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Coffee, Coffee, Coffee |
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Peter J. Wilson |
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2007-01-31 |
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We all need that jolt of caffeine that you get from a good cup of coffee in the morning. But many times, during the day, the urge for a nice cup of tasty coffee hits, and of course we frequently like a relaxing cup after dinner. Some people can't drink coffee at night because the caffeine keeps them awake, and for others it is worth having, even if they are going to be tossing and turning and staring at the clock. I am sensitive to caffeine, so even a can of soda after a certain time of night will have me counting sheep. The only solution for me and others like me is to make sure we have decaffeinated coffee in the kitchen. The coffee urge can be satisfied by putting decaf in that old coffee maker, without paying the price of a sleepless night. If I find I am out of decaf coffee, there is always the local Dunkin Donuts. A quick stop at the local Dunkin Donuts yields a cup of coffee that is every bit as good as caffeinated, but doesn't have the same effect on the body's system. A nice change of pace on a hot summer evening is iced coffee, but if, like me, you will be bothered by the caffeine, you can get decaffeinated iced coffee. Where does the caffeine come from. Caffeine occurs naturally in the coffee bean, and it takes a special water extracting system to remove the caffeine from the molecule. It is an exacting science, with each coffee manufacturer claiming to have their unique, and best system for creating decaffeinated coffee. I don't really care how it comes about, as long as I can enjoy my delicious cup of Java without the sleepless side effects of regular coffee. There is little to no difference between the taste of regular and decaffeinated coffee. As a matter of fact, since I can't tell the difference, I am always concerned that I will get a cup of regular even though I have ordered decaf; since I can't taste the difference, I won't know until it is too late. That's one reason I prefer to keep my own decaffeinated coffee at home and not have to worry about somebody making such a mistake. I can't risk my much needed sleep. The opposite can also happen, that I order (and need) a strong cup of caffeinated coffee and end up with decaf because the counter girl was just as sleepy as I was. There's a real bummer, pay $4-$5 for a cup of coffee and not even get the jolt I need to start the day! Well, caffeinated or decaf, I need my coffee.
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Coffee Coffee Coffee Coffee Food & Beverage |
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Related Article:Coffee, Coffee, Coffee |
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Arjan Kwekel |
2007-03-23 |
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Title: The History of Coffee
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Coffee - THE Drink of Choice Did you know coffee is the most consumed beverage in the world. How did coffee get this ranking? What country first figured out coffee was safe for consumption? When was the first drink of coffee prepared? Where did the first coffee shop come in being? There are many questions about the starting point of drinking coffee. It has been so long ago no one really knows all the facts. But, one thing is for sure, coffee is the most consumed beverage on the planet. The Beginning of Coffee It looks as if the first trace came out of Abyssinia and was also sporadically in the vicinity of the Red Sea around seven hundred AD. Along with these people, other Africans of the same period also have a history of using the coffee berry pulp for more than one occasion like rituals and even for health. Coffee began to get more attention when the Arabs began cultivating it in their peninsulas around eleven hundred AD. It is speculated that trade ships brought the coffee their way. The Arabs started making a drink that became quite popular called gahwa--- meaning to prevent sleep. Roasting and boiling the bean was how they made this drink. It became so popular among the Arabs that they made it their signature Arabian wine and it was used a lot during rituals. After the coffee bean was found to be a great wine and a medicine, someone discovered in Arabia that you could also make a different dark, delicious drink out of the beans, this happened somewhere around twelve hundred AD. After that it didn't take long and everyone in Arabia was drinking coffee. Everywhere these people traveled the coffee went with them. It made its way around to India, North Africa, the eastern Mediterranean, and was then cultivated to a great extent in Yemen around fourteen hundred AD. Other countries would have gladly welcomed these beans if only the Arabs had let them. The Arabs killed the seed-germ making sure no one else could grow the coffee if taken elsewhere. Heavily guarding their plants, Yemen is where the main source of coffee stayed for several hundred years. Even with their efforts, the beans were eventually smuggled out by pilgrims and travelers. Coffee Shops Appear Around 1475 the first coffee shop opens in Constantinople called Kiv Han two years after coffee was introduced to Turkey, in 1554 two coffee houses open there. People came pouring in to socialize, listen to music, play games and of course drink coffee. Some often called these places in Turkey the "school of the wise", because you could learn so much by just visiting the coffee house and listening to conversations. In the sixteen hundreds coffee enters Europe through the port of Venice. The Turkish warriors also brought the drink to Balkans, Spain, and North Africa. Not too much later the first coffee house opens in Italy. There were plenty of people also trying to ban coffee. Such as Khair Beg a governor of Mecca who was executed and Grand Vizir of the Ottoman Empire who successfully closed down many coffee houses in Turkey. Thankfully not everyone thought this way. Coffee Tips Arrive In the early sixteen hundreds coffee is presented to the New World by man named John Smith. Later in that century, the first coffee house opens in England. Coffee houses or "penny universities" charged a penny for admission and for a cup of coffee. The word "TIPS" (for service) has it's origin from an English coffee house. Early in the 17th century, Edward Lloyd's coffee house opens in England. The Dutch became the first to commercially transport coffee. The first Parisian café opens in 1713 and King Louis XIV is presented with a lovely coffee tree. Sugar is first used as an addition to coffee in his court. The America's Have Coffee Coffee plants were introduced in the Americas for development. By close to the end of the seventeen hundreds, 1,920 million plants are grown on the island. Evidently the eighteen hundreds were spent trying to find better methods to make coffee. The Coffee "Brew" in the 20th Century New methods to help brewing coffee start popping up everywhere. The first commercial espresso machine is developed in Italy. Melitta Bentz makes a filter using blotting paper. Dr. Ernest Lily manufactures the first automatic espresso machine. The Nestle Company invents Nescafe instant coffee. Achilles Gaggia perfects the espresso machine. Hills Bros. begins packing roasted coffee in vacuum tins eventually ending local roasting shops and coffee mills. A Japanese-American chemist named Satori Kato from Chicago invents the first soluble "instant" coffee. German coffee importer Ludwig Roselius turns some ruined coffee beans over to researchers, who perfected the process of removing caffeine from the beans without destroying the flavor. He sells it under the name Sanka. Sanka is introduced in the United States in 1923. George Constant Washington an English chemist living in Guatemala, is interested in a powdery condensation forming on the spout of his silver coffee flask. After checking into it, he creates the first mass-produced instant coffee which is his brand name called Red E Coffee. Prohibition goes into effect in United States. Coffee sales suddenly increase. Brazil asked Nestle to help find a solution to their coffee surpluses so the Nestle Company comes up with freeze-dried coffee. Nestle also made Nescafe and introduced it to Switzerland. Other Interesting Coffee Tidbits Today the US imports 70 percent of the world's coffee crop. During W.W.II, American soldiers were issued instant Maxwell House coffee in their ration kits. In Italy, Achilles Gaggia perfects his espresso machine. The name Cappuccino comes from the resemblance of its color to the robes of the monks of the Capuchin order. One week before Woodstock, the Manson family murders coffee heiress Abigail Folger as she visits with her friend Sharon Tate in the home of filmmaker Roman Polanski. Starbuck's Hits the Coffee World Starbucks opens its first store in Seattle's Pike Place public market in 1971. This creates madness over fresh-roasted whole bean coffee. Coffee finally becomes the world's most popular beverage. More than 450 billion cups are sold each year by 1995. The Current Coffee Trends Now in the 21st century we have many different styles, grinds, and flavors of coffee. We have really come a long way even with our coffee making machines. There's no sign of coffee consumption decreasing. Researchers are even finding many health benefits to drinking coffee. Drink and enjoy! http://www.coffeenewschannel.com
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Roland Jefferson |
2007-07-27 |
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Title: How to Choose a Good Coffee Cup
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With the number of choices in coffee that are available to consumers it only makes sense that coffee cups are also a large seller among consumers. Most people have a favorite coffee cup and why that cup is a favorite is a matter of personal preference and function for the coffee drinker. When choosing a coffee cup for yourself you must consider both your lifestyle and your taste. What Kind of Coffee Cup Is Right for Me? If you are a one cup a day coffee drinker then it’s not too difficult to grab whatever coffee cup that is in the kitchen cupboard and fill it with coffee. However, if you drink coffee like most Americans then you need more than just any old cup; you need one that fits both your personality and your coffee drinking habits. Travel Choices Travel coffee cups are becoming increasingly popular among coffee drinkers because they are able to keep the coffee warm a bit longer than a regular cup and they are made to be taken in the car or wherever you might be headed without making a mess. The travel coffee cup is also a good choice for parents with small children as it reduces the risk of a child grabbing a hot coffee cup and burning themselves because the travel coffee cup has a lid that fits securely. Traditional Choices For the more traditional coffee drinker there is always the good heavy coffee cup to bring about feelings of comfort and peace. A stoneware coffee cup helps keep the coffee warm yet is still warm to the touch on a cold winter morning. It is not recommended to put very hot coffee in a porcelain or thin material cup due to risk of burns. If you are going to choose a coffee cup that isn’t a heavy material always be careful when picking it up as the heat can reach the outside of the coffee cup very quickly. When choosing a coffee cup that you will be using on a regular basis, make a point of choosing material, color, and the ability to fit in your hand comfortably. This is because in a way this is about to become a long term relationship for you and you want something that you will be able to cherish and enjoy for many cups of coffee to come. Roland Parris Jefferson III is an online researcher based out of Los Angeles, California. For free tips, recipes and expert advice on Coffee, please visit our Coffee Cup Resource.
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Paul Archer |
2007-06-13 |
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Title: How Do Coffee Grinders Work?
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A Trip to the grocery store and a walk down the coffee aisle, is where you'll see coffee grinders and coffee beans. The coffee grinder has become all so very popular for home use and popularity of espresso and other coffee drinks has blown out of coffee proportion in the last two decades. Coffee shops keep popping up every where and the need of many coffee drinkers to grind their own coffee beans in their coffee grinders. Coffee grinders will grind roasted coffee beans into tiny little grounds that are either fine or coarse. By grinding your own coffee, its totally up to you on how you like it best. Coffee grinders will produce fine or medium grounds which are best for old style coffee makers. Those who love espresso will want to grind the beans into a fine grind, similar to sugar or salt. Coarse coffee grounds are good for percolators or vacuum brewers. Coffee grinders come in two main types. The first type of many coffee grinders use rotating steel blades. These blades on the coffee grinders chop up the coffee beans, making it o-so-nice for you. The bladed coffee grinders allow the coffee lover to control the type of grounds. The type of grounds the bladed coffee grinder makes depends on how long you grind the beans. Other types of coffee grinders uses a grinder wheel. This is called a burr grinder. To get coarse or fine grounds, you move the burr on the coffee grinder. Many people say this type of coffee grinder allows you more control as to the type of grounds you make. The price of a burr grinder really depends on the type of wheel, whether it is flat or cone-shaped. The burr coffee grinder with the cone-shaped wheel rotates slowly and the coffee grinder will plug up less frequently. If you chose coffee grinders that work in two different ways. Manual coffee grinders come with a crank on the side. (this is the old-fashion way) You have to crank the handle manually until all the coffee beans are grounded. If you don’t want to do that much work to have freshly ground coffee, you should probably shop around for electric coffee grinders. Electric coffee grinders are the most popular coffee grinder on the market today. Many electric coffee grinders are small and inexpensive so you can carry them anywhere to grind a perfect cup of coffee. There are advantages to grinding your own coffee with coffee grinders. You can grind coffee that suits your taste and not rely on pre-packaged coffee grounds. Coffee grinders can be found in most stores and online. A coffee grinder can range in price from about $20 to several hundred dollars. The coffee beans can be purchased at grocery stores or at a specialty coffee shop. How you want your coffee to taste and the type of coffee you brew is all up to you. Are you looking for the perfect cup of coffee? Try visiting Coffee Grinders , a website that specializes in providing coffee advice, tips and resources to including information on the coffee grinder.
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Adam Akelis |
2007-05-08 |
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Title: An Introduction to Coffee Cupping
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Coffee cupping is one of the tasting techniques used by cuppers to analyze coffee aroma and the flavor profile of a coffee. To know the trivial differences among coffee growing regions, it is significant to taste coffee from around the world side by side. Cupping is as well used to find out coffee defects or to make coffee blends. Cupping Coffee Table Preparation: Normally, in coffee cupping session, the table is set up with 6 to 8 cups per coffee. These are set in a triangular way. At the top of this triangle you need to place a taster of a roasted coffee and a taster of the green coffee. In the center of the table place a cup of room warmth water and an unfilled cup containing the cupping spoons. Next you need to cover both the green sample and roasted taster until the cupping session is over and the coffee aroma, smell, and flavor profile have been completely documented. After this time, both coffee tasters can be uncovered and extra comments could be written based on appearance. This method normally helps reduce the common “eye coffee cupping” method. Coffee Flavor Analysis: After the coffee has cooled suitably take some coffee into the spoon and taste the coffee sturdily to aspirate it around the whole tongue. It is significant to aspirate sturdily as you are trying to cover the whole tongue consistently. Aspirating sturdily would as well cause tiny droplets of coffee to be dispersed into the throat and in the nasal passage. The nose could then act as another influential tasting tool. Most of the flavor experimental in a coffee is a consequence of aromatic compounds available in the coffee. This result could also be demonstrated by plugging your nose during drinking coffee. While the nasal passage is blocked, the coffee would probable taste same as to instant coffee as it lack aroma. When the nasal passage is opened, a full rainbow of flavors would then become evident. Conclusions: The key to cupping coffee is carry out and humility. The best cuppers known are self-effacing and always eager to learn more. The beauty is that we agree to disagree while respecting and trying to recognize the characteristics, which other people find.
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John Gibb |
2006-08-26 |
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Title: Coffee Making - Where Your Coffee Comes From
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Coffee is coffee, right? Wrong. As most coffee aficionados know, there are several different types of coffee. What type of coffee you are drinking can depend on many factors, such as what area of the world it came from, how the beans were processed or ground, or what was added to the coffee to make it more uniquely flavored. These days, the coffee you drink in the morning or serve after dessert reflects your personal taste more than just how strong you like it, or whether you add cream and/or sugar to it. Below are some of the most popular coffees in the world. Brazilian coffee – The country of Brazil produces more coffee than any other area in the entire world. The hot, humid climate and rich soil of Brazil is perfect for large coffee plantations. Brazilian coffee has been famous for many years and it wasn’t too long ago that most coffee drinkers simply assumed that the coffee they were drinking came from Brazil. Though it may be different these days, with many people being more conscious of where their coffee was grown, Brazil is still the largest supplier. Before the new coffee craze in the United States, most exported Brazilian coffee was a blend of high-quality and low-quality beans – with the focus being on keeping the price of coffee low. These days, however, with people being more discerning about the coffee that they drink, a lot of the coffee that comes from Brazil is very high-quality, with advancements being made all the time in flavor enhancement. Coffee from Brazil can definitely hold its own these days against any other “specialty” coffees. Columbian coffee – Running a close second to Brazil, the country of Columbia is a major coffee producer. Columbian coffee ranks right up there with Brazilian coffee in terms of richness and flavor, as their climates and soil compositions are very similar. Many times coffee producers will combine Columbian and Brazilian coffees to make unique new blends that are very pleasing to the palate. Hawaiian coffee – the only state in the entire United States that produces and exports coffee, Hawaii has been renowned for the special rich flavor of its coffee beans. The famous Hawaiian “Kona” blends have been a favorite of coffee lovers for many years, and for good reason. No matter how coffee makers from other areas try, they cannot completely duplicate the unique flavor of Hawaiian coffee. Many people say it is the combination of the perfect weather, and the rich soil that has been produced by a history of volcanic activity. There are many more countries and areas that produce coffee, and for each area that coffee is grown, the flavors can all be different, if only subtly. Those who are interested in trying all of the different types of coffees out there, from many different areas, should do some research. They may discover coffees that they’ve never tasted or even heard of before. For coffee lovers, this can be quite an adventure! John Gibb is the owner of coffee making sources , For more information on how to make coffee check out http://www.cofeemaking-sources.info
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James Grierson |
2006-02-22 |
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Title: History of Coffee: Part V - Speciality Coffee
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With the large multi-national coffee companies focused purely on coffee as a commodity rather then a drink to be savoured, it allowed a new sector to emerge in the coffee industry: Speciality Coffee. Speciality coffee was nothing new, rather the opposite; it stripped coffee making back down to the grass roots: pure arabica beans, roasted long enough for the coffee to fully develop all its characteristics and flavours. During the ‘Dark Age’ of coffee there was still excellent coffee available, if you knew where to look for it. A number of small cafes and shops continued to trade, sourcing and roasting high quality arabica beans. These outlets were typically run and frequented by immigrants (usually Arabs, Turks, Greeks and Italians), far from the mainstream. All this began to change in the 1960s, with the post World War II ‘Baby Boomers’ coming into adulthood. Many of this generation were keen not to follow in their parents footsteps, preferring to act in a more bohemian way. For them, these cafes and shops were an ideal place to meet, read poetry, take drugs and experience alternative culture. One such coffee shop in Berkeley (California) is widely credited as being the main inspiration on the emergence of the speciality coffee sector. Peet’s Coffee & Tea store, opened in 1966 by Alfred Peet (dubbed the ‘grandfather of speciality coffee’), enthused a number of its customers, who later became key players in the speciality sector. Peet, an immigrant from Alkmaar (Holland), had developed a distinctive style of roasting coffee from working in his family’s coffee and tea business. After emigrating to California, aged thirty-five, he opened his shop employing his artisan coffee roasting techniques to build a loyal customer base. Peet’s coffee was so loved that he even had his own set of groupies: the ‘Peetniks’. Two of Peet’s most important customers (historically) were a couple of Seattle coffee lovers named Jerry Baldwin and Gordon Bowker. In 1971, after tasting Peet’s fine brews, they were inspired to open their own coffee shop back in Seattle called Starbucks. Starbucks opened as a bean-only-store, steadily building a loyal customer base during the 70s and early 80s through its fine arabicas and darker roasts. In 1984, the director of retail operations and marketing, Howard Schultz, tried to persuade Baldwin and Bowker to open the first Starbucks coffeehouse. Schultz had just returned from a trip to Milan, where he had noticed the existence of coffeehouses on almost every block. These were not just places to enjoy great espresso coffee, but also served as meeting places. Schultz was keen to recreate this kind of coffeehouse in America, but Baldwin and Bowker rejected Schultz’s plans as they were unwilling to get into the restaurant business. Undeterred, Schultz left Starbucks in 1985 to open his own coffeehouse, ‘Il Giornale’. Still using Starbucks coffee beans to make espresso drinks, Il Giornale proved extremely popular with the Seattle public. So popular in fact() that, in 1987, Schultz was able to buy Starbucks from Bowker and Schultz. Changing Il Giornale’s name to Starbucks, Schultz began to rapidly expand, opening over 1,000 stores in a decade. The story of the first British speciality coffeehouse also involves Alfred Peet. In 1995, Scott and Ally Svenson wanted to open a coffeehouse in Covent Garden, London. Their background was in marketing and design and, even though they were originally from Seattle, they did not know much about coffee. This is why they approached Steven Macatonia and Jeremy Torz of Union Coffee Roasters. Steven and Jeremy had fallen in love with coffee while working at Peet’s in California. On their return home they decided to open their own roasting outlet and were soon supplying places such as the River Café, the Caprice, and the Ivy. The Covent Garden coffeehouse, named the Seattle Coffee Company, was another big success and inevitably expansion soon followed. The rapid growth of the company caused increasing demand on Union Coffee Roasters, so the two companies decided to merge together. In 1998, after opening over 60 outlets throughout the UK, Starbucks came knocking at their door. They saw the acquisition of the Seattle Coffee Company as an ideal way to enter the UK market. Soon the Seattle Coffee Company was no more, with all its stores re-branded as Starbucks. The popularity of coffeehouses has been phenomenal. Almost every high street in Britain has a least one coffeehouse now. Words such as espresso, cappuccino and café latte are commonplace. In fact the price of a café latte is now one of the products that the British government use to measure inflation. Market analysers believe that the success of the coffeehouse is not solely due to the coffee they serve, but the atmosphere in which it is served. Coffeehouses in Britain in the 1990s were a break from convention. In the consumerist landscape of the high-street, coffeehouses represented a place to relax. Customers were encouraged to take their time over their coffee; sit on big comfy sofas; offered the daily newspapers to read; allowed to idle the afternoon away watching the world go by. In other words, coffeehouses had returned to playing their original role in society, as they had done when they first arrived in Britain back in 17th Century. The growth of these coffeehouses has helped to heighten the public’s awareness of the speciality coffee sector. Increasingly, individuals are looking to have a slice of the coffeehouse in their own home, investing in espresso makers and other coffee accessories. Coffee is now widely available from a multitude of origins, roasted to differing degrees and ground to your requirement. In short, the ‘Dark Age’ of coffee is well and truly over. James Grierson is the owner of Galla Coffee: www.gallacoffee.co.uk - Uk online retailer of designer coffee accessories. Through the Coffee Knowledge section of his website he aims to help people understand more about coffee and give them tips on how to make great tasting coffee in their home. Check out www.gallacoffee.co.uk/acatalog/Coffee_Knowledge.html for more articles.
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2008-03-02 |
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Title: Home Appliances | The Best Coffee Maker For A Good Coffee
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Today all like to have a cup of delicious coffee but are tired of paying the high prices for it in the coffee cafes. You can have a completely different experience having a coffee which is prepared at home in the coffee maker. It is always better to spend only once for a coffee maker than to go out in the café and have a cup of coffee everyday. The new coffee makers are designed such that only with a touch of a button it grinds the coffee beans and filters them within minutes. Your coffee is not far from you. The exclusive devices present in the coffee maker helps to prepare yummy coffee within no time. With the help of a coffee maker you enjoy coffee like the taste qualities of espresso or the cappuccino or any other flavor you can ever think of. So what are you waiting for? Your coffee maker is just a click away from you. Just log on to the Toronto appliances and have a look at the models of the coffee maker on their website and place an order for it immediately and feel the difference. I am sure you will enjoy making coffee at home with your coffee maker. There are many models in the market. They come for both commercial and home use. The manufacturers offer a variety of features and styles. You can opt one according to your choice which can go well with your budget as well as for making a variety of coffee flavors. Companies like L.G., Viking, Frigidaire, Amana, and G.E. offer a wide range of coffee makers which can suit the style of which type of a coffee maker you want to buy. Their structure is such that all the cup sizes can adjust in these machines and coffee is made while still it is in the brewing process. The removable filter attached in this eliminates the need for coffee filters. Cleaning a coffee maker is as easy. These machines are very convenient and very easy to clean and handle. You can buy one coffee maker according to your needs. The latest techniques have filters which help to avoid to spill the coffee and make a mess. This way making coffee is so easy. Now making coffee is no more a mess. It can be prepared very efficiently. It is really amazing that these machines have the automatic buttons which adjust the best water temperature, brewing time and the amount of water you need to prepare a cup of coffee. You can make drinks according your choice. Real milk cappuccino coffee, tea or hot chocolate coffee for your children , each cup of coffee prepared by you in a coffee maker is delicious to let to enjoy the true essence of coffee which you would love to have every time without any fuss. Whether I have a gathering, meeting or party time, I give my friends the best hot coffee which they can enjoy and feel fresh. So even if you want to enjoy the tasty coffee with steamy and frothy coffee café styles at our home, don’t think. Go and buy a new coffee maker for yourself.
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Ckint Jhonson |
2007-03-21 |
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Title: Coffee secrets - all about coffee grinding and using a coffee maker
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Coffee is surely one of many people’s everyday delights. For some, it’s just another drink or stimulant. Others disagree with coffee drinking as they consider it to be addictive. But for coffee lovers, every cup is a delight. There are many connoisseurs that enjoy grinding coffee themselves and know all about the coffee “culture” and its varieties, as well as the best ways of brewing that leave its aroma intact and unlock its best features. We’ll now see how the Internet could help them, and in fact anyone who desires a great coffee experience, to improve their coffee making skills and find the coffee grinder or coffee maker that will suit their needs best. Coffee takes a great journey from its birth to every cup we enjoy. It all begins with the laborious manual sorting of the seeds. Then it travels a long way from its home countries to every consumer’s coffee maker. In the early centuries, it wasn’t as popular as it now is and was even prohibited in some parts of the world. But hey, in the past, everything new used to be prohibited at first... As time passed, many people started consuming coffee and its demand increased. Nowadays, there is hardly anyone who can say that he/she never had a cup of coffee or didn’t own a coffee maker. Coffee making is a rather simple activity, but few know that its industrial processing consists in complicated chemical reactions meant to dissolve the acids contained within the seeds meant to unlock its aroma that many enjoy so much. And one must admit that almost everyone likes coffee, served in one way or another and of course the many varieties available. There are even delicacies which include coffee in their making or at least have the coffee aroma. However, the most popular way of coffee consumption remains its “liquid form”. A coffee “grind” is actually thought of as the whole brewing process. The finest grind is called the “Turkish” grind and provides best flavor as the coffee fresh out of the coffee grinder is mixed straight with water. The most usual machines are coffee “drippers”, which pass hot steam through the ground coffee beans set in a paper filter. The actual coffee then drips into the designated container. There are also exquisite coffee grinding methods, like the espresso, which is stronger and more flavorful. The only inconvenience is that espresso machines were expensive and difficult to clean. But that’s all in the past now because of machines like the Krups Espresso Bravo Plus 872 and because of the information available online. The Internet is very useful for finding all sorts of similar coffee equipment such as a proper coffee maker or a fine coffee grinder that will smoothly grind the beans and finally preserve the special aroma while brewing. You no longer need to worry about not finding the appropriate grinding equipment. There are numerous sites providing tons of information about coffee equipment and walkthroughs on how to use a coffee maker, such as talkaboutcoffee.com. It’s easy to surf online and to find out all you need to know about making your coffee experience easy and delightful. No matter if served for breakfast, after an exquisite dinner’s desert or during any regular activity, a cup of coffee is always welcome. Of course, there are alternatives, such as black tea and others, but let’s face it! Nothing comes even close to the well-ground coffee’s great aroma. Talkaboutcoffee.com provides numerous pages concerning many aspects related to coffee, like recipes and comparisons between its varieties. It also informs about its social aspects and the history of coffee brewage. There are many reviews that will point you to the best coffee grinder and coffee maker and which will offer hints on how to use them correctly. You just have to visit this valuable resource online!
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Eric Comforth |
2006-03-16 |
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Title: Which coffee maker? Grinding out the answer.
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When you stop at the convenience store or at a local coffee shop for your morning cup of coffee have you ever wondered how your cup of coffee came about? No, not how it was brewed but how it was that you are able to drink a cup of coffee. Sure, the coffee machine plays an important role in making your perfectly brewed cup of coffee, but just how did that coffee maker first come about, or how did the first person who ever sipped the first cup of coffee discover its magic? Legend goes back to a lonely sheep herder in Ethiopia who noticed his sheep acting strangely every time they ate certain red berries from a certain bush. One has to wonder why he himself decided to give the berries a try. Well that is of no consequence because since that life altering decision man has been enjoying coffee in many different cultures, different countries and different places. Do you know they even drink coffee on the Space Shuttle? I wonder what kind of coffee machine they have. The one million dollar question is exactly what makes a good cup of coffee? Does buying one of the best coffee makers lead to a great cup of coffee? Not necessarily.. Start with great coffee beans. You can even roast your own coffee beans with the Home coffee roaster machines. Roasting machines allow coffee drinkers to buy premium coffee beans at discount prices and roast them at home. The coffee drinker is in charge of the roasting level; medium or dark roast. Coffee drinkers also advise against buying pre-ground coffee, pre-grinding diminishes the coffee flavor and aroma. Apparently the best part of the coffee bean is found deep within it therefore pre-ground, once the package is opened loses that rich coffee aroma. Grinding your beans before you start percolating your coffee ensures you get the most out of the bean. Talking about grinding the beans there are also two types of coffee grinders; burr and blade grinders, both serve the purpose equally well, so the type of grinder you have does not affect your cup of coffee. Shopping for coffee makers There are three different types of coffee makers. There are filter coffee makers that basically drip hot boiling water over the ground coffee beans then filter the coffee over a disposable paper filter. Then there are the espresso/cappuccino coffee makers and finally the combination coffee makers that make both cappuccino and filter coffee. Choose a coffee machine that suits your needs. Take into consideration how much and how often you drink coffee. How much you are willing to spend on seeking the perfect cup of coffee. Remember to look online, you can find many discount coffee makers. Whether you enjoy your coffee with or without cream or whether you enjoy a robust and flavorful cup of black coffee remember to thank that lowly sheep herder who took a risk and ate the first coffee bean.
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mahasamut |
2008-01-09 |
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Title: Dry and the Saving Heal Coffee Seed
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Dry seed Coffee dryly have different way in order that depend on the country and the weather generally dry seed will coffee dry on grounds , grounds is will like grounds dry cassava only the smell ferments of coffee has will a little more each a stack or each at [row] will abandon the opening keeps to equal to at [row] or coffee stack dry each stack coffee is or each at [row] will abandon the opening keeps to equal to at [row] or coffee stack dry each stack coffee is or each at [row] will have 5 cm. not exceed heights and when sun go to about 30-40 minute laborer must come to turn a stack or at [row] go to still the space by that liberate to keep the cause that must wait for to get back to Coffee seed every half hour as a result for protect don't give coffee seed that have tall moistness is born fermenting and for coffee dry seed fully dry with this way will take time 7 - 14 day depend on weather state when the moistness of coffee seed reduces to about 15 % coffee dry seed will touch pick and import dry fumigator which control the temperature keeps 40 - 45 ?C for bake coffee seed has the moistness is left 12 % just baking with will must is made of the carefulness and elaborate because if do not be careful the quality of coffee seed was destroyed with the heat and make to are worthless.
Dry again the one way at can call that be best way but not like to use are dry on a table or on platform screen that the air can ventilate round a side coffee seed was graded down keep bright and try don't give a seed overlap each other or overlap each least other and must use a hand or wood tray waits for to turn or grade down coffee seed were have the sunlight regularly.
Majority coffee of Africa at famous will use this way in drying out now coffee which is famous many the trademark begin turn to use this way already if the weather gives.
The saving heals Coffee dry seed has already call that coffee is raw will touch pack appeared ramie sack or cloth sack and keep in dry storehouse and the air ventilate well with regard to pack in ramie sack or cloth sack for there is ventilating in the air and the moistness a sack that use to pack coffee raw seed will must induce to sun dryly before for get rid smell.
From the research meets that Coffee seed that pack in plastic vacuum bag and keep in 15 ?C and have the moistness about 41 % can pick 2 - 3 long ago year.
Package coffee is raw for export like to pack a sack vacates 60 the reed. except coffee Blue Mountain which still heal original identity of the exporting coffee the package in a bucket barrel in bucket quantity vacates 175 the pound or almost 80 Kg.
Articles ; http://coffee-cup-shop.blogspot.com
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