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This report seems to be based on mass market response rather than specialty coffee industry response. I mean, obviously the connoisseur will realize how subjective a "taste test" is, given that most people aren't looking for the product that totally embodies the essence of what coffee SHOULD be, but rather what the "average" person would rather drink. Living in the midwest I can say that people here would much sooner drink $4 a bag coffee over $12 a bag Starbucks because they don't really care about anything but the price. 'round these parts even Starbucks is usually a little to "uppity" for most folks. Consumer Reports doesn't really have any way to measure how this compares with specialty coffee shops...
One cannot knock Starbucks for paving the specialty coffee market road. However, their mega-chain presence has left them exposed to the pressures of a falling economy. Starbucks capitalizes on the sale of brewed coffee not bagged coffee. I go to my local grocery stores and check bagged coffee inventory. What consumers dont understand is that the coffee is old before it is even stocked on shelves. I have placed stickers under coffee bags and gone back months later to only see those stickered bags still there. People who buy coffee at the grocery store buy with the mentality that price is more important than quality. Coffee is still seen as a flavor. Unlike wine, more people read into the nuances and charactaristics through each sip. People also dont add a ton of cream and 10 sugars to their glass. I will never tell my customers that my coffee is the best. I tell them to drink Giacobean coffee because its my personal libation of choice. However my motto has always been--Try before you Buy. Dont believe the hype!
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