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We had a barista jam at our shop. Our boss surprised us with some Kopi. He bought it at $140 for 4 ounces after shopping around. It was totally unique and cool to try once. Really musty in the cup. Very interesting. Not good, but not too bad either. I liked it, but wouldn't buy it myself for obvious reasons! Also, something to consider is the fact that the site where he got it (no sure what it was) sold it in "raw form" as well...yep, just like it sounds! It was in "brick" form just as it came out of the animal! They gave you instructions how to process it from there--if you're brave enough! It was significantly cheaper in this form (like $40 per pound) which obviously would not equate to a pound of beans, but it would be something like 9 or 10 ounces of green beans. Sorry I don't have the site.
We had a barista jam at our shop. Our boss surprised us with some Kopi. He bought it at $140 for 4 ounces after shopping around. It was totally unique and cool to try once. Really musty in the cup. Very interesting. Not good, but not too bad either. I liked it, but wouldn't buy it myself for obvious reasons! Also, something to consider is the fact that the site where he got it (no sure what it was) sold it in "raw form" as well...yep, just like it sounds! It was in "brick" form just as it came out of the animal! They gave you instructions how to process it from there--if you're brave enough! It was significantly cheaper in this form (like $40 per pound) which obviously would not equate to a pound of beans, but it would be something like 9 or 10 ounces of green beans. Sorry I don't have the site.
i just had a mental image of brady standing over a sink picking apart civet poop and gently cleaning each bean by hand, cussing under his breath.
for my money, i'd rather have Hoffman Luwak - processed through the digestive system of the 2007 WBC champion. strong notes of crumpets, jam, angels wings, and well kept moustaches.
Daniel Williamson said:We had a barista jam at our shop. Our boss surprised us with some Kopi. He bought it at $140 for 4 ounces after shopping around. It was totally unique and cool to try once. Really musty in the cup. Very interesting. Not good, but not too bad either. I liked it, but wouldn't buy it myself for obvious reasons! Also, something to consider is the fact that the site where he got it (no sure what it was) sold it in "raw form" as well...yep, just like it sounds! It was in "brick" form just as it came out of the animal! They gave you instructions how to process it from there--if you're brave enough! It was significantly cheaper in this form (like $40 per pound) which obviously would not equate to a pound of beans, but it would be something like 9 or 10 ounces of green beans. Sorry I don't have the site.
Brick form?
Please excuse my inner 5-year-old, but I'm laughing so hard right now that I can hardly type.
So many questions... First, $40 a lb for a box of CAT TURDS!?
Is it even legal to ship it? What do you put on the packing slip? (errr... poor choice of words, maybe "Bill of Lading"?). Which new guy at the roastery got the job of "processing" the beans? How DO you process the beans? Did you have to clean the roaster when you were finished?
Sorry... this whole thing just boggles my mind. Don't get me wrong, I'd try some if I had the chance... but only if someone else paid for it. Saving my cash for coffee that is expensive because it's GOOD.
I guess the stuff is counterfeited a lot, I actually had a guy contact me via email trying to sell green kopi luwak to me. He offered to send me unprocessed beans as proof of his product. The idea of receiving cat poop through the mail while intriguing was not enough to get me to email the guy back
Here is a link I found on coffeed about the kopi coffee... it is worth a read.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/unleashed/2008/04/those-arent-cof.html
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