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This Really Grinds My Gears

My boss and the other barista who's been here for about 3 years off and on, are both getting on my case because I adjusted the grinder to a finer grind because my shots were too fast (like <15 seconds fast).

Now, during our summer hours, I was the only barista here, so I had time to perfect MY technique, and I didn't have to worry about other people in my workstation. We also are a slow enough place that we only have one person on shift at a time.

Well, we're back to normal hours and the other barista is back from her summer vacation and she's been giving me nothing but trouble. But that's for another post.

So other barista and my boss try doing shots with my grind. Nothing but drips at best. So instead of adjusting the grinder, they get on my case about it being too fine.

Other barista, who mind you, has over 2 year experience on me, tells me it's BAD for the grinder to adjust it so much.

Uhh... Wat? If you weren't supposed to adjust it as needed, why did they put the adjuster right on the front / top? If you were suppose to always keep it at the same grind, why didn't they make all the grinders one setting only?

My boss is completely on her side. Tells me I'm being too anal about my shots and as long as it has a crema, it's a good shot, timing doesn't matter.

So we have officially gone into crazy land.

I'm being as accomodating as possible. I change the grinder at the end of my shift, I leave the doser empty between shots and only grind enough for my shot (They grind about 10 double shots worth of espresso at a time). It's got to the point that anytime I'm not using the grinder, even when I'm the only one working, I change the setting back to what they like, in case my boss happens to come by and notice the grinder.

They on the other hand, are being absolutely ridiculous. They will come to make themselves a drink (the grinder will already be adjusted for them, since I do it) and they will set the timer on the grinder all the way, which is 30 seconds or so? It's enough grinds to fill our portafilters about 10 times.

So I'm left with 9 shots worth of espresso I can do nothing with. I'll attempt about 2 times before I toss all the espresso they've ground.

I have tried every technique I can think of to get an okay shot out of their grind. I've done what they do, lots of twisting and what not, I've even taken the portafilters in both hands and pushed down on the tamper as hard as I can, with both palms and my shots are 10 seconds long, at best.


I could not tell you why I need it so fine. I just do and my boss and the other barista aren't coffee savvy enough to understand.

Even though I've shown them both numerous times what my shots look like with their grind.


I've talked to a friend who used to work here and has worked at Caribou as well as she says that I'm doing nothing wrong, and I have to agree.

This is why I want my own coffeeshop, so I can train the people right.

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Bad Coffee on National Coffee Day

Do any of you ever need coffee but you don't have time to go where you know the good stuff is or it's to far away?  Most likely not, because the majority of you are Baristas and working in the industry.

 

That was me today, and on a coffee lovers holiday!  I don't work in the coffee industry, but for me coffee is passion; a daily passion that takes me all over my city seeking out my black gold.

 

Today was interesting....

 

I woke up only to realize it was National Coffee Day!  But I was out of bean,  actually I think there where about 5 or 6 stray beans in the jar.   Maybe i should have eaten them.

 

Anyway...  My wife had this great idea.   Lets break out the old Drip/Filter sunbeam machine and cleaned it up.  So in honer of Coffee Day, we went back to our roots and took some pre-ground beans we snagged from a hotel that had been on a pantry shelf for about a year and brewed them.   My son, who's 8 years old said: "What is that thing?"  so we explained to him what is was, then he made a funny smirk and said "It looks cheap" and he ran out to the bus stop.

 

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So we had our "coffee" and was it great?  Of course not, and that was almost what made it all worth it, Nostalgia!, but really I just needed caffeine.

Well...  Now lets move to lunch time.   My small cup of "coffee" from the morning had not done it for me.   So I found myself in the little town of Loveland, OH going to thrift stores and looking for treasure.  Well that got me thinking about Coffee so I drove to this little "Coffee House".   Its a yellow house that serves coffee, and I wont say names.  

I walk in and find a woman working on a quilt. Hard wood floors and some cafe` tables. Its a cute place, and it smelled good, and lets be real honest I did not have high expectations.

 

I made some small talk and looked around at the "crafts" she was selling.   Nothing I am really interested in.  So I look to her menu and its the usual Capps, Latte, Espresso.  I order a double espresso in a cup, for here, and my mind is thinking... "Its coffee, Yes!"  

She grabs the portafilter and gently places it under the super jolly and starts dosing out the coffee, this take 5 attempts and just watching the insane tamping routine I was getting worried.  I wish i could explain to you the strange tamping. 

So she takes her styrofoam cup and tries to slide it under the 2 group Nuova Simonelli. Not only was it not going to fit, but drinking a double from a 16oz cup was not what I had in mind. I stopped her and politely said "Oh can I have one of those little white cups on the machine" and she asked me what I ordered, I told her, and she said she was sorry and took out the cup placed it under the machine and started pulling the shot...  When it started squirting all over the place and burning the lady and making a huge mess.

I felt pretty bad for her...   And she tries again to make this shot.   This goes on for a while, 3 times I think; where she doses and tamps and it doesn't fit in the group and back to the grinder, dump the coffee, and try again.

While all this is going on I ask her if this is her shop or if she just works there, she says to me that its hers, and continues to work on my espresso.   Then she tells me that she doesnt like coffee and only drinks instant when she has nothing else to drink.

 

My mind is spinning at this point.

 

Eventually she pulls the shot.   And well it doesn't look like the best espresso I have ever seen but this lady has truly labored for it, and I give her mental credit for this.   How did it taste you ask?   Well...   Hmm..  It was ok, actually it was bad, but I felt so bad I drank it up and smiled and was on my way.

 

At least I am awake and able to write this.

 

Hope your National Coffee Day was better than mine.

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Bleh

I find it so frustrating that my boss doesn't give two licks about this place.

 

I understand that his main business is his cabinets and the coffeeshop was just an after-thought to take up some extra space, but still. If I have to work for anyone, I want to work for someone who is just as enthusiastic about coffee as I am.

 

If the location of this place was better, I'd work out a deal with him to take over the shop with my husband, but I refuse to stay in Walla Walla / College Place for any more than a year.

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Excellence verse Experimentation

For the last few days, I have been throwing out everything I know about making myself a good cup of coffee and just trying random methods.

 

My tea ball did not work to brew at all

but

My little tea pot does surprisingly well at brewing coffee.

31139456097?profile=originalAdding ingredients too and otherwise being crazy

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Honduras, Benigno Mejia

Honduras

Farmed by Benigno Mejia

San Vicente region

 

Acid: high

Body: medium-full

Texture: mainly clean, juicy, light powder on finish

Flavor Profile: juicy tropical fruit, peach and guava, even tomato jam.  The acid is high and sweet, no hint of tartness, giving it a long mouth-watering finish.  A spicy cinnamon and cayenne pepper mixes into the mid-tone fruits and lingers with a light powder feeling on the finish.

Noteworthy: second harvest we've purchased from Benigno Mejia.  Farmed at elevation at 5000 and above, this lot totalled 36 bags and was fully washed and processed on the farm.

 

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Leonardo Academy hosted the first remote quarterly meeting of the multi-stakeholder National Sustainable Agriculture Standards Committee on Thursday, August 25. The motion was passed in April by the committee to hold three remote meetings in addition to the annual, in-person meeting to increase the pace of the development process. Standards Committee members and observers discussed via a conference call the results of the current work of identifying sustainability criteria and indicators for the performance-based national standard. The group went on to outline goals for the next phase of drafting sustainability metrics.   

Committee Chairman Brian McElroy, Organic Supply Manager of Driscoll’s Strawberry Associates, said, “I am pleased to say that Leonardo Academy held a successful meeting on August 25 with the entire Standards Committee. Both the Environmental and Economic Criteria Development Subcommittees reported on their significant progress since the Committee’s annual meeting in April. An estimated 30 active participants attended the conference call to review progress and exchange ideas. Subcommittees are making progress identifying the key sustainability criteria and indicators for the draft standard.  Criteria and indicators are very specific topics that will help define sustainable agricultural production.  Now is the time for all those interested in sustainable agriculture to get involved.  The standard development process is an open, transparent one and any member of the public may participate in some tangible way.  We continue to work toward finishing a draft standard for public review by April 2012.”
 
Leonardo Academy President Michael Arny added, “This was a very productive meeting due to the hard work of the Coordinating Committee and subcommittee members since the April Standards Committee Meeting. As Chairman Brian McElroy said, now is the time to get involved. We continue to work toward finishing a draft standard for public review by April 2012. Apply to join a subcommittee today!”
 
Funding 
Driscoll’s Strawberry Associates and Organic Valley both contributed $5000 to support the development process this quarter.  Michael Arny officially thanked the funders at the meeting.
 
New Member Announced
The Standards Committee welcomed new member Peggy Barlett to the Standards Committee, Professor of Anthropology at Emory University, and a specialist in agricultural anthropology and sustainability in higher education. She is the co-founder of the Piedmont Project at Emory, the longest-running curriculum development program for sustainability in the country. She manages workshops for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). She also leads Emory’s Sustainable Food Initiative that supports eight educational food gardens, developed a farmers market on campus, and has set bold goals for local and sustainably-grown food in dining halls and hospitals. Ms. Barlett has recently been named to the National Research Council Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources. She is active in the Atlanta Local Food Initiative.
 
 
 
To make a tax deductible donation to support the Sustainable Agriculture Standard development process, go to http://www.leonardoacademy.org/programs/standards/agstandard/donate.html.
 
About the Sustainable Agriculture Standard and the Standards Committee
There are 60 seats on the Standards Committee to accommodate a broad range of perspectives. The Standards Committee is working to develop a national standard for sustainable agriculture under the rules of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). The Standards Committee consists of a skilled, diverse membership representing a broad range of perspectives from across all areas of agriculture, including commodity and specialty crop producers; agricultural product processors and distributors; food retailers; environmental, labor, and development organizations; NGOs; trade associations; government representatives; academics; regulators and certifiers.
 
Supporting the Standards Committee are six subcommittees that have been working since July 2009 to develop the structure of the standard; draft economic, environmental, and social criteria for possible inclusion in the standard; develop communications materials for process stakeholders; and collect resources to include in the Sustainable Agriculture Standard Reference Library. For more information on the subcommittee work, visit:  https://sites.google.com/site/sustainableagstandards/.

Leonardo Academy, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing sustainability, is the ANSI-accredited standards development organization that is managing the development of the Sustainable Agriculture standard development process.
To make a tax deductible donation to support the Sustainable Agriculture Standard development process, go to http://www.leonardoacademy.org/programs/standards/agstandard/donate.html
 
How to Apply for Subcommittee or Standards Committee Membership 
To receive an application for membership on a subcommittee or on the Standards Committee, contact Jennifer Trucks at Leonardo Academy:  jennifer@leonardoacademy.org (608) 280-0255, or visithttp://www.leonardoacademy.org/programs/standards/agstandard/development.html.
 
Beyond the Standards Committee - How to Get Involved 
In addition to applying for Standards Committee membership, stakeholders are also invited to participate in the Sustainable Agriculture Standard development process as a subcommittee member, observer or reviewer of the draft standard once it is opened up for public comment.
 
Subcommittees - Subcommittees are open to membership by all interested parties. Six subcommittees - 1) Economic Criteria Development, 2) Environmental Criteria Development, 3) Social Criteria Development, 4) Structure and Process, 5) Reference Library and Information and 6) Fundraising and Communications - are currently developing the structure of the standard, along with draft criteria, indicators and metrics;  supporting Leonardo Academy's outreach and fundraising efforts related to the standard; continuing to acquire resources for the Sustainable Agriculture Standard Reference Library; and providing additional recommendations and guidance to the Standards Committee.
 
Observers - Observers are invited to participate in the standard development process. Observers may attend in-person Standards Committee meetings on a first-come, first-serve basis, subject to the availability of space, and may also participate in all Standards Committee and Subcommittee teleconferences.
 
Public Review and Comment - Once the Standards Committee reaches agreement on a draft Sustainable Agriculture Standard, it will be posted for public comment. The public review and comment period provides all stakeholders with an additional opportunity to participate in the standard development process. At the end of the public comment period, the Standards Committee will address all of the comments received prior to submitting the final standard to ANSI for approval as an American National Standard.

To sign up for the subcommittees, apply for observer status, learn more about participating in the public review and comment process or to join the Sustainable Agriculture Standard email list, contact Jennifer Trucks at Leonardo Academy:   jennifer@leonardoacademy.org or (608) 280-0255.

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CONTACT INFORMATION:

Leonardo Academy
Jennifer Trucks
608-280-0255

 

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To communicate that the best way to win in life and in work is for us to start a better habit...a better habit to be connected with oneself and then with others. Hoping as we get better and find meaning, we can altogether have a brighter future for this world we live in. Our place is where better habits brew. Espresso, tea, sandwiches, comfort food and time to feel refresh.

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