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Fine Coffee, like a Fine Wine
By Dave Earnest, Founder, Cobblestone Coffee /
CobblestoneCoffee.com.
A common objection I hear from
time to time when I'm showing coffee to the general public, is
"Jeez, that coffee is expensive. I remember when coffee used to be only 5
cents for a cup."
Yeah, me too. Mmmm. Nothing says
quality to me like a cup of coffee with a nice "5 cents" sign on
it.
When considering the price of a pound of coffee, consider the
old saying that says you get what you pay for. When looking at the price
tag of a pound, you should focus on the quality of the coffee that is
being offered, both the quality of the bean itself, and how recently it
was roasted. Coffee roasted just yesterday is very valuable,
even rare if you consider the amount of coffee that is sitting out on the
shelves of all of the grocery stores right now... staling.
But
setting the freshness issue aside for a moment, let's talk about the
coffee beans themselves. All coffee beans are not created equal, and in
addition, all of the same types coffees are not farmed and cared
for equally either. Give the same coffee trees to two different farmers in
the same region, and you will end up with two different qualities of that
coffee.
Just as acquiring fine grapes is crucial to making a fine
wine, acquiring fine coffee beans is equally crucial to the integrity of
the quality of the pound of coffee that a roaster provides to
consumers.
There are many different quality levels of coffees
available to the roasters, for them to choose for their blends and
singles. So knowing this, it is NOT safe to assume that one
Guatemala Antigua from roaster "x" priced at $5 a pound is the very SAME
Guatemala Antigua from roaster "y" but marked up to $10 a pound. The name
may be the same on the label, but the coffee itself may be very, very
different. Sure, it may be a Guatemala Antigua for five bucks,
but the roaster may have provided you the second or third quality grade,
and past crop as well. How do you know?
To be blatantly obvious,
wouldn't you agree that the highest quality beans from a farmer, current
crop, fresh import is worth more than last years third or fourth quality
grade, that has been sitting around staling in a warehouse or distribution
facility somewhere?
Would you then also agree, that the highest
quality coffees from Farmer A may not be as high of a quality as the
coffees from Farmer B, because for whatever reason Farmer B can produce a
higher quality coffee than Farmer A?
Do you see where I'm going
here?
Now, throw in to the mix, if you have that high quality
coffee, having that coffee just roasted today is a higher quality coffee
to us than that very same coffee roasted three months ago?
Most of
you all know that the magic in coffee is in the freshness. When you can
hit the three 'Freshes' in a row with a high quality bean: fresh
crop, fresh roasted, fresh brewed, you are in for coffee
euphoria. But euphoria begins with quality, and a quality bean is
essential to a fine cup of coffee. For your consideration as well, the
quality of the coffees you are purchasing is ALSO directly related
to the skill set of the roaster who brings them to you, given their
intention is to provide quality coffee.
Please know this about
Cobblestone: All of our coffees are the top of the line, the highest
quality coffees from each region of the world that we could find, and
here's the important part: the highest quality we could find to the
best of our ability. And that marks the difference between roasters
these days, their ability and even their intention to acquire the best.
Not to mention the ability to roast it properly (and THAT is a whole
'nother article to be written later). Put all of these qualities and
complexities together, and the likeness to a fine wine becomes
apparent.
Remember, acquiring quality is expensive, both for you as
the consumer, and for me as the roaster. Please do not assume that big
corporate coffee is the highest quality, freshest coffee available. They
are not. Would you say that McDonald's hamburgers are the best hamburgers
on the planet? Nope, but they certainly are the most available.
This same thought applies to the quality spectrum of coffee.
The
highest quality coffees come from those roasters whom are passionate about
coffee to begin with, and will sacrifice nothing to be able to provide
their customers with the best, freshest coffees they can. It
comes from the farmers who will stop at nothing to nurture and grow the
highest quality coffee trees that produce the highest quality beans, to
the best of their ability.
There's big corporate, profit driven,
just get the coffee out there coffee, and then there's passion and quality
driven coffee. Which would you rather purchase? The fine wine, or the box
wine?
Happy Sipping.
(c) Copyright 2007 Cobblestone Coffee
Roastery, LLC. Reprint by permission
only.
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