Thursday, March 08, 2007

Tim Hortons files suit in Kandahar coffee row

KEITH McARTHUR
globeandmail.com

Tim Hortons Inc. alleges its brand — one of the most valuable in Canada — has been damaged by “false and misleading” news coverage of its efforts to serve coffee and dutchies to soldiers in Afghanistan.

The company is suing CanWest Global Communications Corp., Standard Radio Inc. and broadcaster Bill Carroll for $105-million in general and punitive damages, over reports that Tim Hortons received almost $4-million in government subsidies to set up the Kandahar outlet.

It's unclear from the lawsuit whether the government paid anything to help set up the Kandahar franchise. And Wednesday, Tim Hortons refused to comment on whether taxpayer dollars were used.

Tim Hortons is looking for $25-million in general damages plus $10-million in punitive damages from each of CanWest, Standard and Mr. Carroll, who has a show on Toronto radio station CFRB.

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Starbucks files complaint against 'Starstrucks' coffee chain - report

By Laura Ellis

Starbucks Corporation, the world's largest coffee chain, is attempting to stop an Indian entrepreneur from opening a number of coffee stores called Starstrucks in India, according to the Mint business newspaper.

Starbucks has complained to India's Controller-General of Patents, Designs and Trademarks, stating that the name Starstrucks is deceptively similar to Starbucks, the newspaper reported.

However, the Indian entrepreneur behind Starstrucks, Shahnaz Husain, said the stores are completely different to the Starbucks stores. Starstrucks will carry a glamour theme with posters of Hollywood stars.

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Celebration Of Resistance At The Starbucks Annual Meeting

by Tomer - IWW Starbucks Workers Union
Anarkismo.net

Baristas And Coffee Farmers Demand Living Wages

Join Us For A Celebration Of Resistance At The Starbucks Annual Meeting

Wednesday, March 21 @ 9 A.M.
Marion Oliver Mccaw Hall At The Seattle Center
Mercer Street, Between Third And Fourth Avenues
Seattle, Washington

Baristas At Starbucks Demand Justice

In contrast to Starbucks' socially responsible image, Barista Sarah Bender's story illustrates the dark side of its force. When she started in 2004 in Manhattan, she was paid $7.75 an hour; she now earns $10.10. Initially, she got from 20 to 35 hours of work a week and couldn't predict if she'd be able to pay her rent.

At the same time, at Costco, a new employee started at over $10 an hour. After four years, a Costco cashier worked 40 hours a week and earned around $44,000. Starbucks prevents baristas from working full time; last year, the most Sarah could have earned was around $12,000. Many Starbucks Baristas, including Sarah, receive Medicaid, Section 8 housing or food stamps.

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Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Survey: Coffee Surpasses Soft Drinks

Survey: Coffee Surpasses Soft Drinks In Daily Market Penetration Among U.S. Adults, Reversing A 16-Year Trend

Daily market penetration of coffee among U.S. adults surpassed that of soft drinks, restoring coffee's pre-1990 dominance, according to The National Coffee Association's National Coffee Drinking Trends 2007 market research study. The study found 57 percent of American adults drink coffee daily, while 51 percent consume soft drinks daily.

"Coffee is experiencing a new Renaissance," said Robert Nelson, president and CEO of the association, in a prepared statement. "Coffee is gaining a higher profile among American consumers as they enjoy an expanding menu of options amid an exploding café culture."

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Does that morning coffee really pick you up?

By FIONA MACRAE
Daily Mail (UK)

Think it perks you up in the morning? Wrong - new research shows that for the caffeine dependent, all the morning cuppa does is bring you back to normal

When it comes to kick-starting the day, millions would argue there is nothing like a cup of strong coffee.

The caffeine found in coffee, tea and other drinks is widely accepted to boost alertness and stave off sleepiness.

But research shows the benefits of caffeine may have been exaggerated, with daily coffee drinkers being no more alert after their first cuppa of the day than those who never touch the stuff.

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Arabica Coffee Sinks to 4 1/2-Month Low

NEW YORK (AP) -- Arabica coffee futures collapsed to 4 1/2-month lows on the New York Board of Trade on Monday as funds and small speculators liquidated in a broad commodity slide, following overnight losses in Asian and European stock markets.

The March contract closed down 3.80 cents at $1.1055 a pound, with May off 3.65 cents at $1.1150.

Talk is that, while Brazil's developing crop is smaller, it's nonetheless bigger than was expected three months ago because of ample rainfall since then. Global Arabica supplies should tighten in late 2007 following Brazil's cyclically smaller harvest from June to September.

American adults now consume more coffee a day than soft drinks, the National Coffee Association's drinking survey found in results released Saturday at the group's conference in Arizona.

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

Testing the Hearthware i-Roast 2TM, page 2


I probably have the most unsophisticated coffee mouth of all our readers. I have attended three cupping seminars over the years and I never could taste what I was supposed to be tasting. I have found that some coffees taste better than others, but I have trouble telling you why. My roasting expertise is at about the same level as my taste. I have roasted for many years but I really don't know what I am doing when I roast.

This i-Roast 2TM has taken the place of my Café RostoTM. I like the way it operates and I like the roasted coffee it produces. I recommend it to anyone who wants to get into home roasting, or any home roaster whose present roasting tool isn't working well. If you want a more detailed report on this roaster, do some research on Google Groups.

The roaster comes with two preset roasting cycles, which vary the time and temperature throughout the cycle. The cooling cycle is 4 minutes and cannot be changed. You can test any variety of temps and times, up to 5 stages. The maximum temp is 485F and maximum time is 15 minutes. You may save up to 10 profiles.

I roasted a 142 gram batch of Sumatra Mandheling at the max temp of 485 and time of 15 minutes. I watched the temp all the way through and it never exceeded 410. You can push a button at any time and get the temp of the air coming out of the heating area. It is not the temp of the beans. I shut down the roast at 10 minutes because the beans had a nice oily sheen, just the way I like Sumatra. And, more important, the cup was great the next day.

I roasted another batch of 142 grams of Colombian Supremo at 450 and 13 minutes. The temp hit a high of 376 and I shut it down at 12 minutes, just ahead of any oil showing on the bean. Great cup the next day.

As you probably know, ambient temperature affects home roasters. I have always roasted in my attached garage and, while it is warmer there than outdoors in the winter, it still is cool compared to indoors. Another reason is the smoke and the smell. Roasting coffee ptoduces smoke, especially the darker roasts. Also, it stinks. Many people think roasting coffee must smell good, since coffee smells so good when brewing. Not so. My washing machine is also in my garage and my wife is always fussing about my roasting making her clothes smell. (She doesn't fuss the next morning while she sips her delicious coffee, though.)

This i-Roast 2TM comes with a duct adapter that fits on top and allows a dryer duct to be attached so you can send the smoke out a window or hole in your roof. I thought, "wow, now I can roast in the kitchen without having to (1) deal with ambient temp, and (2) wade through my junked up garage."

I picked a day when my wife was out of town, bought some flexible dryer duct, and set everything up on my kitchen stove. I loaded the roaster with 145 grams of Sumatra, and started the roast on the Preset 2 setting. That setting roasts in 3 stages, first stage for 6 minutes at 455, second for 4 minutes at 400, and third for 1.5 minutes at 435.

I turned the stove exhaust on and watched it roast. At about halfway through the smoke detector just outside the kitchen went off. I put it into another room and thought I was home free until the smoke started. Lots of smoke. My idea didn't work. Maybe my exhaust isn't powerfull enough, but I will not be able to roast in the kitchen. Oh well, back to the garage.

I stopped the roast with 2 minutes to go, since the beans looked right. The temp never exceeded 405. The roaster gives very good visability so you can keep a close watch, especially toward the end, and shut it down by pushing the "Cool" button if needed. Since it continues to roast for a little while, hit the button ahead of when you want to stop the roast. You'll learn with experience. You may set up the third stage to allow for changes in roasting time as it roasts.

I have not yet played with different profiles for roasting. You can record up to 10 roasting profiles, each with up to 5 stages. I intend to do some more testing on profiles. Hopefully my unsophisticated mouth will be able to tell the difference. I suspect that most users will pick a time and temp that produces a good batch and roast away with that one profile.

CONCLUSION

This is a great roaster for anyone. It is programmable, it's easy to use, and it's priced reasonably at around $179. I recommend it.

Negatives:

  • Instruction manual could be easier to understand.
  • LCD is hard to see, since you need to bend down to eye level with the bottom of the roaster to see it. A 45 degree angle would be better.
  • Operation is too loud. It was difficult for my old ears to hear the cracks.


Positives:

  • Good price.
  • Affected by ambient temperature, as are all air roasters.
  • Sufficient agitation ensures even roasts.
  • Batch size is approximately 145 grams, or one cup of green beans. Comes with 1/2 cup measuring cup.
  • Very little chaff escapes.
  • Easy to clean. Comes with handy cleaning brush.
  • Efficient cooling cycle. Cools beans and allows safe handling of components.
  • Programmable roasting profiles. Allows hours and hours of tinkering and tweaking.



For page 1 of my test, click HERE

For more information, go to i-roast.com.
Where to buy? Many, many places. Go shopping!


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