Friday, October 17, 2008

Get More from Your Coffee!

Feng Shui Coffee Company Introduces Functional Coffees with Herbal Benefits

PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct 16, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Feng Shui Coffee Company opened a new category of coffee that expands the benefits of one of the world's most popular beverages. Using ancient Chinese principles of Feng Shui, the company has blended 100% organic Arabica coffee with natural medicinal herbs and minerals to create seven perfectly balanced functional coffees featuring a variety of properties known for maintaining health and wellness.

"Feng Shui Coffee is for people who love great tasting coffee, and want more from it," says Tom Kazas, CEO of Feng Shui Coffee Company. "We harmonize the ancient and the modern by going beyond gourmet coffee. Each blend offers health benefits, delivers great taste, and enhances the daily grind that draws people to coffee in the first place."

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Coffee authority destroys 60 tonnes of poor quality coffee

Joseph Miti
Kampala

Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA) has destroyed 60 tons of coffee beans worth Shs190 million. The coffee was confiscated from traders in separate verification exercises carried out countrywide, after the beans were proved to be substandard.

UCDA officials said the 60 tons of coffee were recovered from traders who sought to make profits from illicit trade. “It unfortunate that some traders mix all sort of trash in to coffee for quick gains,” UCDA Principal Researcher Officer Frederick Sewaya told Daily Monitor on October 15. “We can’t let such acts to carry on. They (acts) affect Uganda’s coffee quality, value and volumes exported,” Mr Sewaya said.

The development, however, came days after the authority released its annual report, which indicated that the quality of Uganda coffee has tremendously increased.

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

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Coffee Price to Rally on Demand, Brazil's Cecafe Says

By Aya Takada

Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Coffee prices will probably rebound to $1.40 a pound within the next six months if the global credit crisis subsides, as world consumption keeps growing led by demand from emerging markets, Brazil's exporter group said.

``In Eastern Europe demand is very good,'' Guilherme Braga, general director at Brazil's Coffee Exporters Council, known as Cecafe, said in Tokyo. ``In Brazil in 2008 the growth of consumption is about 4 percent, which is very significant. It will keep growing. We are very optimistic about it.''

Coffee futures in New York have plunged 34 percent from a 10-year high of $1.7190 a pound Feb. 29. They reached a 15-month low of $1.0935 on Oct. 8 on concern the credit freeze will slow the world economy, cutting commodity demand. Inventories in warehouses monitored by ICE Futures U.S. were climbing and exports from Brazil, the biggest producer, increasing.

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Caffeine Not a Breast Cancer Risk for Most Women

MedHeadlines.com

Caffeine is thought to be the most widely consumed drug in the world, its presence felt in foods and beverages such as coffee, tea, and chocolate and in many medications, too. The drug is generally thought to increase the risk of developing breast cancer but an exhaustive 10-year study indicates most women can enjoy their caffeine with no fears of increased risk for breast cancer.

Ken Ishitani, MD, PhD, and his colleagues followed 38,432 women, age 45 years and older, for an average of ten years after their enrollment in the study between 1992 and 1995. During the follow-up period of study, 1,188 women were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer. Ishitani is affiliated with both the Brigham and Womens Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston and with the Tokyo Women’s Medical University in Japan.

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Will we turn to cheap coffee?


Will the economic meltdown and current financial crisis put an end to expensive coffee shops as penniless consumers abandon Starbucks in order to huddle in unheated apartments brewing cheap coffee filtered through socks? Folgers hopes that this will be the case as this roaster is about to debut a big new ad campaign, hoping that now that your retirement fund has evaporated, you'll be interested in a lower-cost coffee experience. And hold onto your threadbare hats, newly poor caffeine addicts: Folgers has just made the "biggest innovation since the launch of decaf..." according to a recent article in the NYT.

We are finally living to see the day where Folgers sells coffee grounds that are the product of a slightly upgraded pre-roast drying process!

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Monday, October 13, 2008

The history of gourmet coffee in Costa Rica and its relationship to Costa Rica and their free school system.

Source: Mission Grounds Gourmet Coffee

The likely date of the arrival of coffee to America is 1720 when they brought the first seeds, Arabica Coffea species (Typical variety), to Martinique in the Antilles. From there originated the berry that was sowed in Costa Rica in the beginning of the 18th century.

Prominent Costa Ricans contributed to the development of coffee, and the first to cultivate it was the priest Félix Velarde, who, in 1816, made reference to having a plot of land cultivated with the beans. Don Mariano Montealegre was the crop’s main promoter during the decade from 1830 to 1840.

Costa Rica was the first Central American country to establish the budding coffee industry. The first two Heads of State, Juan Mora Fernández and Braulio Carrillo, supported the development of the coffee enterprise. They saw coffee not only as a product that was capable of stimulating economic change for Costa Rica, but also projected coffee production in the following years, during which the coffee bean would become the product that gave rise to Costa Rica’s economic development.

As the first plants grew, Costa Ricans’ interest in its cultivation increased, and by 1821 there were 17,000 coffee trees in production, with the first export of two quintals of coffee to Panama in 1820. The exportation of coffee to the United States began in 1860, and initially, the weight was almost 25% of the all exported coffee.

Authorities of the Republic implemented a series of measures aimed at promoting the coffee industry, among which are notable: 1821: The Municipality of San José distributed free coffee plants among residents; 1825: The Government exempts coffee from tithe payments; 1831: The National Assembly decreed that any one who grew coffee for five years on idle land could claim the land as their own; 1840: a decree is issued to plant coffee on the undeveloped land to the west of San José (Pavas).

Several decades passed between the introduction of coffee and its consolidation as an export product. The commercialization of coffee began in 1932, when Don Jorge Stiepel, who had close business ties with the English, first exported to Chile. It has been confirmed that Captain William Le Lacheur opened direct trade with English ports in 1943.

Le Lacheur made the trip from London to Puntarenas in 1943 on the “Monarch" to transport back a shipment of 5,005 quintals of coffee, one of the most representative exports. Afterward, other freighters full of coffee set sail to England, which marked the success of the coffee trade.

Throughout the history of Costa Rica, coffee has been a fundamental pillar of the society and a driving force behind development and the national economy. For this reason it has been called the “golden bean." With the development of its cultivation and opening of export markets came an economic, social, and cultural surge, and an improvement in the country’s infrastructure:

The Federal Debt was paid; the postal service, first Government printing office, San José Hospital and San Juan de Dios Hospital were founded; the Santo Tomás University was founded, and the National Theater was erected.

Also established were the first libraries, the opening and improvement of roads and the construction of the Atlantic and Pacific railroads. Development of the Banking system (in 1863, Banco Anglo Costarricense, Banco la Unión, Banco Internacional) helped small farmers with their credit to increase their cultivation areas.

In addition, there was the Mauro Fernández Education Reform, the first higher learning centers and libraries, the Political Constitution of 1871, profound changes in the State during the 1880s and changes in the electoral code and practices.

Communications and infrastructure: building of the San José - Puntarenas road, which revolutionized coffee trade since it allowed mules to be replaced by ox carts; construction of the Pacific and Atlantic railroads; completion of the National Palace and National Theater. The latter achievement is a symbol of an era, a way of life and of thinking, and one of the many results of the prosperity of the coffee boom.

Upon this historical, cultural, and economic foundation, the small and medium Costa Rican producer had access to a number of goods and services (education, communication, health) resulting from the commercial production of coffee.

About the author

Boake Moore started Mission Grounds Gourmet Coffee www.missiongrounds.com to help homeless children.

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Denis Leary on Coffee

Very funny 1997 video, with about 7,000 f-words (and many other words you might find objectionable), so BE ADVISED that its language is not for your grandmother.

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Coffee regulator seeks new legal method to register 'Blue Mountain'

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Coffee regulator, the Coffee Industry Board (CIB), wants to register Blue Mountain under a new legal method linking it to Jamaica's geography having mostly failed to register it as a trademark.

It's not academic, but an attempt to stop African and other impersonators from taking advantage of the ambiguous Blue Mountain label. Jamaica Blue Mountain is a registered trademark, but Blue Mountain is too generic to register as a trademark.

"Kenya and Ethiopia are using the name 'Blue Mountain'. In using the name 'Blue Mountain' Kenya says that they used their first coffee plant from Jamaica. They have taken advantage of our uniqueness and brand," said Stacian Bennett, CIB legal officer and Board Secretary speaking to the Observer. "We will explore the possibility of registering the name 'Blue Mountain' as a Geographic Indication (GI) so that the current ambiguity may be resolved."

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Want coffee -- with benefits? Here's what you'll get

by Janet Cromley
Los Angeles Times

We’re a nation of spoiled coffee drinkers. Whereas our forebears boiled old grounds over camp stoves and our parents percolated Folgers, we’re driving five miles to suck down triple mocha lattes like beer at a NASCAR event.

Now it’s gotten even headier: Coffee with benefits. Cashing in on our insatiable thirst for coffee and our willingness to embark on new frontiers, java makers are adding a dazzling array of extras to coffee, including soy protein, guarana, garcinia cambogia, matcha green tea, white willow, yerba mate and echinacea.

The ingredients are intended to have actual benefits, such as boosting metabolism or energy, improving the immune system or increasing mental focus.

We put four infused, pre-ground coffees to a taste test and were surprised at how much they tasted like regular pre-ground coffee.

That was the good news.

The bad news is that ingredients such as guarana and yerba mate, which contain caffeine, can leave you with enough supplemental energy to take down a tiger in the jungle. We suggest that before snapping up a bag of infused coffee, consider what you want the coffee to do and then do some research on the supplemental ingredients.

Here’s what we found: More >>

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Coffee Drinking May Help Protect Against Type 2 Diabetes

October 9, 2008 — Regular consumption of coffee and potentially black tea, but not green tea, is associated with a lower risk for type 2 diabetes mellitus in Singaporean Chinese men and women, according to the results of a study reported in the October issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

"Increasing coffee intake was inversely associated with risk of type 2 diabetes in populations of European descent; however, data from high-risk Asian populations are lacking as are data on tea intake in general," write Andrew O. Odegaard, from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, and colleagues. "We investigated the prospective associations between intakes of coffee, black tea, and green tea with the risk of type 2 diabetes in Singaporean Chinese men and women."

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Budding baristas pick up some hot tips

By Myron Kukla
The Grand Rapids Press

Travis Yaklin figures he has more to learn before he opens a coffee shop.

The 24-year-old plans to open Guido's Coffee Lounge in Owosso later this year, and so he took a class with the Midwest Barista School in Holland (MI) this month.

"I dumped a lot of the espressos I made the first day," Yaklin said.

"It's a real knack to get the right aroma and taste to the espresso to serve it to customers. You just don't turn on the machine and call it espresso."

No, one doesn't.

To help coffee-shop owners, Jack Groot started the Midwest Barista School in January 2007 to share his 15 years' experience in the business.

The owner of JP's Coffee & Espresso Bar at 57 W. Eighth St. charges $1,375 for a week of intensive training on how to open a cafe and brew just the right cup of joe.

"I decided it would be more cost effective for the clients and less road time for me if I opened a barista school at JPs and ran the school from here," said Groot, who uses a second espresso bar in his cafe for the on-the-job training.

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