Coffee

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  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

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  • peter4jc
    peter4jc Posts: 18,100 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Did you take your Robot to mom's?

    "I could've had a Mi Querida!"   Nick Bardis
  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I did, but I forgot the portafilter and basket in my dish drying rack so I met up with a fellow coffee nerd in Fullerton to borrow his.

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  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Interesting thread on Home-Barista about how just smelling--and not drinking--a throw-away dark roast sharpens and opens up the senses allowing you to better enjoy a light roast coffee. I haven't tried this myself yet, I don't often roast screamingly light roasts, but it sounds like it has merit. I was reminded of this thread this morning after drinking my medium roast Brazil Jag Summer espresso before enjoying an Excalibur and how much the espresso opened up and enhanced the flavor from the cigar.

    https://www.home-barista.com/brewing/mind-blowing-just-smell-dark-roast-brew-transforms-light-roast-brew-t100862.html

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  • silvermouse
    silvermouse Posts: 23,487 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Coffee prices in the US have surged more than 20% in the last year, as duties on some of the world’s biggest producers take effect. While American consumers have in general been shielded from the impact of tariffs, coffee drinkers are feeling the pinch as steep duties on imports from Brazil and Vietnam force sellers to pass on some of the cost. The levies compound the pain for US coffee retailers, who already faced higher costs after droughts dented global production. One New York City cafe owner who recently had to hike the price of a cup of drip coffee by 50% said: “We have held off on making this change for as long as possible, but… this adjustment is necessary.”
    --Semaphor

    Summary
    Irrigation crucial for Brazil's coffee amid climate change
    Coffee prices rise due to supply shortfall, drought impacts
    Concerns over water use in Bahia's agricultural expansion

    https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/brazils-coffee-farmers-turn-costly-irrigation-quench-global-demand-brew-2025-03-31/

  • peter4jc
    peter4jc Posts: 18,100 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I truly feel bad for the people who have to make a living by roasting/selling coffee, and am grateful for my lot in life, where I can observe, w/o the pain inflicted by all the vagaries of coffee prices.

    "I could've had a Mi Querida!"   Nick Bardis
  • Olekingcole
    Olekingcole Posts: 1,370 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Yakster if you were in the market today would you buy your robot again or would you grab something different?

    I don't have problems, just more work to do.

  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Olekingcole that's an interesting question. When I signed up for the Kickstarter for the Cafelat Robot I didn't intend to use the Robot as a daily driver, but rather to add to my collection in place of a Faema Faemina Baby which is the inspiration for the Robot and a machine that I had considered collecting but worried about problems with the old gaskets on these machines. I already have a Faema Faemina and so I had this itch to scratch as a collector of vintage lever espresso machines. I didn't go for the Barista version with the pressure gauge because it would deviate from the Faemina Baby's classic looks.

    image

    However, when I received my Robot, I quickly discovered that it works great to make a straight shot of espresso without much prep time. The Robot fills a particular niche for people who want straight espresso, a lever, don't mind having to provide boiling water, and it's relatively easy to use and works well.

    I haven't tried the Flair levers so it's hard to compare. As a lever enthusiast for many years it's also hard for me to accurately comment on how easy it is to use, since I see posts from people who encounter difficulties for many different lever machines.

    I would buy another Robot now without question, both from a design aesthetic and performance perspective.

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  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Join Alessandra Cagliari as she takes you on a fascinating journey through the Museum of Coffee Machines by Caffè Cagliari in Modena. This unique museum showcases over 100 original espresso machines, some still fully functional, spanning from the early steam-powered models to iconic designs by renowned Italian designers like Gio Ponti and Bruno Munari. Alessandra shares the rich history and culture behind these machines, highlighting how Caffè Cagliari preserves the art and tradition of Italian coffee.

    I suggest you go into the YouTube settings for the video and switch the Audio track from English to "German (DE) Original." They're actually speaking English in the original track. 28:53 long. I would also suggest watching at 1.25x or 1.5x. You need to watch on YouTube to change the settings.

    https://youtu.be/gb9vhuSdc5g

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  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I roasted a Peru Cajamarca today, pre-heated the roaster for the next batch, and then accidentally poured in the same roasted Peru back into the roaster instead of the Ethiopia Guji Gogogu Washed I was planning on roasting next. Thankfully I realized my mistake and dumped the beans out after warming them up again and then pre-heated again for the Ethiopia batch.

    Doh!

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  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 2

    I'm thinking of taking my Cafelat Robot espresso machine camping this weekend so I'm trying out the coffees I have roasted up to see which one to bring. I have a Peru Cajamarca first which has some sweetness and earthiness and an Ethiopia Guji Gogogu Washed which has a lighter flavor and more berry sweetness second. Also, I had my morning cup of the Peru, so I'm starting to vibrate a bit but the winner is the Guji coffee.

    Too bad the images are stretched out horizontally. It looks like it may look better for images that haven't been cropped. Hmm.

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  • TRayB
    TRayB Posts: 3,648 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Yakster said:
    I'm thinking of taking my Cafelat Robot espresso machine camping this weekend so I'm trying out the coffees I have roasted up to see which one to bring. I have a Peru Cajamarca first which has some sweetness and earthiness and an Ethiopia Guji Gogogu Washed which has a lighter flavor and more berry sweetness second. Also, I had my morning cup of the Peru, so I'm starting to vibrate a bit but the winner is the Guji coffee.

    Too bad the images are stretched out horizontally. It looks like it may look better for images that haven't been cropped. Hmm.

    Pretty sure that's called Glamping. Have fun.

  • peter4jc
    peter4jc Posts: 18,100 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Interesting.

    If it weren't for gullible people with more money than sense, the whole Kona coffee thing wouldn't exist.

    "I could've had a Mi Querida!"   Nick Bardis
  • Yakster
    Yakster Posts: 31,385 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I'm surprised that they were able to avoid the agricultural inspection, I'm pretty sure Hawaii doesn't allow importation of green coffee, since they are a coffee growing region.

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  • edz
    edz Posts: 314 ✭✭✭✭

    @peter4jc said:
    Interesting.

    If it weren't for gullible people with more money than sense, the whole Kona coffee thing wouldn't exist.

    20 some years ago a friend sen to send me Kona coffee, macadamia nuts and cuban cigars the first time I started smoking cigars. I would send him things from the states. One day I told him this wasn't working, you cant go to Cuba and just buy cigars' and Kona coffee is rare around here. His reply was "you can't go to Cuba but most of my family is Asian and we go when we want . As for the Kona coffee he said "nobody here drinks it, people overlook what's in their back yards".

  • silvermouse
    silvermouse Posts: 23,487 ✭✭✭✭✭

    "...people overlook what's in their back yards". True. I live a 5 minute walk to the ocean and haven't been swimming or reading a book on the beach in 50 years.