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We have tried several but cannot get it to steep well in the milk.
Any suggestions?
..be bold
But it was late, I had missed the last bus, and I had a long, cold walk home ahead of me.
My introduction to the world of Guatemalan coffee came a short 15 months ago. I really had zero information about coffee, let alone the world associated with it. I am so thankful that my eyes have been opened to the beauty of the world behind my little cup of coffee.
Of course, Guatemalan coffee is superb; every cup is a new beginning for me as I experience the flavor each time anew. It is so multifaceted. It is easy to sell for me, as it sells itself. I could never have imagined, though, that I would fall in love with the country and people behind that cup.
Truly, knowing Pablo Castañeda, our company founder and president, has been the biggest blessing of my life. Not only did he introduce me to this amazing elixir of life, he welcomed me into the world of coffee, and has taught me about the magic and art of it, leading me to understand the most important thing about the coffee: its human value.
The generations of mastering the art of coffee that it takes is remarkable to me, especially as it seems our society is losing its history and past. The Guatemalan people take pride in their work, right from the simple act of hand-picking. I imagine in my mind, the child who comes to the father and says, "Papi, tell me, how do you know when to pick the right cherry?" Then the father tenderly explains the process and the knowledge behind that simple pluck of the fingers that results in an amazing coffee.
It's the people behind it that truly fuel my passion to see Guatemalan coffees explode in the market. The Guatemalan people are beautiful, with such amazing hearts. They are people who work hard for what they have, and unfortunately still struggle in ways we will never understand-- thank the Lord we are blessed!
My heart is especially tender for the children, as there is much poverty, neglect, malnourishment or abuse for many. That our company supports Escuela Integrada in Guatemala through our Kafes Kids program thrills me! We have the opportunity to affect the lives of the children-- the future-- and to provide for them education, healthcare, nutrition, even psychological care, things that we can take for granted. But through my coffee I can give a child hope for a better tomorrow. Who could ask for more!?!
So, when you sit down to your coffee in the morning, whether it be Guatemalan or not, I hope that you will think about the true beauty of that cup, the artistry and magic that produced that cup, and that you will say a prayer for those beautiful people who worked so hard to bring you that joy. We are truly blessed, and usually the most when we stop to regard the simplest things in our lives.
Be blessed!

we are no longer in BETA mode! woohoo. I will be introducing new functionality each month. A couple things I am working to add soon are:
• Google map/location finder. This is a huge task but I am hoping to create something like this soon. This may also satisfy my/others want to have a search by location feature on the site.
• New and improved Video Browser function. This will allow users to watch videos without having to navigate thru multiple pages. Also, it will be another fun way for our sponsors to get more exposure.
• Super Message Center - Instantly reach anyone who is online across your network and send a message or chat privately. Can also track (and map) who WAS online last and when!
• Member to Member Exchange- Offer items for sale or trade amongst trusted members and friends!
If you have any suggestions or comments please feel free to send me a message.
- Matt
Posted by: Mary Dally-Muenzmaier
Stone Creek Coffee's owner and founder, Eric Resch, just recently returned from the lovely and enchanting country of Honduras--a land rich in cultural and coffee growing history. While there, he spent three days visiting microenterprises, including multiple coffee co-ops.

One such co-op is CORAH, located in the small village of Hoya Grande and founded in 2001 by twenty local families. During Eric's visit, he met with CORAH leaders and members to discuss the possibility of Stone Creek buying their coffee direct--an arrangement that would mean more money going straight to the farmers and their families.

The coffee produced by the CORAH co-op is certified organic and a new mill has just been constructed in the center of the village to handle processing.
Our hope is that, through a direct relationship, we can assist CORAH farmers and their families maintain a sustainable, organic coffee growing way of life that benefits us all. Cheers to that!
Posted by: Mary Dally-Muenzmaier
Local tech head Matt Caton started a blog called Table for Two (and a half): A Milwaukee Family Dining Review back in September of 2007 and since then he's been posting reviews of Milwaukee restaurants, running the culinary gamut from Indian to Thai to American. While his blog focus is fixed on family friendly restaurants--he and his wife have a three year old son--he also looks for those dining spots that serve dishes beyond the palate numbing cuisine normally associated with kinder cordial eateries.
For his first post of 2008 he chose to write an extremely positive review about our old pals at The City Market, giving them 5 stars. Fantastic, no? Yes! Now, as you are all well aware, The City Market switched to serving Stone Creek Coffee some months ago, much to the delight of many, so who else do ya think Matt managed to mention in his review? You better bet that it's us, baby! And with such high approval does he sing the praises of our brew that we simply had to bring it to your attention.
Read Matt's fabulous review of The City Market and Stone Creek Coffee now !
Since i already have a blog up and running on blogger i'll just post the link to it here and save myself some trouble. if your interseted click away:

After reading the post I was curious to apply some to Barista Exchange ... first impression, friendly environment, interaction with the owner :), consistency, affordable and welcoming are all things I hope people have a good experience with on the site. I am in the process of redesigning the site ... so stay tuned.
Again, all feedback is super appreciated, thanks for all the support so far.
- Matt
Read the Article
Posted by: Mary Dally-Muenzmaier
We're not gonna lie to ya, kids, it is crazy cold out there. In fact, it's colder than the glare your mother gives you when she finds out you did something dingbat dangerous when you were young but never told her about and she's missed her chance to punish you for it because you're all grown up now. Come on, you know that glare--it is cold.
This frigid weather could be a perfect excuse for us not to encourage you to step out of your warm cozy house tomorrow morning and join us at the Stone Creek Coffee Factory for our regularly scheduled cupping event, but, well, you know that ain't gonna happen. And ya know why? Because we're Wisconsinites! And what do Wisconsinites do when it's cold? We bundle up a little more, put our winter game face on and head out the door with a sense of determination known only to exist in the most stalwart of tribes. Right? Right.
Besides, we'll have the fireplace a goin' and the javacation a flowin'. In other words, it'll be divinely swell, so come on down tomorrow to the Stone Creek Coffee Factory at 422 N. 5th Street in downtown Milwaukee at 9AM sharp. It's what Wisconsinites do when it's too cold not to.
It all started at 4:15am. I woke up after 4-5 hours of sleep, showered, shaved, dressed... no coffee yet. I get to the shop at 4:56 give or take. Amanda's mom drops her off as I begin the drip coffees. She's been having car trouble, as an owner you've got to appriciate an employee getting her butt to work on time at 5am without a car...
Shots timed and tested, bakery case full, coffees ready, chairs pushed neatly in to lined tables. Mmm... we're open.
5:30am: Small tastes of the daily coffee... Colombian Supremo Spectacled Bear light and Bolivian Colonial Caranavi medium. Glass of water. Double shot of espresso.
5:47am: Scones out of the oven. JP is the first customer. We talk for a little while. JP could talk for hours. He had to go cut down a tree at a property he manages. I wonder now if he finished before the snow started... It was frigged cold today. Who cuts down a tree in January?
By seven we're fully staffed. It was a steady morning. The rush came a little later than usual.
I had a new employee begin training today. Craig came in fifteen minutes early, a good sign for a new hire. He's got a lot of service experience but this is his first coffee gig. He's primed for it and I think he will catch on quickly and turn into a very productive employee. I've been wrong before, but I've also been right and with everything else in the world you've got to be optimistic about a good hire.
It takes me about 45min to read through the employee manual with a new hire. I always do it myself. I like to go over everything in detail. Verbalize what the expectations are. After two years and too many employees I think I deliver a pretty nice presentation. My favorite line is this:
If we act as if every customer we see has the ability to make or break our business we can't help but succeed.
It's cool... at two years I feel like we're on the verge of something. I don't worry that we won't make. I'm optimistic. The best employees are fiercely loyal and take the success of the business personally. That is a good good thing to have from a staff. It's stressful being a young business but it's rewarding to see steady growth and give your staff credit for it.
10:00am: I have Amanda and Dave begin prepping for a catering order to be delivered at 12:30pm. They do a good job, I don't micro-manage too much and I can focus on working with Craig and the bar.
I wiggle a little free time and I take the opportunity to work on my cappuccino... GLRBC in March. My signature drink is a work in process. Craig hadn't really seen a lot of latte art and I think it encouraged him.
The catering order goes out without a hitch. I'll bring more coffee to the location when I leave the shop in Jenna's hands around two.
No tragedies, no trouble-shooting needed... so far.
Did I mention one of my shift managers gave two weeks notice the night before and our womens bathroom is under construction.
Jason, my brother and partner, decided Sunday he would re-tile the womens bathroom. It needed to be done. So we re-tiled the womens bathroom. The grout's now drying.
As for my manager, it's unfortunate. She did a very good job while she was here and we will miss her. I could have guessed though. The week before she had dyed her hair pink... I knew change was in the wind.
A lot of changes after the new year at CC.
We turn two, well... today. So, happy birthday us!
On my way home at about 3pm I'm wishing I had to roast today. Jason roasted yesterday. I wanted to roast this morning... it's funny you kinda fiend for roasting coffee. Just like making and drinking coffee. Good business to be in I guess.
Then it comes... the text message no one owner ever wants to here.
Jenna: health dept is here!
Are you serious? Happy birthday to us. I call and tell her to make sure there is a bucket with sanitizer and rag under the bar and keep the scoop out of the ice. We should be alright, I can't think of anything else.
Except for the bathroom. ####!
You see, there are proper channels one must go through to re-tile a bathroom. Letters must be written and applications must be filed. Jason hand delivers an apology letter to the HD offices in Woodstock just before close at 5:00pm. We really had no idea. Sorry health department... please don't hurt us.
Everyday at a coffee shop is unique. Every person. Every story.
I get home... no more coffee. I've been drinking coffee all day long. Leinenkugel's Red.
Now, for no reason but today being Conscious Cup's birthday, I write my first and greatest blog post ever.
I'm sorry if you thought this was going to be the greatest blog post ever... it's just my greatest blog post ever.
Thanks,
Mike
Weird.
I recently spent happy afternoon being instructed in how to make the perfect coffee at a rather obscure little factory in Blaydon in the outskirts of Newcastle. They have been importing, roastingand selling coffee from there since 1750, and are now running Baristatraining courses. This is because, as our instructor tells us,he hates seeing all the hard work that so many different people putinto to producing the coffee, ruined at the last minute by untrained,or often plain lazy baristas. The commodity chains involved inproducing a cappuccino are infinitely long, and necessarily global. Thecoffee growers, graders, buyers, shippers and importers, roasters,packagers, marketers, salesmen, distributors, and coffee shop managers;not to mention the dairy farmers, people who pasturise milk, bottlingfactory workers, health and safety regulators, supermarket or dairybuyers and even milkmen have all had some involvement in yourcappuccino, then there is the designers of the espresso machine, themaintenance man who adjusts it for you, the cardboard cupmanufacturers, brand designers and so on, have all contributedsomething too. And then a bored, underpaid, dispassionate and usuallypart time barista, screws it up. And still charges you £2 for theprivilege.
Throughout the afternoon, we are taught how to make an excellentespresso base (and even with a fully functional espresso machine andperfect ingredients and equipment, it can still go wrong very easily.)You then froth milk - and this is equally as important and as skilledas making the espresso. I'm sure everyone on here knows how to do this perfectly, I still appreciated being taught! For record, not only do these coffees look great, they taste fantastic.So, if given the opportunity to train, why aren't all cappuccinos likethis? Where I used to work, at the Voodoo Cafe, (an independent andvery unique place!) we took the time to learn properly, and althoughours were never that pretty to look at, we invested in very high gradeluxury coffees and then practiced making them properly. We had a wholerange of different coffees to try; different espresso bases indifferent varieties of coffee. We also tried to keep the pricescompetitive. Our 12-ounce cappuccinos were £1.50. Even taking intoaccount my bias, compared to the competition we made some of the bestcoffees in town.
Comparethis to life at Caffe Nero. Nero is a big brand. It is the 20th fastestgrowing company in the whole of Europe, and currently has over 330stores in Britain. And every single one is identical. This means thatwhichever store you go into from Brighton to Glasgow, you know thatthere will be brown leather armchairs, little circular tables, thecoffee bar usually in the middle, a fridge full of cakes (the samecakes...) the same rather dated pictures on the walls, and even thesame music playing at the same time of day in each store. You will alsoknow the prices are the same throughout the country with the exceptionof those in central London and at airports, and that your loyalty cardwill work anywhere. If you pay attention you will notice that the staffwill even say more or less the same things to you; the Six ServiceSteps we are all obliged to follow. You will be very familiar with theNero logo, which is plastered all over each store, all over your cups,plates and bowls, the take-out cups, the take-out sleeves to stop youburning your fingers on the take-out cups, the take-out bags, thet-shirts of all the staff, the retail bags of coffee, containing thesecret Nero Blend, all the cake wrappers and sandwich boxes, and evenon the napkins.
The other thing that is identical in every Caffe Nero is the coffee -supposedly. Each new employee has to undergo "weeks of intensivetraining before being allowed to serve an espresso" (from theirpromotional leaflets). However, this intensive training does notinclude actually tasting the coffee. We are taught that if the rightamount of ground coffee goes into the handles, and it pours for thecorrect length of time (a full ten seconds less than Pumphreysrecommend), and it has a good crema on the top, then it is a goodespresso and can be served. This is not a good argument however,because espressos can look very good but still taste awful. In myexperience at Nero, I am in the minority because I actually drink thecoffee there. Most do not touch the stuff.
With an not-so-greatespresso base, the next step is the milk. In Nero, this is heated to 60degrees centigrade/ 140 farenheit. We pump a lot of hot air into it,until in separates, with thin but very hot milk on the bottom, and araft of thick, dry foam floating on the top.
From this, thecappuccino is made, to the Nero Way: 1/3 espresso, 1/3 hot milk, 1/3foam. The foam is occasionally so thick it has to be spooned into thecup. It is then topped up with the hot milk until the foam bulges outof the top of the mug, in the trademark dome shape Nero prides itselfon. Think muffin tops. I always ask for an extra espresso shot, becausewith this level of milk, it is often not possible to taste the coffeeat all.
If the cappuccino does not look right, we are not allowed toserve it. I have actually had someone complain that she did not haveenough froth on her cappuccino and I had to make her another one,heated even higher and with even drier foam. By this time, even I couldsmell that the milk was burnt, but this is what she wanted.
Overheatingthe milk is a cultural phenomenon, it seems. Try as we might, in thiscountry we are still very much tea drinkers. When we drink tea, we makeit with boiled water, then sit, chat and stir it until it is coolenough to drink. When we make coffee, we expect it to behave the sameway. But it doesn't. Tea needs the heat to infuse properly. Burning thecoffee by brewing espresso at too hot a temperature makes itunplesantly bitter and metallic tasting. Heating the milk until isseparates for a Nero cappuccino makes it smell of baby sick (yes, Ihave been able to test and research this claim as well recently) andlose its natural sweetness as well. Cappuccinos made at 50-55 degreescentigrade - which is the optimum temperature for both espresso andmilk - is designed to be drunk as soon as it is made. Of course it goescold quickly, but better that than burning it?
As I've alreadypointed out, Caffe Nero is a success story, it claimed record profitsthis year and has made a serious amount of money, very quickly, and allapparently by creating generic stores selling underextracted espressoand burnt milk drinks. But there is no denying that they "look" likegood cappuccinos. Large chain and branded coffee have created thisimage of what an ideal coffee looks like in the UK, and if anythingdeviates from this, customers will not recognise it, and it will notsell, even if it tastes better.Which is what may have been happening at our independent cafe. For allthe authenticity Caffe Nero claims: "The best espresso this side ofMilan" for instance, or "A True Italian Coffee" they are still buyingin to, and perpetrating this ideal of image and appearance over tasteand quality. For as long as we consumers continue to buy theseimitations, nothing is going to change. Which I think is quite sadreally.