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Dabbling in tea blending



Are you looking to get into making loose leaf tea blends, but don't want to spend the money buying large quantities of numerous teas and then blending everything on your own? There are a few companies these days that are willing to do the work for you.

Adagio.com and Design a Tea currently have the most well-know options for creating your own custom blends online. They arrive at your door already blended, labeled, and ready to steep, but you should keep in mind that while you're getting a custom blend without all of the work a custom tea blender has to do, you're sacrificing some of the advantages. These companies will offer a limited number of teas to choose from, you can only blend a certain number of teas, and you won't know until you've paid for and received the tea if it's a success or not (and tweaking the blend will involve an additional purchase each time a change is made).

Keeping those things in mind, making your own custom blends can be a lot of fun. The differences between the two companies I've mentioned would be quantity, price, and options. Adagio allows you create a unique tea tin label with your own image, they award Adagio points if anyone else buys your custom blend (redeemable for a certain dollar amount toward tea!), they allow up to three teas in each blend (allowing you to choose the proportions), and you receive a 4 oz. tin of your tea. Design a Tea allows one choice of tea with up to two added flavorings, there is an option for customized label text, and they provide more options in terms of size and quantity (they will also package your blend in tea bags for you).

If tea isn't your thing, I also stumbled across JL Hufford Build-Your-Own Espresso. Looks like fun for coffee drinkers!

Starbucks is bringing back the "burnt" coffee

White coffee mug with green Starbuck's label on it.
There seems to be a lot of Starbucks news over the last few months. Here's some more, anyway.

It seems that Starbucks not everyone was happy about the switch to the Pike Place roast coffees. The Consumerist reports that the coffee chain got a lot of requests for consumers for the older, stronger roast coffees. Apparently some people likened the old roast style as having a burnt flavor, while the new Pike Place roast is much milder.

Anyway, the public demanded and Starbucks has conceded. They'll begin selling both varieties of coffee in stores that make fresh coffee all day. So if you're going to Starbucks for a leisurely weekend coffee, you can have your pick between the old and the new.

Felicitea wants to convert coffee drinkers to tea

can of sloth tea from felicitea
Are you a tea lover who was once a die-hard coffee drinker? Would you like to help other people move away from the bean towards the happy world of the leaf? Felicitea, a company that produces teas, herbal pillows and bath products is currently running the Coffee to Tea Convert Contest, in the hopes that they'll be able to create a few more tea drinkers.

In the first phase of the contest, they are asking tea lovers to make short videos, in which they explain why tea is superior to coffee. When the video is done, you can upload it to Felicitea's Ning page. You have until June 30th to enter that phase of the contest. In the second phase coffee lovers will have a chance to enter to receive a Mug Makeover.

Thanks Alexis!

Are coffee cuppings the new wine tastings?

coffee cupping
There's a pretty interesting story in the New York Times about the prevalence of coffee "cuppings" - basically wine tastings for java, minus the spitting. Aficionados sit around discussing different roasts, trying to find the right words to describe the subtle flavors of a cup of Kenyan or Guatemalan roast.

Now, I drink coffee every day, usually multiple cups, black. Aside from water, it's probably the single consumable I have most regularly. But while I can certainly taste the difference between the watery, acidic, sewage brown stuff sold in most gas stations and a good French roast, that's about where it ends. When people tell me they drive half an hour for special beans or they 'hate' the (to me) perfectly ordinary cappuccinos at my local cafe, I just shrug. I mean, I'm willing to believe that other people have the ability to discern flavors I can't sense. But is a bag of beans from a single farm lot discernibly different than beans from a handful of farms in the same region? In a town with dozens of independent coffee shops, is it really plausible that one has the absolute 'best' coffee?

What do you think? Do you have sensitive coffee palates?

Big tease on how to stay skinny at Starbucks

Starbucks coffee mug with coffee and whipped cream overflowing the sides.Imagine you're perusing your favorite food blogs, and you come across a headline that reads "How to order at Starbucks and not put on weight". If your first thought was anything like "Oh wow, finally, a map to not getting fat at Starbucks!", then you, like me, would be disappointed to read the actual article.

I see now that I was overly optimistic. Of course it's getting to be common knowledge how many calories are in most of the coffee chains' creations, and anyone can figure out that you need to order low fat items to maintain a healthy weight. I was simply, momentarily, envisioning a magic formula. Silly, I know.

Anyway, the article by Mark Strausman, in the Huffington Post, is an interesting one, full of reminiscences and observations, but no magic bullet. The real advice offered is to order low fat items and to order small sizes. Sounds like something to keep in mind as you're ordering your morning caffeine.

Eight types of annoying people at Starbucks

Starbucks coffee in a to go cup.Do you visit Starbucks on a regular basis? If you do, you might notice one or more of the type of patron that Holy Taco names in its list of annoying Starbucks customers.

I'm not a big coffee drinker, and I hate to sound pretentious, but I have been against the coffee chain since I was a teenager and I rarely go into one of their stores (though my parents love, love, love the place). What I'm trying to say is that I wouldn't be able to spot these customers at Starbucks, though, after reading the list you could say that it applies to customers in general.

The list is pretty funny. My favorite is the person getting coffee for the office, but because I absolutely hate that person. Also, the person making a complicated order and then expecting it, like, two minutes ago was particularly entertaining. If this kind of thing concerns you, there is some foul language in the post, so be forewarned. All in all, though, an amusing way to start your Sunday morning, and hey, maybe you can be on the lookout for types on the list.

Passion for Coffee, Cookbook of the Day

cover of Passion for CoffeeMy passion for coffee has been well documented here on Slashfood. While I drink it every morning, I find that I don't often cook with it (other than when I put instant coffee in Ina Garten's Outrageous Brownies). However, Patricia McCausland-Gallo's new book, Passion for Coffee is beginning to make me thing that I should change my ways.

I always appreciate it when cookbook authors take the time to write a little something about why they chose to pursue the topic at hand. I look at it as their opportunity to gain my trust. If they seem genuine and honest in that introduction, then I can dig into the cookbook with a sense that they are a reliable source about baking, barbecue, or in this case, coffee. And from the looks of it, McCausland-Gallo is an extremely reliable source when it comes to all things coffee.

One of terrific things about this book is that it doesn't just deal with the sweet coffee confections (although the recipes for the sweet stuff look delicious. I think my first recipe stop will be the Pecan Coffee Tart on page 86). There are also a number of recipes for savory dishes like Flank Steak with Wine-Balsamic Glaze and Cornish Game Hem with Blackberry-Coffee Sauce. All in all, it has a number of yummy recipes and if you are a coffee fanatic, it might be a good volume for you to check out.

Buy some Green Mountain coffee for the "Goodall" of the chimps

Coffee beans.
Do you remember Jane Goodall and her work with chimpanzee's in Africa? Well, she's still out there, fighting for those primates and their habitat in Tanzania. Now she's partnered with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters.

They've unveiled the first in a new line of products that will come with Jane's seal of approval, Tanzanian Gombe Reserve Coffee. It's made from beans, as the name implies, from in and around the Gombe reserve in Tanzania, which is where she has done all of her research on chimps.

The new coffee came from an effort to improve the lives of people around the preserve by turning them onto cultivating their land instead of clear cutting it. Jane Goodall hopes that by improving the lives of the people, the lives and habitat of the chimps will also be saved.

The coffee should be sold in major grocery chains. If you see some, consider buying some in order to help save vital habitat in Africa. I love that: coffee with a heart.

[Via AdFreak]

Baristas are people too

A cup of cappucino witht the foam forming a heart.Do you go to coffee shops with any regularity? Are you there every day, or do you make it a weekend thing? Whenever you go, have you ever wondered about the people who make your coffee?

As we should all remember they are people too (not just automatons, created to serve our caffeine whims), and they have just as many pet peeves about you as you have about them. The RedEye blog interviewed baristas extensively and put together a list of everything (well, ok, 10 things) that they really want you to know. Next time you order your favorite beverage from your favorite coffee shop, keep in mind these tips while you're leaving yours.

Don't tell your high school English teacher about this drink

cover of The Grapes of WrathMy fashion-forward roommate reads Nylon Magazine, and I was flipping through it the other day when I came across the drink of the month: the Grapes of Wrath martini. The Grapes of Wrath is one of my favorite novels, but to see it as a martini? I'm not so sure how I feel.

It would be one thing if the magazine had designed a martini around a book like The Great Gatsby (I'd actually bet there are many), but The Grapes of Wrath? I mean, it takes place during the Great Depression -- none of the characters go near anything like a martini, especially not one featuring Belvedere Vokda, grapes, apple juice, elderflower cordial, and a dashes of lemon juice and sauvignon blanc. Is it blasphemous, or am I reading too far into a name?

But the whole thing got me wondering about other novels, and whether they have drinks named after them. I found a Scarlett O'Hara from Gone With the Wind (another personal favorite), which consists of peach liqueur, cranberry juice and a lime wedge. That's appropriate enough -- though I'd have loved to see something perhaps with a touch of sour mix! I found a Monte Cristo with coffee and orange liqueurs, hot coffee and whipped cream, though the drink could be named after one of the various cities by that name and not the book The Count of Monte Cristo. Anyone know of any others? Extra points for books you read in high school English and for drinks that are wildly inappropriate for their respective novels.

Dunkin' Donuts gives away free donuts on Tax Day

cup of coffee and a free donut
Is tax day bringing you down? Dunkin' Donuts wants to help raise your spirits. All day today, if you buy a cup of coffee at DD, they'll throw in a free donut. Because while there's no such thing in life as a free lunch, on April 15th, at least you can get yourself a free donut. I recommend the chocolate glazed.

Starbuck's new Pike Place roast

As you may have heard, after years of growth that kept them on track for world domination, in recent months global coffee phenomenon Starbucks suddenly hit a few stumbling blocks. Back in February, they closed their stores and retrained their employees on how to make the perfect shot of espresso. Yesterday, in response to critics who say that their beans are over-roasted, they introduced a new roast called Pike Place, named after the iconic market in Seattle, the city where they first started out.

They handed out free samples of this new roast yesterday at 12 noon to passersby and have scattered free coffee cards in daily newspapers all across the country. The clip you see above is from Mahalo Daily and in it, they capture reactions to the new coffee from Starbucks.

Have you tried the new roast? If you have, what do you think?

Harry and David recalls espresso beans

Harry and David logoI think if we all try really, really hard, we can have a food recall every single day this week. We're already off to a great start.

Harry and David has recalled 8 oz. bags of their espresso beans because the bags might have milk as an "undeclared ingredient" inside. The bags have a Used By date of August 28, 2005.

This recall comes on the heels of other recalls this week, including Sam Adams beer (glass) and Malt-o-Meal cereal (salmonella).

Have an opinion about Starbucks? Who doesn't?

So, I've gotta hand it to Starbucks. Its new site, My Starbucks Idea, is actually...well, a good idea. You sign up and simply type in a suggestion that you think the coffee chain should adopt, and post it to the site. You can also view others' advice, and vote on ones you think are worthwhile.

Then - and this is the kicker - someone from the corporation actually reads the ideas and even puts some of them into practice. Several of the ideas on the site are currently "under review," like the suggestions for implementing frequent buyer punch cards, or for implementing free Wifi access in every store (obviously, many city locations already have WiFi service).

I'm also surprised at the quality of the suggestions. Though I'd imagine that the site is highly monitored to eliminate the crazies (or, for that matter, Starbucks haters), many of the responses are actually decent and well thought-out. And some, on the other hand, are flat-out hilarious: one poster calls Starbucks' music "pseudo-intellectual," "over-produced" and "noisy garbage," while another requests that the music in his local store be turned down, so that when he's "making a business call, it doesn't sound like I'm calling from a public place." Um...isn't that what your home and office are for?

Hmm...so I guess suggesting "STOP EXPANDING YOUR CHAIN!" would probably get flagged, huh? Just a thought.

The "Why I Love Peet's Coffee" contest

bag of Peet's coffee
Do you love Peet's coffee? If you answered yes to this question and you can articulate why it is you feel so fondly towards Peet's coffee, then you are well on your way to potentially winning a year's supply of Peet's. They are currently running a contest in which they are asking people to submit stories based on the theme, "Why I Love Peet's Coffee." It can be about an interesting experience you had while in the store or about someone you met while getting a cup of coffee.

The only irritating thing about this contest is that they want you to surrender email addresses from five friends along with your story, which makes the promotion feel a little less cool. However, if you're willing to sell out five friends for a chance to win a year's worth of coffee (I must add that Peet's coffee is quite excellent), then you can find all the official rules and entry info here.

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