Showing posts with label flavored coffees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flavored coffees. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

The Types of Gourmet Coffee

Whether you are a coffee connoisseur or just need your morning pick me up, there's nothing to tempt the palate quite like a hot mug of smooth gourmet coffee! These improvements allow gourmet coffee drinkers the chance to choose between many different grades and flavors of the coffee. Since it's first induction as the world's most popular beverage, coffee has gone through many changes and upgrades.

Each process will bring about the shared result of removing all of the fruit from the seed. There are a couple of different ways to extract the seed; wet process and dry process. The coffee bean is not really a bean; they are actually the seeds of a cherry that are found on a coffee tree. To fully appreciate a cup of hot gourmet flavored coffee, you should take a minute to inform yourself with the basics of gourmet coffee.

Those that enjoy this type of coffee will also tell you that gourmet coffee has a much better smell and more desirable flavors than Robusta. It has50% of the caffeine of Robusta and has the best taste. gourmet) coffee is the best grade of coffee. Arabica (a.k.a. Robusta coffee makes up the coffee that has the most caffeine, at the cheapest price. There are two types of coffee: Arabica and Robusta.

Basically, if there is any flavor that you are partial to, you will be able to find. Gourmet coffee is available in many of your favorite flavors, including: almond, amaretto, Irish crème, French vanilla, Swiss mocha, vanilla, chocolate, mint, peppermint, pumpkin spice and just about anything else you can imagine!

Arabica coffee ranks very high among the Specialty Coffee Association of America, which pretty much sets the standards applied to all gourmet coffee drinks. If you have a sensitive stomach, you can even find gourmet coffee that is low in acid, making it a little more gentle. There are gourmet flavored coffees that are caffeinated and those that are decaffeinated.

Though this type of coffee may be a bit more pricey than the Robusta, it's the only choice for true coffee lovers! They are also offered at many different prices, depending on your personal preference. The gourmet coffee beans are offered in a variety of different serving sizes. Many coffee making companies offer a gourmet style drink, including: Gevalia, Green Mountain, San Giorgio, San Francisco Bay, Kona and Javalution.

Monday, September 22, 2008

coffee machines utilizing todays technology for your favorite morning drink

Coffee machines have not only grown in popularity, but have become much more sophisticated that the early models of old. Today, you can program a coffee machine for early morning breakfast; utilize gourmet coffee machines to make a tasty cup of espresso or cappuccino; or use a simpler coffee machine wherein you can have a cup of java at any time of the day. Although percolators have almost been replaced by drip coffee machines, there are still individuals who utilize the former rather than the latter. and Scandinavia boast the highest amount of coffee usage. In fact, the U.S. It is currently estimated that there are over 100 million cups of coffee drunk every day. There may be a variety of reasons why some households still choose percolators over coffee machines. It may be that some drip coffee machines to not maintain heat as well; or perhaps automatic coffee machines turn off at a certain point; or there is a problem with the decanter; or it may be that having a percolated cup of coffee tastes somewhat better than that which comes from a coffee machine. Whatever the reason, today you can find coffee machines for a variety of households; from one cup to ten cups or more. In today’s economy, however, prices of food, milk, and especially coffee have risen. When you add to this the fact that many years ago drinking several cups of coffee was not considered a healthy part of one’s diet regimen; today the tide has turned once again and coffee is considered a good thing. Coffee machines brought the emergence of flavored coffees from around the world. Though quite high in cost, nonetheless, individuals flocked to these coffee houses to have a cup of this rich brew. At the same time, percolators and drip coffee machines would continue to be used in households. However, many of the well-known coffee houses who charged an exorbitant amount of money for a cup of coffee have now turned towards decreasing the cost due to an economic recession. Although individuals still choose to forgo making a cup of java at home and prefer, instead, to buy a cup of coffee on their way to work. Others, on the other hand, choose not to buy a can or bag of coffee but rather buy a cup at their local convenience store or coffee house. It seemed inevitable, then, that because there are millions of people who drink coffee that technology needed to take a giant leap forward in order to accommodate coffee drinkers at large and offer a coffee machine that could be programmed to do everything except serve. For those who still own percolators and who refuse to spend a handsome sum of money to purchase coffee machines, take heart. Percolators are still available, although you may need to research the internet to find them.

Coffee machines have not only grown in popularity, but have become much more sophisticated that the early models of old.Today, you can program a coffee machine for early morning breakfast; utilize gourmet coffee machines to make a tasty cup of espresso or cappuccino; or use a simpler coffee machine wherein you can have a cup of java at any time of the day.Although percolators have almost been replaced by drip coffee machines, there are still individuals who utilize the former rather than the latter. and Scandinavia boast the highest amount of coffee usage. In fact, the U.S. It is currently estimated that there are over 100 million cups of coffee drunk every day.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

gourmet coffee trivia

Interesting gourmet coffee facts:

• The Boston Tea Party was planned in a coffee house – the Green Dragon Coffee House
• 27% of U.S. coffee drinkers and 43% of German drinkers add a sweetener to their coffee.
• The world's largest coffee producer is Brazil with over 3,970 million coffee trees. Colombia comes in second with around two thirds of Brazil's production.
• Hard bean means the coffee was grown at an altitude above 5000 feet.
• Arabica and Robusta trees can produce crops for 20 to 30 years under proper conditions and care.
• Most coffee is transported by ships. Currently there are approximately 2,200 ships involved in transporting the beans each year.
• In Turkey a husband who refused to provide his wife with the drink could be divorced by her!
• Germany is the world's second largest consumer of coffee in terms of volume at 16 pounds per person. Second to the United States at 19 pounds per person.
• Over 53 countries grow coffee worldwide, but all of them lie along the equator between the tropic of Cancer and Capricorn.
• An acre of coffee trees can produce up to 10,000 pounds of coffee cherries. That amounts to approximately 2,000 pounds of beans after hulling or milling.
• The percolator was invented in 1827 by a French man. It would boil the coffee producing a bitter tasting brew. Today most people use the drip or filtered method to brew their coffee.
• With the exception of Hawaii and Puerto Rico, no coffee is grown in the United States or its territories.
• Up until the 1870's most coffee was roasted at home in a frying pan over a charcoal fire. It wasn't until recent times that batch roasting became popular.
• Each year some 7 million tons of green beans are produced world wide. Most of which is hand picked.
• The popular trend towards flavored coffees originated in the United States during the 1970's.
• Mission Grounds Gourmet Coffee is the most satisfying cup of coffee - it donates all its profits to children.
October 1st is the official Coffee Day in Japan.
• The first coffee tree in the Western Hemisphere was brought from France to the Island of Martinique in the 1720's






















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