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Well To-Go cups are standard now, but the rest you said is absolutely true. (Even the getting chummy part, these hells are made by yet another Italian-German liaison.
Wow, these pics are telling me we are talking two different kinds of coffee cultures here. So romantic and almost historical... People in Berlin miss those real cafés, where you have exactly those tiny painted ceramic cups and table service. Especially the elders are still trying to get self-service and they strictly avoid Starbucks because of the mugs they have to drink out (even though there are a lot of more reasons to avoid them). Some super-hip-alternative-areas try to be more romantic again and design their coffee shops like an old living room, not only with sofas, but with cupboards and stuff. Just like on your pictures with the exception that young hipsters with huge glasses they just wear because it's cool, sit around those tables, talking more to their mobiles than their companions and are cheap with tips. So not Cafe Rau I guess. But most German culture today is taking place at cities and those are quite oriented at American culture. Speciality coffee shops are really close to those in the US (taking aside the café-crema-failure).
You know, We have a Slayer at our shop and have pulled a few 12oz espressos at a low pressure (about 5 bars) and they tasted okay, but not really stellar. No one has ever asked for a cup like this, but I'm not sure I'd really be interested in serving it either. It just ends up tasting over extracted, even when we made the grind coarse. It's pretty cool, but we gotta figure out a way to make it taste good before people should have it.
You know that's a good point, but I guess I just think of the Slayer, as much as I worship the counter it sits on, as a tool and I'm interested in seeing what it can do. If I can make something that tastes amazing, then I might have to rename it a coffee machine instead of an espresso machine.
As a side note, the guys who make Slayer actually recommended we play around with it and suggested we try making a cup of coffee.
Cool.
Anya Pomykala said:You know that's a good point, but I guess I just think of the Slayer, as much as I worship the counter it sits on, as a tool and I'm interested in seeing what it can do. If I can make something that tastes amazing, then I might have to rename it a coffee machine instead of an espresso machine.
As a side note, the guys who make Slayer actually recommended we play around with it and suggested we try making a cup of coffee.
Wow, these pics are telling me we are talking two different kinds of coffee cultures here. So romantic and almost historical...
Volumes like 12oz are a myth or drinks for people you don't want to serve.
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