.  Coffee for export is usually only at about 11% moisture content.  For viability, coffee needs to be at about 18%.  Having said that though, life tends to hang on, so there is always the chance that a beans for export could sprout for real. Especially if you plant enough of them.

Bad news too is that spouting for real can take up to three months given the moisture content and the hard life they’ve already had. So the chances of rotting in the ground is high, or nothing happens at all. And the only way to check is digging them up.

My experience with sprouting Robusta is that they do in fact tend to live longer and sprout, but then the tail breaks off and they die anyway. I’m not a botonist so its a mystery.  I have grown many many thousands of Arabica seedlings though. It’s mostly a lot of work if you don’t live at 3000 feet at the equator.  In my case Southern CA was close enough though, for coffee trees as houseplants.

More bad news. Coffee under the best conditions can take 3-4-5 years to begin producing fruit.  At home though they do make beautiful house plants though. Especially bunched up. Separately they tend to be a little leggy, and shaped like an upside down charlie brown christmas tree.

Eating them, if you get that far, won’t harm you in any way.  Caffeine is a natural bug repellant, so in that sense you’d be eating natures own :)  For example, coffee grounds are one way to control ants.  They won’t cross a line of coffee grounds.

If you have a green house that might be the best bet for sprouting and growing. Coffee trees live in volcanic climates, so offer them lots and lots of drainage as you’d get in lava rock fed by composting vegetation.

Q:  Thank you.  I actually found a coffee plant in our small grocery here once, cool beans thought I.

After two years of nursing and fussing, I had an eternal shoot at the top and two leaves, apparently awaiting a trip to Colombia.  Finally tossed it when I moved to a new apartment.  As to sprouting, I’m not so much looking to plant and grow them, but to try and sprout them much like any other bean; soak 24 hours, then drain and rinse twice a day.  tropical seeds get put in my kombucha warming box, and so far pretty much anything that hasn’t been frankenstiened by monsanto takes right off….brown rice, garbonzos, pinto, popcorn, etc.  Never tried coffee though, so I’ll let you know how that goes with a dozen or so beans.  The wheat berries I grind for bread take right off, even after years of storage.  Now somethings like whole oat groats are typically hulled, read as killed, so they won’t sprout.  In these cases one must hunt for hull-less oat groats of the natural variety; which will change the way one feels about real oatmeal forever and a day.

Thanks again for this great info.  I’ve decided to give up sencha  and play with your coffees a while.  My last journey was with Blue Mountain and Kona, and worth the pennies at the time, but companies such as The Coffee Project didn’t exist and I’m sure great coffee hand roasted is much more affordable, and probably better than roasted and warehoused.

 

Colombian vs Colombian

Thursday, January 30th, 2014

Q:  I am always looking for good Colombian coffee and it’s been hit or miss lately with ones I’ve tried. Mostly miss. But I saw you have some new micro lots that sound good.

Before I order can you please tell me which of those microlots might do better with a slightly darker roast? I know everyone says to keep them lighter, but I prefer to let it go at least into the start of the 2nd crack. I know some coffees don’t have a lot of character left at that point. I would appreciate your advice on which of those microlots, if any, would not disappoint in that roast range.  

Also, would you be able to tell me how your Supremo Narino might compare to those micro lots?

A:  Take the Planada Tolima beans darker. You’ll lose a bit of the lighter aromatics but get a nice deep round cup a Joe.

The Reserva del Patron is always a fave and very consistent. Side by side it has all the nice caramelly richness, but maybe not as many of the fleeting side tones as these current rock stars do.  Prep in the Reserva is always top notch.  It’s a terrific comfort food coffee you can rely on.

Into second crack on any of these should be just fine. Its turning coffee into charcoal that erases all the good bits. Start of second crack isn’t that radical.

“New” to Coffee

Tuesday, January 14th, 2014

Q: Your site was one of several that I found that was recommended on a blog about roasting your own coffee.  I was wondering what you would advise I start with.  I’m looking around for various options to get started for now.  Do you think I should try the CP Sampler Bundle?  Do you happen to have an option for 1-pound samples instead?

A: You can never go wrong with our Colombian.  It’s a familiar taste and you’ll have a benchmark to compare against what you have been drinking. Other than that I’d say try Sumatra, its earthier with a nice body. Costa Rica La Minita is a favorite for a fine balanced cup. And Felucca blend is a made up of North African beans, its complex, wild, and a little fruity.

Any of those would be good to try.

If you want to jump right into a roaster, the SR500 come with a selection of free beans. I’m pretty sure those are all in the beans options.

 

Frugal shopping

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011

On your website and saw that the coffee prices were pretty good. Six dollars for one pound of beans I could roast myself! But shipping cost was as much as the coffee. I was looking for a way to enjoy quality coffee for cheaper but I don’t think this works.

———-

Buying a single pound is definitely not going to be as cost effective as buying multiple pounds all at once. That’s probably true in buying anything. We have a starting point in our shipping structure that makes it worthwhile for us to process and bag a up a single pound. While many customers DO order only one or two pounds at a time, most buy at least 5-10 pounds at a time- especially since raw coffee stores so well. Many also order 10-20 pound bags where available for the price breaks.

If you’re willing to buy a bit more coffee all at once and watch for the coupon codes in our newsletter, you can get the cost per pound down too. First time orders for instance may use the online code “Newcomer” for 5% off beans. We also have birthday codes good during the month you were born for 10% off beans. And in our email newsletter we sometimes have random short time frame promotions.

The very best way to manage the overall cost of an order is to buy a bit more all at once and combine that with the online ordering codes. Ordering a single pound would be the most pricey way to go.

Coffee is a lot like wine in that price is sometimes more about scarcity (and marketing) than quality. So don’t let price be your guide in choosing beans. Instead, let what you like guide you. Colombian (also Mexican, and Brazilian) beans for instance tends to be well priced and terrific quality even though not as expensive as others. Colombian etc are often some of the very best available. Prices are relatively low compared to smaller producers just because Colombia grows so much of it. Also like wine, different regions are going to taste different. For a small difference in price you can have beans that are wilder tasting, fruity, more chocolate, buttery, citrusy; whatever suits your tastes in coffee best. You can even blend coffees to balance what you like most in them.

If it’s ALL about price however, not about regional variations in coffee or consistency, we do have Uncertain Blend
http://coffeeproject.com/shop/magento/raw-coffee-beans/uncertain-blend.html Very inexpensive especially for practicing, and many of our customers are committed to it. It’s all excellent coffee, just mixed up together and without any pedigree.

Using a birthday code, eight pounds Uncertain Blend and shipping works out to only $5.25 to your door.

I hope thats helpful info for when price is a leading factor, and that you do decide to source ALL of your beans via The Coffee Project.

How do raw coffee prices compare to roasted coffee prices?

Friday, July 8th, 2011

A lot of that depends on what scale you’re using. If you are comparing apples to apples raw coffee is normally about half the price of roasted. Coffee pricing is a lot like wine pricing. Rarity or quality both have their influences on price.

Even comparing green coffee against itself, a pound of green microlot Colombian is going to be more expensive than a pound green from a larger commercial farm. So you’d have to compare the rarity of the coffee against each other. Not all wines are the same just as not all coffees are the same.

There’s no comparison AT ALL between fresh roasted coffee and a can of coffee. That’s a quality issue.

If you are comparing whole beans coffee in a grocery store against home roasted coffee the margins may be a little closer, but you are adding in the element of staleness in the store bought coffee. …How long did it take for that coffee to be roasted, packed, get on a truck, get to the front of the shelf, and finally get used up at home?

And, don’t be fooled by the 12 oz pound pricing! a real pound is 16 ounces, so factor that in.

Once you’ve accounted for quality, scarcity, freshness, it’s very close to half the price roasting coffee at home. Its hard to beat the consistency of what a professional roaster can produce from her specialty coffee shop, but, its going to cost you half as much as doing it at home. Its a lot like going out to dinner.

Your friends will also be completely knocked out at how good your coffee is. THEIR coffee will taste like swill :) while costing twice what yours did. That’s well worth the ten or so minutes at home to roast up a batch or two, just in bragging rights.

Raw coffee beans store well, a year or so. If you buy raw coffee bulk it will always be as fresh as possible once roasted, and always roasted exactly the way you like it best. Store bought coffee has about the same shelf life as bread, or milk. So there’s a big tertiary saving in roasting your own right there.

Currently the market is crazy. Coffee prices are through the roof. The mega-corporations have held back their price increases as much as possible over the last year or so, but they’re also sitting on coffee they bought 3-4-5 years ago. Sooner or later they are going to have to buy current crops and as we’ve seen recently, even the corporate giants will raise their prices and the margins will once again be closer to half the price.

Overall, Its the difference between corporate food and fresh homemade food. Homemade is better, less expensive, and just takes a little love to produce something spectacular. Its worth the effort.

Nuggets, Nuggets, and Nuggets.

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

“…since we are fairly newer roasters we’ve really had fun trying different beans. We really like the Indian beans… what is the typical season for buying these? That way I know to stock up. We REALLY like the mysore nuggets!”

A lot of coffee around the globe gets picked and processed around November/ December. Depending on the origin and importer it either dribbles into the US all year or it arrives in chunks.

Last summer we brought in a LOT of different Indian coffee all at once, but at the same time coffee prices have gone kaplooey, so we didn’t bring in as much as we wanted and ended up running out. Especially because these were really yummy examples the long time customers knew to grab a bunch at the bulk prices when they found one they really like; because everyone else will too. Its kind of like wine.

On the other hand there are coffees we always have. Some of those are called CP Select, and some are highly branded like La Minita or Josuma. Those are selections we can pretty much assure will be around all the time at the same quality each time they are ordered.

Then there are the jewels that pass through like some of those Indian beans, Cup of Excellence beans, or something really unique that has a quality deserving a spot light.

Recently the Burundis arrived. Those will eventually run low too but something else will be arriving that’s equally special.

There ARE Nuggets out there now that could go on the menu, the only problem is that we’re swimming in everything else at the moment and just can’t put everything thats ever been grown everywhere on the menu all at once. :) The biggest problem right now is the price of raw coffee. Every time we restock or try to buy forward into the year our replacement costs have gone up. We’re probably in a bubble, but we’re also in some reality too.

In the early 90’s coffee was at an all time low as certain world trade agreements ended. Following that, here was an effort to bolster prices by paying attention to farmer’s quality of life, the coffee’s actual quality!, sustainability, reaching new markets… All that has worked really really well. Farmers are no longer selling the crop before its even flowered just to survive. Established demand has increased overall, brand new markets are creating greater demand, quality is WAY up,

Unfortunately… over the last ten years or so, (whether you believe in climate change or not;) yields have been dropping, there isn’t as much new land to consume, weather patterns have followed drought with floods. So worldwide warehoused supplies are dropping, prices are climbing, and speculators are almost certainly right that prices will continue to climb.

Thats a long answer to a simple question…

Broadly speaking we’ll probably see new crop Nuggets sometime in the summer. Nuggets are definitely on the list to become a CP Select option that we’ll always have. The question right now is only whom to commit to, when to commit to this price or that price. And, buying some of one coffee definitely means we won’t be buying some of some other coffee.

Quality, Price, and Availability- pick any two and it will cost the other.

Hi Sweetness

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

We were asked, “Is there a simple formula to maximize sweetness for these coffees?” “I can control time between cracks easily, but not temperature”

… No, not a formula – maybe a rule of thumb. Just don’t roast too darkly. easy as that. You want to hit second crack so the sugars caramelize just a little but not so much that you burn them up. The rule of thumb to hang on to the sweetness is, err light.

Another rule of thumb is in the timing mentioned in the question, between 1st and 2nd, if you can extend that a little you gain a bit of body at the expense of snappiness in the cup. But, extend it too long and you wind up with flat tasting coffee.

Working it the other way, if you’ve got a naturally big bodied coffee you can get more brightness out of it by going hot and fast, but at the cost of some of that body.

We’re not a fan of recipes with numbers attached. They’re not real. They are not easily reproducible in home machines and far too subjective. You’d need to have a NASA lab to do something the same way twice roasting by numbers (or at least a $10,000 roaster with data logging.) The very best thing you’ve got going are your own senses and that’s FREE. Use your eyes, ears and nose, and just pay attention. Thats better than an army of number crunchers. With a few iterations you’ll hit on what you like and be able to get pretty close time after time.

It all comes down to “more of this is less of that.” and “Less of that is more of this.” Its actually all pretty easy. Rule of thumb: just pay attention.

FreshCoffeeBeans.com Customers

Monday, February 14th, 2011

One of our peers recently closed up shop. If you are a former customer of FreshCoffeeBeans.com and you’ve never ordered from The Coffee Project before. Email us a copy of your most recent receipt and we’ll send you a pound of beans free, anywhere within the US. No strings, no shipping, nuthin’. Free.