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#101
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Wolfgang wrote:
"Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Did you ever get one of those little Ikea espresso maker thingies like I had at my campsite? Nah, I haven't gotten one. Espresso is something I like every once in a great while.....not enough to justify buying apparatus for making it. I've found that mooching off of fishing companions suits my needs perfectly. ![]() That's cool. I also enjoyed mooching your advice and that Pass Lake. :-) Now if Wolfgang can just forgive me for using Starbucks (aka, "Charbucks") in the thing. :-} The one nice thing about Starbucks is that you can use any of their beans to make espresso. No, it won't be good, but none of it will be worse than any other. It's sort of the McDonalds of the coffee world in that respect. And to tie in with another part of this thread: McDonalds in Canuckistan have been serving pretty decent coffee for quite a while. I never drink coffee at convenience stores or fast food restaurants, but Carol told me to try some one day and I was surprised at how much it tasted like real coffee. :-} Chuck Vance (who admits to knowing next to nothing at all about coffee, except it goes nicely with a cig when sitting by the Little River on a cool morning) Yeah, that was good. Indeed. And I hope to repeat that scene this year. Nothing finalized yet, but it looks like Carol has resigned herself to the fact that I plan to make the trip again. She even got me some new speakers for my car for xmas, saying if I was gonna be driving all those miles, I should at least have some decent sound in there. :-) So I should be back about the same time of year (early May), and I plan to camp in the same spot if possible. I'll bring my coffee maker ... you bring the beans. :-) Chuck Vance (and a few Pass Lakes) |
#102
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![]() "jeff miller" wrote in message ... Wolfgang wrote: wrote in message My favorite is the drip method.....through unbleached paper, thank you very much, none of the reusable (reuseless, if you ask me) wire mesh crap. Grew up drinking it that way.....well, from age 7 to 10 or so. I'll still do that once in a while. Or, even better, plop a nice big gob of ice cream in it! But that's not coffee. That's just a coffee flavored dessert. ![]() Wolfgang ditto on the drip...i have a bunn coffeemaker...it uses a different spray of the hot water over the grounds, instead of the usual drip. unbleached filters at times seem to change the coffee taste for me...a paper-y taste...i like the bleached filters better. Interesting. I've never really noted any flavor imparted by the filter.....except when forced to use a paper towel in emergency situations. I always opted for the unfiltered purely on the basis of environmental considerations. Ah well, yet another set of experiments to conduct. ![]() Wolfgang |
#103
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![]() "Steve" wrote in message ews.com... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 15:46:22 -0600, "Wolfgang" wrote: So, acidity? I think maybe I don't know enough about the nuances of coffee to say just what it is I like about this one. I THOUGHT it was the LACK of acidity. But the descriptions of the East African coffees at the site above make much of their acidity being one of their stong features. I dunno. Got a lot left to learn, I guess. Acidity when used to describe coffee is different from bitter. Check this out, if you are interested http://coffeereview.com/reference.cfm Thanks, Steve, I'll check it out. Every group has it's jargon. I mean, come on, we're really fling fisherman aren't we? Give us enough coffee......or other adult beverages......and we fly! ![]() Wolfgang |
#104
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On Jan 11, 10:57*am, "Wolfgang" wrote:
Give us enough coffee......or other adult beverages......and we fly! ![]() Or ursine encouragement. :-) B |
#105
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![]() "rw" wrote in message m... Steve wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:27:23 -0700, rw wrote: I buy nearly all my coffee from Peet's. No stinking valves. :-) I also like Peets Coffee, Have you tried the Major Dickerson's blend? Good stuff. I know you mentioned about freezing the beans over a long period of time. I believe you said; freeze for 1 yr. and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference against fresh batch of unfrozen for taste. Coffee beans will eventually absorbed moisture and they will break down, unless it was vacuum sealed. Next time you're in Peets, ask them how often they turn-around their incoming coffee beans...I think you'll be surprised. -tom |
#106
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#107
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Steve wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 21:55:46 -0700, rw wrote: My companion and I decided we needed a cup of tea to warm up, so we stopped into a "tea tasting" place. We'll be in The City this weekend. Would you share the name of this place? I don't remember the name but it's on the east side of Grant Ave in Chinatown. They recommended a sushi restaurant named, I believe, Sushi Roc (excellent) which was down the street, I believe on Pine St. just to the right off Grant. If you go there they may be able to point you to the tea place. I think their tea prices are way out of line, so don't buy much. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#108
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![]() "Tom Littleton" wrote in message news:K_whj.18718$Xo1.15470@trnddc06... never have bothered to roast the stuff myself(and, yet, I have frequently roasted peanuts and other beans, so I figure it isn't beyond comprehension). Peanuts, sure. What other beans does one roast? However, I do, whenever possible grind my own blends and try a lot of different roasted beans. The real Blue Mountain is nice, several African beans I have had are unique tasting, sort of winey in flavor. I do often mix the latter with some sort of Central American arabica into a blend that suits my none-too-sophisticated palate. At any rate, simply going fresh-ground beats the crap in cans, so I would imagine that roasting would add something as well, along with the usual do it yourself sort of satisfaction with the process. Aside from the self-evident freshness (and granting that fresh is better.....which no one here has contested) factor, roasting also adds one degree or another of ritual, a consideration easily dismissed by some, but important to many others. Wolfgang |
#109
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Surfing a few espresso and "moka" explanations, it does sound like
espresso machines operate at below-boiling-point temperatures -- around 90C is claimed to be optimal, _well_ below boiling at the very high pressures involved. Most web sites get it right, that _water_ is being forced through the grounds, but some mistakenly claim it is steam. Plenty of sites describe the "moka" contraptions as operating at higher temps, and given that the water is reaching its boiling point at slightly higher than atmospheric pressure, they must be. So the wikipedia explanation for moka machines must be correct. The claims of espresso sites that temps much higher than 90C ruin the brewing process seem to contradict the moka brewing process -- the only explanation I see is that the chemistry changes quite a bit at the espresso pressures. Moka pressures are only slighty above atmospheric. Jon. Not replacing my Mr. Coffee anytime soon... |
#110
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![]() "jeff miller" wrote in message ... well alrighty then!! another thing to look forward to when next we go a-fishin. As easily said as done! Well, if we invite Mr. Baker so that we can use the electrical appliances......otherwise we have to roast in a pan over a campfire and grind the beans by hand with twelve pounds of mortar and pestle. Wolfgang |
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