Thursday, January 30, 2003

Coffee that helps better the world

By:MIKE CHAIKEN, Editor January 30, 2003

How can coffee change the world?
Well, former Thomaston businessman Naren Sonpal explained, if that coffee has been "Fair Trade Certified" and has been labeled "USDA Organic," you have taken steps toward improving the lives of coffee farmers and helping your own environment.

Naren, and his wife Gun, have become experts in the process of "Fair Trade" and the meaning of "organic." They also are walking encyclopedias about coffee.

But then they should know about the commodity. The Sonpals gave up their business on Electric Avenue, NS Fluid Dynamics, to start their own coffee roasting and tea business. Working out of the basement of their Goshen home, the Sonpals roast all their own coffee, which has been grown organically and purchased under the process of Fair Trade.

"Fair Trade" and "organic" coffee are fairly new developments on the East Coast, said Naren. But Fair Trade and organic coffees have been popular for a considerable time out west, Naren said. "It's slowly coming to this side (of the country)."

More...

THE COST OF A COFFEE IS ON THE UP AND UP

BY ANNE BYRNE

12:00 - 28 January 2003

It was once the case that when you asked for a cup of coffee, you got plenty of change from £1.

Now you ask for a 'Gutless Wonder' - and you had better have more than a £1 coin to hand.

Exeter and District Consumer Group has found that as the names given to cups of coffee get more and more exotic - a 'Gutless Wonder' is a latte made with skimmed milk - so, it seems, are the prices.

More...


Wednesday, January 29, 2003

"Specialty Coffee Business Seminar" at Coffee Fest Las Vegas

Coffee Fest’s “Specialty Coffee Business Seminar” has been training entrepreneurs to open and successfully operate their own specialty coffee business since 1994. There is no better seminar available anywhere to help you open and successfully operate a coffee retail business! Over 900 have taken this seminar and everyone agrees, “The seminar was fantastic.” Many who have taken multiple seminar’s in multiple industries state, “This is the Best Seminar I have ever attended.”

Key to success as a specialty coffee retailer is to achieve high by the cup sales, which depends on your ability to consistently produce consistently high-quality beverages and thus obtain customer loyalty. This seminar provides you with the knowledge it takes to consistently prepare perfect espresso beverages, “a taste sensation unlike anything you may have ever experienced and definitely better than virtually all of your competition is providing” to build clientele and keep them coming back!

In addition to espresso techniques, the seminar provides valuable training on subjects such as obtaining a location, lease negotiation, choosing the right equipment, selecting suppliers, store design, hiring and training employees and espresso coffee philosophy.

The seminar workbook, included with your seminar registration, becomes a regular resource and a valuable aid in training your new employees. Many of the 900 students have mentioned on their comment forms that “the workbook alone, was well worth the entire investment of this seminar.”

Learn more by clicking on “Specialty Coffee Business Seminar” form the Home Page of www.coffeefest.com or by calling for a “Specialty Coffee Business Seminar” information packet at (425) 283-5058 ext 13. Highly intensive three-day course - limited to 50 students - separate registration fee required.


THE BEST COFFEE TRADE SHOW VALUE AVAILABLE TODAY

PRE-REGISTER at www.coffeefest.com


To reserve room at the Host Hotel call (800) 935-0454

Tuesday, January 28, 2003

Chinese ready for coffee culture

Move over Starbucks! There is a new kid in town and he has grand plans.

The new kid is the Coffee Beanery chain, which announced in Shanghai yesterday its intention to open 800 stores on China's mainland over the next five years.

The Chinese licensee of the Michigan-based company called the mainland market almost untapped and said now is the time for the coffee shop business to "boom" in China.

"In more developed cities, well-educated consumers have good knowledge about coffee and they are open to new thing in their lifestyle," said Xia Ling, president and chief executive officer of The Coffee Beanery (China). He cited a company survey that revealed positive consumer attitudes toward coffee culture.

More...

Discovering the buzz behind caffeine

by Jennifer Lloyd
01/23/2003

During your morning walk to class, daylight pounds through your eyes to the back of your skull. Each car whizzes past you leaving a jet stream of noise in its wake. Your gray matter throbs in pain. What is happening to cause such anguish? Why did you decide to skip having your morning coffee?

Not cocaine, not opium, not anything so fanciful and exotic, caffeine is the little culprit that lurks under the dark, delectable waves of java. As a stimulant, caffeine reduces blood flow, increases metabolism and increases energy use within the brain. Whether you soak up the sweet stuff through coffee, tea, soda, chocolate, or the almighty stay-awake-for-three-days-until-your-eyelids-glue-themselves-permanently-open pill, the drug works the same way.

More...

Coffee's jolt tied to genes

American and German researchers say they've found the genetic basis for the jitters that come with your java.
People with two linked genetic variations are far more likely to suffer caffeine-induced anxiety than other people, says the study, which was presented at the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology's annual meeting in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

More...

Monday, January 27, 2003

"Mexican Week" Celebrates Coffee Culture South of the Border

Coffee brewed from beans grown on Santa Elena -- the first coffee farm in Mexico to be certified by the Rainforest Alliance -- will be served at Marché 5 Saisons during "Mexican Week" in Montreal, Canada. Scheduled for the first week in February, the Mexican Tourism Board and Bancomext are sponsoring the event to draw attention to the precarious condition of coffee production in Mexico, and to celebrate growers committed to a sustainable, eco-friendly alternative.

The "Rainforest Alliance Certified" seal of approval guarantees that Santa Elena meets a rigorous set of social and environmental guidelines established by the nonprofit in collaboration with nine Latin American-based organizations. Certification encourages growers to maintain primary forest, to reforest their land with native species, to use water efficiently and to protect wildlife. Historically, coffee was one of Latin America's most lucrative and environmentally-friendly cash crops. The coffee-growing tradition was integrated into the social fabric of rural life. Primarily cultivated beneath the shelter of the rainforest canopy, the taller trees not only protected the coffee beans, but provided habitat for a wide range of wildlife. With the development of "technified" methods of coffee production, many farmers began clearing the forest and switching to a new, open-field system of sun-grown coffee. While these intensely managed hedgerows produce more beans per acre, they require the application of more agrochemicals and are useless to wildlife. The return to sustainably produced coffee is key to maintaining balanced ecosystems in coffee-growing regions.

Not only do Rainforest Alliance standards protect the land, they support the rights and social conditions of workers and local communities. The current crisis in coffee production, brought on by a glut in the market, is forcing farmers worldwide to abandon their crops. In Mexico, entire villages have been turned into ghost towns as villagers flee to find work in the squalid shantytowns of Mexico City, or in Canada and the U.S. Because certified beans commands higher premiums than mass-produced coffee, certified farms like Santa Elena can afford to provide workers' families with benefits such as improved working conditions, safety equipment, training, environmental education, better housing, sanitary facilities, clean water, and access to schools and medical care. "Today we have companies from all over the world who are willing to negotiate a premium because they understand the challenges to producing a high-quality, sustainable coffee such as ours," says Astrid Bernstoff, Santa Elena's Vice-President of Marketing. Consumers committed to saving rainforest and those simply seeking a great-tasting cup o'joe, should visit 5 Saisons during the first week in February. Sip a sustainable cup, learn more about the Rainforest Alliance and experience the cultural and traditional treasures of Mexico. Marché 5 Saisons is located at 1180 Bernard, Outremont, Québec, Canada, (514) 276-1244.

The Rainforest Alliance's mission is to protect ecosystems and the people and wildlife that live within them by implementing better business practices for biodiversity conservation and sustainability. For more information please contact the Rainforest Alliance at (212)677-1900, or visit www.rainforest-alliance.org


Search WWW Search aboutcoffee.net