First let me say I'm a bonafide card carrying Coffee Snob. Heck, I wrote the CSA 12 Steps years ago! You bet I've been chasing fresh roasted, fresh ground, fresh brewed coffee since I first started drinking coffee in 1984 and I'm a purist in my personal brewing and consumption.
That doesn't mean I don't recoginize the difference between an espresso based dessert beverage and a traditional espresso or macchiato or cappuccino. And that doesn't mean it's my place to push my consumption preference on others.
Case in point. A first time customer stopped in a few minutes ago and asked for a 16oz Hazelnut latte easy on the syrup. I simply asked if he'd like it a double or quad shot, went quad. While making his beverage for his trip home from work he mentioned his pastor had told him he had to try us. He mentioned usually going to a shop north of us that's serves Stumptown. I told him I had great respect for Stumptown coffees but I'd go head to head with Duane's coffees anyday. He then said he'd only gone to a Stumptown itself once and would never again, BECAUSE he ordered a Hazelnut latte and the barista belittled him in his tone of voice questioning him "are you sure you want to put a flavor in our coffee?" DAMN, if you're going to carry a syrup don't rag on a customer for ordering it! I told him yeah I'm a coffee snob myself but know the difference between an espresso dessert beverage and traditional espresso beverage. This new customer also noticed and commented when I dumped the first double shot (it ran a couple seconds fast, and hey it would have been "ok" in a sweetened bev' but I wasn't in a compromise mood, good thing!:). I asked him to take a sip before leaving to make sure the Hazelnut level was ok, his comment "perfect, your sign out front is right, I'm a believer". (The sign: The Best Espresso in Clark County, Agree or It's Free)
If someone orders a "dessert" espresso beverage don't belittle them, just pretend it's your "signature beverage" at the WBC and make it the best damned dessert espresso beverage you possibly can. You may not be making it for a "Title", it's more important than that, it's for your personal and business reputation and survival.
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As a life long coffee lover and fairly recent specialty coffee lover , I think the indie specialty coffee shop industry has a very long way to go before the average American knows what a trad cap, espresso, etc is. Figure Starbucks spent a decade and hundreds of millions of dollars on marketing and advertising to train Americans how to order a Grande Soy Lattewhachamacallit.
This is just my opinion , of course, but the general American public is clueless about coffee period. Recently I read an article about the coffee scene in NYC, and the author used the word "notes" when describing the coffee, as I'm sure you guys do when cupping. Some guy replied in the comments ridiculing the author for using the word "notes" to describe coffee. As if coffee is not worthy of being described in the same manner that wine is. This is just a small example, but I think that attitude represents a large portion of the population. Another example was when I was watching Iron Chef "coffee battle". One of the judges , who is a famous NY chef, remarked she prefered the "sludge mud coffee from a street cart". would she say the same thing about wine? Would she prefer the lowest form of any other ingredient she uses when cooking? Then why does she prefer the absolute worst coffee available? As a backlash to the Starbucks invasion and what the public percieves and "yuppy fancy coffee" they willing choose to drink the sludge in defiance.
Just like Coke, Pepsi, Budweiser, Kraft, and other multi billion dollar advertisers, Starbucks too have ingrained the "Starbucks experience" in the mind of the consumer. You, we, have lots of work to do to break them out of it.
Well, this is my theory as a coffee consumer. Sorry for rambling :)
Chefs these days are getting more and more into street food and simple food stuffs. Unfortunately what this means is that many of their choices taste better in the mind than in reality. They want nasty coffee to balance their otherwise unbearably posh life. To them it is not about flavor but about image...like a politician getting dirty with the common man for a photo op. Really good coffee...believe it or not...may not have as much pretense in the mind of a fine dinning individual as mud sludge coffee and therefore is not as attractive to those who trying to be exactly that by imbibing in their cup of false humility.
-cd
Wellerfan said:...Another example was when I was watching Iron Chef "coffee battle". One of the judges , who is a famous NY chef, remarked she prefered the "sludge mud coffee from a street cart". would she say the same thing about wine? Would she prefer the lowest form of any other ingredient she uses when cooking? Then why does she prefer the absolute worst coffee available? As a backlash to the Starbucks invasion and what the public percieves and "yuppy fancy coffee" they willing choose to drink the sludge in defiance.
Just like Coke, Pepsi, Budweiser, Kraft, and other multi billion dollar advertisers, Starbucks too have ingrained the "Starbucks experience" in the mind of the consumer. You, we, have lots of work to do to break them out of it.
Well, this is my theory as a coffee consumer. Sorry for rambling :)
There's a difference between drinking PBR because you only have 4 bucks left in your pocket, drinking it because you like the taste, and drinking it because that big can is cool.
Yes, there are also a small number of foodies championing "vin ordinaire" - easy everyday wines that are pleasant enough to be enjoyable yet simple and cheap enough to just drink on a Tuesday.
Interesting turn to this.
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