Archive for the ‘Intelligentsia’Category

According to Food & Wine Magazine, we’re 20% on to something

Well, how about this.

First, Paste Magazine urges its readers to listen to people that you’ve been able to hear at Everyday Joe’s for quite some time. Now, the hungry people at Food & Wine Magazine are urging you to go and drink coffee at a handful of spots…including Stumptown Roasters in Portland, Oregon and Intelligentsia Coffee and Tea in Chicago, Illinois.

Slap me and call me Susan.

From when we opened in 2003 until May of 2007, we handcrafted the drinks you drank using beans from Stumptown. It was so delicious.

Eventually, the time came for us to change roasters (you can read more about that transition here). D$ read about Intelligentsia and called ‘em up and now you drink their delicious. It is so bueno.

So, not only do we kind of fit in with the Indie Music Hipsters, we now kind of fit in with the Eating And Drinking Up And Ups. A nice time is had by all.

Further:

Popularity: 20% [?]

15

09 2008

The Nod: Rwanda’s Coming Out Party

Each week we receive The Nod…kind of a coffee digest from Intelligentsia’s Green Coffee Buyer, Geoff Watts. It is always interesting, but some weeks it is simply too long. The man has a lot floating around in his head about coffee and its industry. Enjoy this week’s Nod and then enjoy some of Intelligentsia’s beans in brewed form the next time you come to Everyday Joe’s.

Hola:

Sitting in the airport here at O’Hare, wondering why it is that the International Terminal is so under-serviced. It’s unusual as most prime-time international airports go the extra mile to stuff their international terminals full of shops and restaurants and decorations and various amenities designed to impress visitors (and suck cash out of their pockets). O’Hare is, of course, huge, and most terminals there have a decent assortment of places to eat or sit or shop for things you don’t really need. But Terminal 5 is a no-frills stripped down traveler processing unit. And not even a very efficient one. What’s up with that?

I’m here awaiting my flight to London, which will be followed by a flight to Kenya. Tomorrow morning I’ll make the last leg over to Rwanda, where the first-ever Cup of Excellence competition is getting ready to enter the final round. There are several things that are amazing about this:

- Eight years ago there really wasn’t any top quality coffee being produced in Rwanda.

- There are at least three African nations (Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia) that have been involved with Specialty Coffee for many decades and should have been better positioned put on a CoE event.

- Most of the jurors attending the competition have never before purchased Rwandan coffee, and it will be the first time that many of them taste this coffee!

Suffice to say, it is going to be a big coming-out party for this tiny country that is re-shaping itself at an astounding pace after completely falling apart just 15 years ago.

Next week I’ll be reporting on the cuppings and goings-on. I’m especially excited about this since I’ve been so close to the development there over the last five years. It really does feel like a school graduation of sorts, though it is important to remember that everything there is still very fragile and there is still a long way to go before their coffee industry can become strong, self-sufficient, and sustainable. The local industry still doesn’t really know itself. Grower groups there have been guided along a path, but they have much to learn about long-term self-management and are still developing the orienteering skills that will allow them to navigate in a quickly changing coffee world. So I guess that makes it a high-school graduation…

But they have a lot of things going for them. There are a lot of young people that are driving the quality process, and with any luck, they should form a solid base of leadership in the future. They’ve got a natural advantage over Latin American producing countries in the form of abundant labor. There are many people living in a tiny place, and the Rwandans can apply a massive amount of human effort to meticulous process control on the farms, at the washing stations and in the dry mills. At a time when other producing countries are battling real labor shortages, Rwanda is flush. And, at least for now, they’ve got a government that seems to function well and does not create the kinds of obstacles (outdated and archaic coffee industry bureaucracy, endemic corruption) that some of their neighbors deal with.

This jury will be star-studded. Does that sound funny? I think it does, but that’s one of those great things about the coffee world. There are some incredibly dynamic and visionary persons who populate it, people who are very capable of creating wonderful things, who in another life would likely be rock stars or painters or field-leading researchers… or flailing lunatics. (Sometimes it’s a fine line.)

Most of the cuppers are friends I’ve known for many years, folks I’ve spent weeks at a time with in various countries evaluating and discussing the merits of contending coffees, brainstorming ideas for improvement, imagining what this will all look like ten years from now. The Cup of Excellence circuit has made this possible. With nine participating countries (Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Colombia, Bolivia, Brazil, Rwanda) there is ample opportunity each year to meet up for the intense four-day cupping that forces us all to dig about as deep into a cup as one can go. Complete dissection. I liken it to taking an MRI on the bean and then sitting around for an hour contemplating and interpreting the images. These cuppers will come from Scandinavia, Japan, Central America, Europe, the US, Australia and Taiwan for the opportunity to taste and discuss these coffee specimens. I’ve been traveling the “circuit” for about the last six years and have made some great friends with other roasters and coffee buyers over time. Most of them will be there in Rwanda. It is without doubt the most talented coffee jury I’ve ever seen. Should be pretty amazing.

Next time you hear from me I’ll be midway through the competition, and there will be a big smile on my face. For a smile on your own face, drink some Itzamna, our Direct Trade Offering from Guatemala.

As always, find our Nods at:
http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/origin/offerings.

Onwards,

Geoff Watts
Green Coffee Buyer
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Popularity: 16% [?]

25

08 2008

Concerning Coffee & Its Cost

Each week, we get The Nod – the e-mail newsletter from our roaster, Intelligentsia Coffee and Tea. Usually, the content of said Nod is rather interesting, and worth passing on to you.

Last week, the Nod arrived in my inbox and I opened it and it was long. Real long. Perusing it, I could tell it would be interesting. Geoff Watts – author of The Nod & Intelligentsia’s VP of Coffee – knows quite a bit about many things, and perhaps the primary thing is coffee. In this latest edition, he explains the rising cost of Kenyan beans…an explanation that can, for the most part, be translated to many coffees and probably many of the other things Mr. Watts knows quite a bit about.

So, in order to assist you in your navigation of this explanation, a handy little summary is below (and is also offered at the end of Mr. Watt’s essay). Click on a point of interest and you can read the expanded version. I do, however, recommend reading the entire thing in context. Just start below the summary if that is your desire.

The Summary:

The Nod:

Hola:

Last Friday saw the release of one of our favorite, and in my humble opinion, best coffees. A question that we have been asked since this time is: What’s up with the Kenya prices? Why have they risen so sharply this season? There are a lot of things that have contributed. I’ll try to explain as clearly and concisely as I can, knowing full well that the latter has never been one of my strong suits. Let’s break it down into a couple categories:

1.) The rising production costs at origin.

This is not just occurring in Kenya. EVERY coffee producer I know has seen coffee production costs rise dramatically over the last two years. It is a worldwide phenomenon. What has gone up?

A.) Fertilizer and Transport costs. This is directly related to the rising prices of fuel worldwide. We’ve felt it here in the US, but man….many developing countries feel it even harder because they do not have any buffer whatsoever. Their governments do not have the kind of reserves we’ve got or the ability to subsidize prices for farmers. So while fuel costs have risen profoundly here, they’ve gone up at an even faster rate in many coffee producing countries. As a result, everything that requires energy to produce (fertilizer is just one example) is also more expensive now. I was recently examining fertilizer costs in Guatemala and found that in many cases it has more than DOUBLED over the last two years. So the farmers are paying more for inputs than they ever have. Transporting the coffees overland (farm to wet mill, wet mill to dry mill, dry mill to exporter, exporter to port) has gotten way more expensive as well, due once again to fuel costs.

B.) Labor costs. Labor is often the number 1 or 2 most significant cost of production on a coffee farm. It keeps getting more expensive as the labor force dries out. This is especially true in Central America where there has been (and continues to be) mass emigration to urban areas and to the United States. In Africa it is not quite as big a deal as labor is still abundant in many places, but they are still facing the problem of the “aging farmer”. Most coffee farmers are in the latter third of their lives and increasingly find it more difficult to put in the work needed to manage a coffee farm to its top potential. Younger generations have not shown an interest in being coffee farmers. Why would they? They look at how their parents and grandparents have fared and they see the poverty and depressing commodity cycles and mercilessly rising costs and intense climate impacts and the sheer unpredictability of it all and they say “no way!” Why would they want to follow in their father’s footsteps when the path has failed to take them anywhere?

C.) Cost of Production per hectare has gone way up due to falling productivity. There is always a chain reaction that takes place when coffee farmers aren’t making enough money for their crops. First they stop making inputs (they use less fertilizer, spend less on husbandry, stop pruning, and stop planting new trees) and then they cut costs during harvest. This means fewer cherries per tree and more disease and fungus problems as trees become old and weak. It means less care taken in selecting cherries for ripeness. It means the per-hectare cost of production is higher than ever while the quality has gotten worse! Trees growing in poorly managed and nutrient deficient soil get quickly debilitated. They don’t produce as much coffee and they struggle to bring the fruits to full maturity. The reality is that today the costs of production on most coffee farms (and other agricultural products too) are WAY higher than they were even two years ago, sometimes by as much as 50%. The market is going to need to adjust to this somehow, or a lot of farmers are going to be in big trouble over the next couple of years.

2.) The Kenyan Auction system dictates market price.

The Kenyan Auction system was the model on which the Cup of Excellence was founded. It has consistently been the world leader when it comes to delivering the BEST price per pound for coffee of quality. Every year there are a handful of coffees that crack through into the $4.00+ range and sometimes quite a few. It is a great system for finding “market value”, as there are close to 20 exporters who compete at auction to purchase the best coffees. Each exporter receives an “auction book” and accompanying set of samples every week, and each Tuesday there is a live auction during which all those coffees get put on the block. There can be ferocious competition sometimes, especially whenever a true 90+ coffee passes through.

This season was a low crop and the general quality was not very great. When that happens, the prices for the best coffees get even higher than usual since everyone is scrambling to get a piece. That’s the nice thing about the auction from a farmer’s perspective. It also rewards scarcity, so when there is a down year in volume or quality, it drives prices for the good stuff even higher than expected because various buyers are fighting over a smaller number of available coffees.

Unfortunately, the individual farmers are not always beneficiaries of these nice prices. The link from farmgate to auction is not as clean and direct as it should be, and layers of organizational inefficiency (and outright corruption as Kenya as a nation has managed to institutionalize corruption like no country I’ve ever seen!) eat away at the profit until there is next to nothing left for the farmer. Banking is screwed up there, with interest on debts overwhelming any income.

So while the auction has yielded many clear benefits, there is still a lot of work to be done to make the system sustainable, meaning making it viable for the farmer.

This is the first year that Intelligentsia has begun to purchase some Kenyan coffee using our Direct Trade model. It is super-freaking-exciting to me, because I’ve wanted to work more closely with farmers in Kenya for almost a decade. It is my favorite coffee year-in and year-out, and it has always been profoundly saddening that the farmers, despite great auction prices, never seemed to really be able to move forward.

About half of what we purchased this year was purchased under Direct Trade principles with prices negotiated directly with the farming communities, full transparency in the chain, and quality rewarded with premiums. It is a significant step for us and for Kenyan farmers as it was not permitted under law to deal directly with farmers until about 22 months ago, and today the huge majority of coffee is still passing through the auctions.

We WANT TO BE AN EXAMPLE. We want to show Kenyan farmers what is possible and participate as leaders in the effort to re-engage farmers and introduce new expectations about transparency and commitment at the farm level. We want to earn the trust of the farmers and prove to them that pursuing a long-term, Direct Trade relationship with Intelligentsia is a great option for them. Based on lots of experience buying coffee in Kenya, it is my opinion that we’ve partnered with some of the best cooperative groups in the country, in the heart of what I consider to be the top growing region in Kenya.

I’m hoping that next year all of our Kenyan coffee will qualify as Direct Trade and that we will be able to sell it that way. For now it should be considered “Direct Trade in Transition”. This season we purchased some coffee in the auction and some directly, all from the same cooperatives whose coffees we’ve been buying in the auctions for several years. For any DT system to work in Kenya it is vital that the farmers are able to see a true benefit by selling direct versus selling through the auction. So the auction will continue to function as a sort of “market regulator”, at least on the high end, and at least until Direct Trade takes hold and farmers begin to really understand the value of working closely with roasters and establishing reliable, long-term markets for their coffees.

3.) The Falling Value of the Dollar

We feel this pretty hard-core in many countries. The problem is that farmers pay everything in the local currency, pesos, shillings, quetzales, francs, cordobas, lempiras, but they get paid in dollars. So labor, fertilizer, bags, boots, everything has gotten more expensive for the farmer due to the fact that the local currency is worth far more versus the dollar than it used to be. If this continues, at some point the industry at large will need to decide whether or not the coffee market can continue to be tied to the dollar since another 5-10% drop in value will make the equations completely untenable for the farmer. Even without adjusting for inflation, most farmers are making LESS today than their parents did…in real dollars per pound. That is not acceptable.

4.) The rising costs of production here at home.

As you know, Intelligentsia is a company that believes in constant research, development and innovation. We’re freaks about quality, and we spend money, time, and energy to make sure we get it right. That’s why we’ve invested in roasting locally in LA, that’s why we keep hiring staff for Quality Control and Roasting, and that’s why we invest so much in our Baristas. We’re always doing things to try to make our coffees even better, and there is a price that comes with that. I would hazard a guess that we have one of the deepest teams in the industry when it comes to coffee expertise and knowledge.

But beyond the costs of innovation and intense quality control operations, our raw materials costs have risen sharply. Fuel costs are high, and we depend on fuel to roast and deliver coffee. It runs our roaster’s afterburners, which clean the exhaust to ensure that we are good stewards of the local environment, but those suckers eat up gas like it was candy. We will probably need to invest in alterative technology soon.

5.) Coffee has always been very under-valued and under-priced.

There is another point that must be made, one that is to me more important than everything I’ve just mentioned: The fact is that coffee has never been valued correctly to begin with, dating back to well before all of the recent economic downturns. The only coffees that have succeeded on a large scale over the last 20 years in getting the value they should have been a handful of well-known brands from Jamaica and Hawaii (Kona). And as we all know, those coffees usually cannot even hold their own in the cup when compared to the best coffees from places like Kenya, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Guatemala, Bolivia, and so forth. They get smacked up and down and exposed for being very well cultivated, very clean, very well-handled but altogether too mild and, for lack of a better word, just boring.

When I say “the value they should” what I mean is this: valuation based on actual costs of production and real intrinsic/material quality. Just like any other business, coffee farmers ought to have the opportunity to sell their coffees at a price that nets them a profit, and that is tied to measurable quality. The better the quality, the more a coffee farmer can stand to earn in a competitive market.

Let’s select a couple of industries for comparison. The wine, spirits and beer industries all have some obvious similarities with coffee. Wine has a lot in common with coffee with regard to the way it is produced (fruits produced under specific environmental conditions and then processed into liquid goodness) and in the way it is talked about. The language of tasting is nearly identical between them, although coffee is actually the more chemically complex of the two beverages and has a greater range of potential flavor. When we talk about beer and spirits, there is similarity with coffee because these are considered “luxury goods” and they are consumed as liquids.

Now consider the range of prices you might find when shopping for a nice bottle of Scotch whiskey. You can probably find a fairly cheap bottle at your local supermarket, something that is kinda nasty going down and even worse once it has had time to soak in. You can find something mid-range, a decently distilled blend of decently produced malts. And if you go to specialty importers or big-time liquor stores you’ll find a huge variety of small-batch, limited production single malts that have been aged for many years to improve the texture, perceived sweetness, and complexity. The prices will range from $10/750 ml for true swill that will surely pummel you into joyless submission by the next morning to perhaps $150 for the finest commercially available single-malts. Most Scotch drinkers likely find their place of comfort somewhere in between, happy to pay $30-$40 for a nice bottle of Glenlivet or Macallan.

With beer it is the same…your basic six-pack of aluminum Milwaukee’s Best cans can be had for a couple of bucks, while you could easily pay $12.00/16 oz bottle for a nice Belgian small-batch.

Surely wine has been the best explored by most consumers when it comes to “tasting the range” and learning about what the low-end (frighteningly astringent and sour and ethanol-like with big-time headache power) and the high-end (ah, kill me now while I am floating on this cloud of sweet and savory bliss) can deliver on the pleasure scale. Most wine people, like beer or scotch drinkers, settle somewhere in the upper-middle of the range. No cheap stuff, but save the tip-top-barely-out-of reach shelf for those who have made a lifestyle out of sipping priceless delicacies. The $10-$40 range seems to serve people quite well when it comes to measuring out a nice pleasure-to-value ratio.

Then we could even expand the discussion to cheese, where the scale takes us from Velveeta all the way to the nicest 15-year old hard cheese with more taste per square millimeter than there are bad jokes in Marc Johnson’s arsenal. (Marc is our Marketing Director, he tells lots of bad jokes, and my comment means infinite taste, for those keeping track at home.) One costs $1.50/lb, the other costs $50.00/lb. One makes you fart and weep and rot away from the inside, the other one makes you want to high-five the cheese guy.

My point is that consumers have learned how to differentiate value pretty well for most products out there in the world today. They, of course, sometimes attribute value to certain things due to reasons of fashion or trend. And sometimes clever marketing combined with gullible consumers can lead to freaky pricing for what are really low-quality goods. But most of the time people come pretty close to getting it right, over time.

When you consider coffee, one thing to realize is that there is a very small amount of truly high-quality coffee available in the world. Just isn’t produced very much. Why? One reason is that it is very hard to accomplish. Really, really hard. The second is that the world has rarely been willing to pay farmers what it actually costs to produce this kind of quality. Instead of being priced according to actual costs of production, with better coffees getting additional premiums as a result of their better taste, coffee is priced like corn, cotton, soybeans, petroleum, or other commodities out there. It is a futures market that has always determined value.

Much has been written about the “coffee crisis” of 1999-2004, which put hundreds of thousands of coffee farmers out of business because the prices people were paying were below even the most basic, rawest costs of production. One thing that was exposed was that we as consumers (and those of us working in the coffee business as roasters, retailers, baristas, restaurant owners) really need to re-think the way we understand value as it applies to things like Specialty Coffee, and coffee in general, which is not actually a traditional “commodity” in any practical way. The range of different qualities, different production costs, and different cultural traditions behind the coffee are huge and diverse.

The reality is that we fight nearly a century of history during which coffee was bought and sold as a commodity and where the idea of the “bottomless” cup became entrenched in the minds of most consumers. Coffee has usually been a loss-leader for most restaurants and shops, given away for free or for next-to-nothing. Cheap coffee is far-and-away the norm.

Our objective is to try to get things right. We want to pay farmers what these coffees are really worth. When someone purchases Intelligentsia coffee, they are getting an amazing deal. Some of the best coffee produced on the planet for what still amounts to very little compared to what one might expect to pay for any other consumable the sits at the top end of the quality spectrum. That’s not to say we over-pay. We’re not a charity, and I do not have much faith in development models that show up in Africa or anywhere else and give money away without building anything that can last. That model has proven over the last 30 years that it simply doesn’t work, and in many instances has even made the problem of poverty WORSE.

We pay what both we and the farmers agree to be the right price, call it whatever you like: fair, just, honorable…those are just adjectives. The whole nature of this business, as I see it, is to figure out what farmers need to earn in order to produce extraordinarily great coffee. That’s what I do; I work with them to figure out how much everything costs, to quantify those things, and make sure that the farmer, who shoulders so much responsibility and so much risk in this whole deal, is profiting from his/her work and is in a position to grow and evolve. We want to contribute to building a coffee industry where growing coffee is an attractive career choice. Where the children of coffee farmers will decide they DO want to continue the family tradition, and can make that choice without needing to be certifiably insane.

That might have been a bit too long winded, a bit too lengthy to divine the key points. In acknowledgement that this is likely true, here is a summary. In short, the prices we paid this year for our Kenyan coffees reflect:

- Big rises in costs of production at the farms in Kenya.
- A shortfall of volume and of quality coffee in the recent harvest, leading to greater competition over top quality lots.
- Our movement towards Direct Trade in Kenya and investment in the farming societies and in building relationships.
- The falling value of the dollar.
- Greater costs of production here in the US with the costs of everything from roasting, packaging, and transporting having gone up.
- A reworking of the quality pricing model to better estimate real costs of production and attribute appropriate value to exemplary/exceptional quality coffees
- And of course the coffee is among the best harvested the entire year in Kenya, so you know it is worth it, my brethren.

And with that, read even a bit more about Kenyan coffee, the subject of this week’s Nod.

As always, find our Nods at:
http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/origin/offerings.

Best,

Geoff Watts
VP of Coffee
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Further:

Popularity: 29% [?]

23

07 2008

Coffee Grinders, The TSA, Edelweiss, Coffee

Sorry it’s been a few days. I do hope you will forgive me. But, as a result of it being a few days, there is a bit of catching up to do. With this in mind, Appendix E-J would like you to buckle down and really focus, because there are things for you to know. Mainly things concerning the roaster of the beans brewed at Everyday Joe’s, Intelligentsia Coffee out of Chicago (and now L.A.!).

Rock and Roll.

1st Things: Coffee Grinders + TSA = Kyle Glanville Takes 8th Place At The World Barista Championships

Back in May, Kyle Glanville of Intelligentsia was named the United States Barista Champion (read more about that here). This honor earned him a trip to Denmark to compete for the world title. It appears all preparations were going well…then Mr. Glanville had a run-in with airport security. I’ll let Intelligentsia’s VP of Coffee, Geoff Watts, take it from here:

“This year marks the second time in three years that an Intelligentsia Barista represented the United States in the world championship, which is an incredible accomplishment, I must say. The US competition is probably the most competitive of all the national events, with a very large number of qualified competitors who could all do well at the WBC.

This year our man, the inimitable Mr. Kyle Glanville, did his thing on the world stage. Despite some hitches (his grinder was torn apart and rendered completely inoperable by the TSA staff at the airport, so Kyle spent what should have been his practice time scrambling around trying to fix it) the performance was great and good enough for 8th Place overall. I do think (and yeah, I’m biased, I adore the guy) that his chops are among the best in the field, and he always manages to come across relaxed and at ease, fully in command of his craft. It is that charisma and confidence (on top of the hundreds of hours of practice refining technique) that I think gives him a tangible edge. And of course the coffee itself is exceptional, a Panamanian pulped natural micro-lot from Finca Santa Teresa. Look for him to again make some noise next year!”

2nd Things: Edelweiss- The Song and The Coffee, Not The German Flower

When my wife was little, her mom would sing the song “Edelweiss” to help her fall asleep. As a result, the song holds a special place in my wife’s heart and now a place in my heart…particularly as performed by The Innocence Mission from their album of lullabies, Now The Day Is Over. You can stream that song below.

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This morning when I went to make a press of coffee at Everyday Joe’s, I was pleased to see that we are carrying Intelligentsia’s latest offering, Edelweiss Finagro Estate, Tanzania. Right now, I am listening to the song and drinking the coffee and enjoying both quite a little bit. You can read the full story and tasting notes for this mighty fine bean here.

Further:

Popularity: 20% [?]

07

07 2008

Lessons From Coffee: Do It Even If You Sound Crazy

Ladies & gentlemen- the Nod. A weekly note from Intelligentsia Coffee’s VP of Coffee, Geoff Watts. It is e-mailed to Everyday Joe’s (because we use the beans roasted by our friends in Chicago), and then we post it here for you, because we love you. Enjoy.

A Nod or two ago I started reflecting on how my relationship with traveling has changed over the years and especially how some things that never before had seemed burdensome were now beginning to feel a bit wearying. That’s to be expected, I suppose…most things are more exciting when they are new, and it is easy to disregard small drawbacks when one is so entertained and occupied with assimilating fresh experience. It strikes me that somehow this condition must sit at the epicenter of the Happiness equation—the ability to continuously experience the world and its sensory delights with fresh eyes, the ability to soak it all up and never get saturated. Wasn’t there a film about that? “The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” I think it was. It might be interesting to watch that in a double-feature with “Groundhog Day” and juxtapose those two scenarios.

Regardless of the fact that some things in life seem destined to become mildly less stimulating after much routine and repetition, there are, fortunately, always surprises. And every year there are trips that end up being particularly inspiring, stretches of days or weeks that leave me feeling renewed with the kind of silly but invigorating and intoxicating optimism that you can almost bathe in.

This last trip was that way. I spent the weekend in Cali, Colombia doing some roasting and cupping at Café Palo Alto, a small coffee company that I help run there. Often when I’m working there, I feel as though I’ve stepped into the way-back machine, remembering the days when Intelligentsia was just a tiny retail outfit with a 12-kg roaster in the store. It’s a lot of fun. The challenges that come with operating a start-up business are of course all too real, and I suspect relatively similar for all new business owners regardless of location, but I enjoy the simplicity of dealing with a compact and immediate universe where most decisions feel comfortably free of weight.

After a couple of days I was joined by Mary and Neil Smith, two Chicagoans who had bid on and won a “coffee origin trip” that we had sponsored in a charity fundraiser last summer. Before the trip started, I must admit that I was a little less than enthused about the prospect of chaperoning a trip with two complete strangers. People are strange, that we all know very well. Some nice, some not so nice, some happy-go-lucky, some just plain unhappy, some frivolous, some cynical and some defeated. But this was a blast. These two new friends, one of them a professional in the high-quality fresh fish industry and the other a now full-time musician, went with me to Cajibio (about two hours from Cali, close to the old colonial city Popayan) to visit a farm called Santuario. You’ll be hearing a lot about this farm in the coming months and years—it is a breathtaking example of what can be done with resources and intention, and I hope that it may serve as a model for future generations of coffee farmers.

What makes it so inspiring? Part of it has to do with providence. I can’t shake this feeling that for some reason I’ve met this farmer at precisely the right moment in time, the right point of convergence in the coffee world, a time when both of us are ready to take the tools we’ve developed and map out what the future of coffee can look like. Coffee 2000. The new deal. You see, this farm is the farm of dreamers. It was started in 2001 at a time when investing in growing coffee seemed like a patently ludicrous proposition. The market was in the gutter, the planet was oversupplied with poor quality coffees, and the immediate future seemed pretty bleak for most growers around the world. Farms were going out of business left and right, and would continue to do so for the next four years. Many economists probably would have recommended gambling on NBA games or selling typewriters as more promising career moves. Milk-based drinks were dominating the landscape in the US and overseas retail markets, new “energy drinks” were capturing the attention of the sugar-addicted youth population, and coffee beans themselves had somehow become the least expensive part of most “coffee” beverages.

Still, Camilo Merizalde decided he wanted to grow coffee. Wow. I’m quite certain more than a few trusted friends were suspicious that someone must have slipped something into Camilo’s aguardiente. Coffee? The same crop that has bankrupted thousands of farmers and held millions more in a state of perpetual uncertainty and debt? Where production costs are rising at a pace that far exceeds rising values? Where small changes in world climate could throw the whole formula out of whack? Yes, that one. A fool’s pursuit.

I’m sure he heard a lot of that, but he was driven. He apparently caught what I myself am afflicted with, and what many a friend has experienced in the past—coffee has a seductive power. It gets in your system and won’t leave. It offers incredible intrigue, much like wine but far more complex. More fascinating than a yellow submarine and with more potential to impact human lives in a positive way than perhaps any crop in existence. But it can be an unpredictable and capricious companion, elusive and frustratingly impermanent.

So Camilo planted coffee. He took what was at the time nothing but pasture land, nearly barren, and created a farm. And he did it as dreamer and a perfectionist would, taking nearly two years to consult with farmers, agronomists, environmental engineers, coffee roasters and exporters before getting it up and running. The result is a coffee lover’s fantasy, a perfect marriage of exceptional environmental advantages and an engineer’s sense of orchestrated harmony. Most of the farm sits at close to 2000 meters, a glorious altitude for the best types of coffee tree. It is partitioned in a sensible fashion, divided into lots of Typica, Bourbon, and other heirloom varieties of coffee that are revered for the cup characteristics of their seeds. Each section was planned out meticulously based on advice from field-leading agronomists, with a big variety of different shade tree species and other plants spaced appropriately to promote the symbiotic ecosystem interactivity and minimize the need for additional inputs to keep the coffee healthy.

Having the farm organized as such will allow Camilo to identify specific niches on the farm that produce unusual quality and provides for the harvesting of coffees by variety—something many farms lack since varieties tend to be interspersed in such a way as to make them impossible to isolate. Currently, Camilo has nearly 20 additional varieties growing in a test garden, soldiers preparing even now for a time in the distant future. Over the next several years we will work together to classify the quality traits and potential of all of these experimental coffee types, looking to identify some treasures. And knowing Camilo, we’ll be experimenting together every single year as we try to fine-tune the processing methodologies in order to get maximum sensory expression in the coffees.

It’s a little paradise there, and I’m extremely excited to be working with a farmer who shares our vision and is just crazy enough to be willing to take necessary risks that would cause most others to balk. That’s how progress is made, and while it is surely premature to make any grand proclamations about how together we will redefine the model for both coffee grower and coffee roaster, there is nothing wrong with dreaming.

I’ll share more about Santuario and the rest of the trip to Colombia in next week’s Nod. For now, get yourselves ready for an impending onslaught of new crop coffees from Central America and East Africa. Port strikes and unexpected rains have collaborated to delay shipment of many of the coffees we normally expect to have ready for sale in June, but the tide is about to come in. Over the next weeks expect to see new Direct Trade coffees from Kenya, Tanzania, El Salvador, Honduras, Costa Rica, and Guatemala showing up on the offering sheet. In the meantime, we are proud to launch the 2008 edition of Los Delirios our Organic Direct Trade offering from Nicaragua. Enjoy!

As always, find our Nods at:
http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/origin/offerings.

Onward,

Geoff Watts
VP of Coffee
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Further:

Popularity: 19% [?]

17

06 2008

Unity Through Belief…and Coffee

The Nod.

It is the newsletter sent out each week by Mr. Geoff Watts. Mr. Watts is the VP of Coffee for Intelligentsia. Intelligentsia is a mighty fine coffee roaster. We serve the beans they roast. Their passion, however, extends far beyond coffee. That passion is palatable in this week’s letter from Mr. Watts. Parts of it remind me of when Everyday Joe’s first opened 5 years ago, and Suzanne worked without pay just so it could get going because she believed in what could happen. Enjoy.

Hola:

To recap last week’s message, I spent a lot of time talking about, well, time. Having just returned from a trip to Africa, I also discussed our work in Rwanda and the challenges for cooperatives there: a lack of strong leadership, interference from both the government and private companies, and even electrical power outages. This week, I feel good talking about some of the positive things happening in Rwanda.

This year at Nyakizu the dozens of workers at the cooperative washing station have not yet been paid. Farmers delivering cherry are forsaking immediate cash to support the efforts of their group, tendering the coffee without any payment whatsoever. It is a staggering display of commitment and loyalty. They have new leadership in place, starting with President Emmanuel Hibamukiza, a relatively young and very charismatic guy who also works as a schoolteacher in the local village. One of the farmers, an old gentleman named Narzon Muharinkya, has been there since the beginning and recounted the leadership problems they’d experienced in the past. For the first time since Nyakizu was founded, he feels good about the group and has a renewed optimism that they will be able to move forward from here. I cannot begin to explain how his sentiments touched me as we sat together in a grove of trees just beside the station, talking about how to fix the problems and what must be done to build stability within the group and ensure that the cooperative can grow and thrive as it moves forward.

Still nothing is certain. I wrote a letter of intent last month to help the group secure pre-financing through Root Capital, a micro-finance organization. RWASHOSSCO, led by the very capable and sympathetic Gilbert Gatali, took out a loan in order to bail out the coop this year and prevent the bank from taking the washing station. This season is critical. If anything goes wrong, it will mean the end of the cooperative. But I feel good about what lies ahead. They’ve pushed through incredibly difficult times and have grown smarter for it. The stage to succeed is set in a way it has never been in the past, and we are going to do everything in our power to make this thing work. The coffee here is incredible, and it was easily the best of the Rwandan coffees we purchased last season and the real potential has not yet been touched.

From Nyakizu we drove to Kibuye, a small town on the edge of Lake Kivu in the western part of the country. Kivu is a gorgeous lake separating Rwanda from the Congo, filled with delicious little fish called Sambaza. They are just about the only fish in there as the lake is full of natural methane that rises up from the bottom and makes it nearly uninhabitable.

After a night’s sleep we took off for Nyabumera, one of the washing stations we are buying from in the region. Previously there had been four mini-stations under one umbrella of management, collectively known as Rusenyi, but large geographic distance separates the stations (nearly an hour and a half drive over bumpy roads to get from one to another) and the coop leadership proved unable to keep things together. A bad accountant was removed from office last year and a decision was made to split the coop into two groups based on geography. Nyabumera and Ruvumbu now fall under one roof, independent of the others, and just as with Nyakizu they’ve got a new set of leaders and a new lease on life. The same issues apply here—motivating membership to deliver cherry despite the immediate appeal of the competing stations that are luring away farmers who have lost faith in the cooperative and are pursuing short-term fixes rather than trying to build strength through solidarity with the group.

Rusenyi is an enchanting place. It is one of the lushest regions in Rwanda, with softly rolling hills and gorgeous views of the lake. It also stands out as one of the only areas in the country that mounted a strong resistance to the interahamwe militias that catalyzed the genocide in 1994. They are a strong and impressively fearless people.

When we got there, I went immediately to the drying tables to have a look at the parchment. I was surprised as I reached out to grab a handful—one of the women sorting defects out stopped me, and told me I could not touch the coffee until I washed my hands. Never in 7 years of prolific origin work in well over a dozen countries have I ever experienced this! It was an inspiring moment. Touching the parchment with unwashed hands really shouldn’t make any difference (provided the hands in question were not covered in oil or paint or something), but they were taking no chances! They were protecting the quality with astounding vigilance. I went and washed my hands and then headed back to check out the coffee and talk with the women working on the parchment.

We met with the group for a couple of hours, discussing both the past and the future and strategizing on ways to push this thing forward. More communication, more pre-financing, more outreach in the fields, and more technical assistance form the backbone of the prescription. They thanked us for solar flashlights that they’d received last season and asked quietly whether or not they might be able to get more since the farmers really loved them and there were many who hadn’t gotten one. There will be more flashlights coming, we will see to that, one way or another.

When we finished our meeting we headed down to Kibuye again to stop in at the cupping lab and taste some coffees with Emerthe and Rose, two of the young cuppers who I had helped train years ago. It was great to see them again. They still have a lot of work to do to continue developing their skills, but it will come with time. After we cupped, I took a quick ride on one of the Yamaha bikes sitting around and was having a grand old time until I rounded a corner with a little too much speed and went crashing to the ground. Ayyy! I couldn’t restart the bike and ended up walking it back to the lab, feeling more than a little embarrassed.

From there it was a three-hour drive back to Kigali and an early end to the day, due mostly to the fatigue from lots of driving and lots of talking. After a somewhat refreshing sleep, we moved on to Humure, another coop we’ve worked with for the last couple years. It’s way up in the North, approaching Tanzania. Along the way you pass a lake where Paul Kagame, president of Rwanda and a captivating figure who I am still dying to meet, has a home. It takes just under three hours to get there, and when we arrived, we were greeted by the whole crew: Claude Sebamana (the new President), Veniranda Mukankusi (VP), Eustache Inite (Secretary), Principe (GM), Eugenie Mana (Acctounting), Jean de Dieu (Maintenance.), Gasana Gideon (Production Officer), John Bavumire (Security), along with Emmanuel Getera (Technician) and about 20 other farmers. Things looked much, much, much better than the last time I’d been there. Clearly they’d taken the advice from last year to heart, and across the board the systems for controlling quality were improved.

Humure started as a group in 1999, but back then it was a different ballgame altogether. I’m amazed they’ve stayed together, given the abysmal value that Rwandan coffee had in those days. Now they’ve got 372 members. They are still paying off their 2004 BRD loans that were taken out to pay for the washing station construction. But they are advancing. Of the three coops we visited, Humure is the strongest and best organized and accordingly are the furthest along in getting square with the bank. They’re also trying to diversify; many of the women have been weaving baskets and asked us if there was a way we could sell them in the States. I’m going to get that worked out…the baskets are gorgeous, very well-made, each one requiring about 30 hours to complete. I have lots of them at home, some that I’ve bought and many that were given to me as gifts over the last five years. You should have one too!

After a long and very productive meeting with the group in which we discussed plans for the current season and ideas about how to keep this thing moving forward, we drove back to Kigali once again. I have some friends there who run a media company, and they’ve just recently opened a cool bar attached to a cool Italian restaurant called Papyrus. I went up there with Peter Giuliano and Clara, a girl from Portland who directs a program called Bikes to Rwanda. The food was delicious, especially the cheese that comes from a nearby farm. The wine was cheap and gave me a headache, but at least it tasted OK. Still, I’ll give the place thress stars. One of the best food options in Rwanda, where one cannot be especially picky.

Right now I’m in Heathrow airport, sitting, and waiting. I’ll be happy to get back to Chicago tomorrow morning, or this morning, or however you want to reckon it. But the stay at home will be a short one…I leave the following morning for Colombia.

This week we are proud to announce the release of one of our newest Direct Trade Offerings: El Machete, Panama. Since this is a new coffee for us, I am happy that it is coming out now before all our old favorites from Central America are back in season. El Machete gets a couple weeks in the spotlight, and it will really shine. Sarah Kluth, our Chicago-based Director of Quality Control, says that you can expect “a mouth-watering syrupy body full of blackberry, caramel, fudge, and hints of citrus.” Sounds good to me!

As always, find our Nods at:

http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/origin/offerings.

Onward,

Geoff Watts
VP of Coffee
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Popularity: 22% [?]

09

06 2008

Time & Coffee & A Prelude to something better

Each week, we post “The Nod” from Intelligentsia (the coffee roaster who produces the fantastic beans we serve) here on Appendix E-J. It is always a source of coffee knowledge, though this one (written by Intelligentsia’s VP of Coffee Geoff Watts) touches on the philosophy of time and the frustrations towards corrupt governmental systems as well. Hold on to your butts.

Hola:

I’m sitting here at the little café outside the Jomo Kenyatta airport in Nairobi, Kenya. Times like these are the dregs of my work, the most uncomfortable and least enjoyable part of being a coffee buyer. Just waiting and nothing more. Nothing to do and just enough fatigue to sap any will to try to make something of the time. I’ve realized that the act of waiting with nothing on the line, no tension whatsoever, is one of the most frustrating elements of life.

Years ago, when I first started traveling relentlessly, I was able to find pleasure in transit. New airports, new people to observe, and the anticipation of getting somewhere not well-known were enough to make the transit interesting in one way or another. Now those things have worn away from repeated use. I used to take a certain satisfaction and pleasure in explaining to friends that I never, ever got bored. Not once. For almost two decades boredom was a foreign condition. At the very least, there was always something to think about or some sort of meaningless distraction that would allow time to wash by unnoticed. I took pride in that.

I remember fondly the arguments I used to have with Doug Zell (Intelligentsia CEO) about keeping track of time. Ten years ago, in our first Roasting Works on Cortland in Chicago when our production staff consisted of me and a handful of guys packing coffee, I walked in one morning and saw a gigantic clock hanging on the gray cement wall in front of the roaster. I took it down immediately. “What point is there in watching a clock?” I asked. It slows things down, causes one to start measuring time in an unnatural way, giving individual minutes an undeserved importance in the scheme of things. It makes the day feel longer. If I want to know what time it is, I’ll check. There are now clocks on cell phones, watches on arms, clocks on the computer, clocks everywhere. The last thing we need is to have one in our face, staring down at us all day and tempting us to look, almost forcing us to care about the steady progress of the little revolving hands.

A day after I took it down, I entered the office and there it was, back in place. Geez. I decided to hide it this time, so I stuck it behind a pile of coffee sacks where it could tick-tock all day and bother no one, entertaining itself in solitude. That’s when we argued about it, a silly exchange that danced between philosophic and metaphysical objections to the intrusion of regiment into our natural state of being and pragmatic reasonings about productivity, organization and time management. Funny stuff. I think we both had a point, but I’m not sure we ever found consensus. In the end we moved the clock to a less conspicuous location and let it be.

These days I have a much harder time staving off boredom during the transit times in my trips. Partly it is due to changes in the way I perceive time. Often I want the day to last longer with more time in the morning to wake up and gradually ease into full consciousness, more time in the afternoon to get things done, and more time in the evenings to unwind or indulge in hobbies or entertainment. Years seem way too short, as do months and weeks. More to do than there is time in which to do it.

Bicycles transporting coffeeFor this reason, I really begrudge time that I deem to be completely wasted. There are very few occasions when I hand out that designation. Sometimes I can watch TV for hours, gaining little of importance, but enjoying it nonetheless. Or idling in a coffeeshop, just chilling, just watching the world go by. That can be fun too. But standing in lines at airports, standing in lines at security, standing in lines waiting to enter or exit a plane… there is absolutely nothing to appreciate about that. Standing in line at immigration or staring at a moving belt hoping that my luggage will pop out is not fun at all.

But I think the worst may be layovers. 6 hours, that’s the most ruthless of them all. It’s not enough time to get into the city and back, not really worth the expense or effort, but it is more time than can be passed having a meal or wandering the airport. Just off a five-hour transit from Rwanda or Tanzania, most of it spent reading a book, I have no immediate interest in setting my eyes back on the pages. My friends and colleagues back home are still asleep, a full 8 hours behind, so there is no point in communication and the roaming charges are too steep anyhow.

It is those six hours that I loath, made worse knowing that another six hours are waiting for me in London Heathrow, when I arrive blurry-eyed at 5 AM tomorrow morning after another nine hours airborne. At 5 AM nothing is open and the airport is as sleepy as I am. And six hours from now I will step on another plane, ready to sit once again for a full eight hours on the way to Chicago. I will arrive as rush hour begins, so after waiting in lines at immigration I will wait in the back of a taxi, inching along I-90 on the way to my apartment. When I get home, I will sink into a chair with my brain not working well after about 30 hours without significant sleep. The evening itself will be wasted too because I’m not really wanting to go to bed for the night but I’m too blurry to really get much out of the remainder of the day. I will try to watch a movie, but will invariably fall asleep in my chair two-thirds of the way through, missing the resolution. When I awake tomorrow, much of that day will be wasted too, since the combination of jetlag and lack of sleep will reduce me to about 60% functionality.

Was that enough complaining for one day? I think so. Not much can be gained through complaint. But I did want to shatter the myth that being a coffee buyer is always sexy and exciting. It is great work, no doubt about it. But just like most anything else, it comes pre-loaded with plenty of significant drawbacks. Often I wish that NASA would stop sending people and plants and monkeys into orbit and focus their energy on making earthly transport more efficient. It might yield nothing, but then again I’m not so sure what we’ve gained in the last twenty years after trillions of dollars spent on endless, secretive, and obscure space programs. Why not put the money into education and get us a bunch of new millennium Einsteins who will transform our ability to manipulate Time?

Anyway, back to Rwanda. I spent the last week there, a glorious week, spending quality time with many good friends: coffee students, farmers, researchers, co-op leaders, development workers from various NGOs, and some local business people. This time I was also in the company of an admired peer and one of my closest buddies on the planet, the immensely talented Peter Giuliano (the buyer for another coffee company called Counter Culture). He and I work together in Rwanda, and it may strike some as odd that we collaborate so closely. After all, our companies are direct competitors in many ways and many markets. But there is tremendous value in this kind of cooperation. We always learn from each other, every single time we are together. And by combining our energies and insights we are able to accomplish a lot.

Development work (that’s what working with coffee in these countries is, really) is incredibly complicated. The puzzle is large enough and intricate enough to defy imagination. But the reward is almost inconceivably gratifying. Getting amazing coffees out of the mess that exists in many producing nations while helping to improve the livelihoods of those whose efforts makes these coffees possible is a hard-to-beat endeavor. I can’t think of many things I’d rather do. When Peter and I put our heads together on this stuff, we often make things move more swiftly more precisely and with more immediate results than either of us would probably achieve doing it solo. I am grateful for our friendship and professional alliance.

This past week we visited several coops that we are in partnership with here: the Nyakizu, Rusenyi, and Humure groups form the backbone of our Rwandan coffee mark Zirikana. First up was Nyakizu (Abakundakawa), located in the far south reaches of Rwanda, very close to the Burundi border. It is a small group and has been in a decidedly chaotic state for the last three years. They’ve switched Presidents three times, and the entirety of the cooperative management team has been in constant flux. Makes it hard to earn progress when the leadership turnover is this dramatic. The coop is beyond bankrupt, and they nearly lost their washing station last month as BRD (Rwandan Development Bank) made moves to repossess it in the wake of missed payments on outstanding debts. In total they still owe more than 150,000 dollars to the bank, and at this point anything they’ve been able to pay has been gobbled up by interest. No movement whatsoever on the principle.

Why is that? We’ve been paying great prices from the start…way over “market value” and more than we pay in many Latin countries, where economies are a bit more developed and labor costs are considerably higher. We’ve volunteered thousand of hours giving training and advice. The PEARL project (and now SPREAD, a follow-up project with a clever new acronym for a name) has spent countless thousands of dollars in the last few years on technical assistance and infrastructure to help build the capacity of the cooperative. RWASHOSSCO, the recently formed federation of cooperatives that helps the individual groups with export and marketing services along with countless other hard-to-measure types of assistance, pours loads of energy into helping these groups get on track.

The answer to that question (like the answers to most questions having to do with coffee) is not simple. A big piece of it is lack of reliable and competent leadership and management. Too often, elections (more accurately called “appointments”) are mostly political in nature. It is not the best educated or most qualified individuals given responsibility, but rather the most popular, the most outspoken, or even sometimes the most gullible—those willing to step into a role where failure is the likeliest outcome and who will later shoulder the blame when things go wrong. In so many instances the leaders are the ones who want to climb over the rest, who see the position as an opportunity for personal gain, and who are shameless enough to seek it even at the expense of their neighbors. There is this Latin story that Peter reminded me of which explains why it is so easy to boil crabs. You throw them in the pot, and as the water gets hotter they try to escape. Once in a while one will almost make it, getting a hook on the top of the pot after major effort. But just as it is about to get over the top, the other crabs reach up and pull it back in. That happens all the time in developing countries. So corruption or incompetence leads to financial mismanagement and loss of profit. The leaders change, the debt grows, and the cycle starts over again.

Next up on the list is interference from private companies or state-run coffee exporters who lure coop members away with “bribes” in the form of artificially high cherry prices that will probably cause the company to lose money on the business but will bring them farmers and help them acquire overseas clients. The coops lose out on coffee because the competition is rigging the game. What happens then? Not enough volume of coffee to sell means lower income, lessened ability to pay back debt, and an erosion of confidence among cooperative members. Soon enough the coop will crumble, the washing station is put on the auction block, and now the farmers have no other choice but to sell to the private company. Of course, those high cherry prices are no longer there at this point and now the exploitation can resume without resistance.

What else? Electricity failing for long periods of time mid-crop and causing quality loss. Random and unpredictable weather events leading to more quality loss because farmers are not trained to deal with unexpected complications in the formula. Delays in payment due to export complications that can arise from a myriad of places (often a result of shoddy infrastructure) lead to further debt. Lack of cash on hand to pay for incoming cherry puts coops at a severe disadvantage versus privately funded stations and results in further loss of volume, which lowers total income and reduces economy of scale.

Next week I will tell you the second half of my story from Rwanda. And hang in there, OK? Rereading what I wrote, I want you to know that I am telling you all of this not to get you down, but to illustrate just a few of the challenges that face these new and fragile organizations. And to point out just how inspiring it is to see them endure against all odds, and to begin to show signs of real progress.

And speaking of progress, you might remember the story of Victoria Dalton-Diaz and her Matalapa farm. I said that we might have a Micro-Lot from her farm, and that’s just what we are featuring this week. This coffee met all the requirements for Direct Trade status and we are offering it as Los Inmortales, El Salvador Micro-Lot: Finca Matalapa. The coffee offers up delicate floral aromatics and a juicy citrus acidity. Please enjoy it while it lasts.

As always, find our Nods at:

http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/origin/offerings.

Onward,

Geoff Watts
VP of Coffee
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Popularity: 16% [?]

02

06 2008

Win Two Pounds of Coffee: A Contest from Intelligentsia

Each week, I receive The Nod from Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea – the roaster who is kind enough to allow us to sell their wonderfully roasted beans in a drinkable form. Usually, The Nod is almost like a digital coffee classroom. This week, it’s like class went to recess and we’re here to have a good time.

Happy Friday.

As was mentioned last week, Geoff Watts (Intelligentsia Coffee Buyer) is currently in Rwanda and Matt (Intelligentsia Web Master and 2006 United States Barista Championship winner) and I were absolutely stunned to get a message from him this morning. Not only did he write something for us, but he described it as “kinda lengthy.” Coming from Mr. Watts, that means pages and pages. Sadly, something obviously got lost on the way from Africa because neither of us could open Geoff’s attachment. His stories will, unfortunately, have to wait until next week.

That means that this week we are going to do something a bit different. See the picture below? That is Doug Zell, Intelligentsia CEO and founder, at the Specialty Coffee Association of America in Minneapolis a couple of weeks back. What’s going on with that look on his face? We have no idea either, but whoever sends me the best caption for the picture will win two pounds of this week’s featured coffee: Fazenda do Sertão, Brazil.

The Fazenda do Sertão, Brazil is an Intelligentsia Reserve and having tasting it, I think that it is definitely worth your time to come up with a good caption. Send all entries to mjohnson@intelligentsiacoffee.com. We’ll let you know who won next week… when you can expect Geoff back in the saddle.

Last thing: You can order Black Cat, Single Origin Espresso: Matalapa, El Salvador – United Status Barista Competition, 1st Place until midnight Memorial Day. This is the coffee that Kyle Glanville used en route to winning the 2008 United States Barista Championship. Good stuff, only one roast day, get it while you can!

Have a great Memorial Day Weekend.

Cheers,

Marc Johnson

Director of Marketing

Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Further:

Popularity: 18% [?]

23

05 2008

Intelligentsia’s Summer Blockbuster Coffee Previews

Summer is the time for blockbuster films. Blockbuster films are the time for blockbuster previews…previews that cost more to produce than I make in a year.

Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea is our blockbuster roaster of choice here at Everyday Joe’s, and they have released their blockbuster previews. Often, I find myself looking at Intelligentsia as our very cool and hip older sibling…and they’re kind enough to let us tag along and wear their hand-me-downs.Thankfully, the hand-me-downs are really, really good coffees.

This week, Intelligentsia’s “Nod” comes from Marc Johnson, their director of marketing. He has some exciting things to tell you about, so keep reading.

Greetings:

Geoff Watts (Intelligentsia’s Green Coffee Guru) is the usual author here, but even when he is in Chicago, he’s getting pulled in a million and one directions. It was really difficult to get him to do this on a weekly basis when we started this email three years ago (can you believe it’s been that long?), but he is pretty good about it when he is around. Today, sadly is not one of those days. Geoff is now in Rwanda and as hard as he works when he is there and as spotty as internet connections can be, I know not to expect anything. Of course, on the positive side, we’ll get lots of good information on African coffees when he returns.

Second choice? Doug Zell (Intelligentsia’s CEO) is always good for a post or two, but seeing how he just posted last week and was in New York working on a super-secret project for a while this week (we’ll tell you more when we know more), he gets a pass as well.

Third choice? Hmmmm, maybe KC O’Keefe? KC is our West Coast Director of Operations and he also does a lot of work sourcing coffee in Latin America and so always has something interesting to say about coffee. Well, I called LA this morning on another topic and was on hold for like 10 minutes, so I am going to assume our friends in LA are busy roasting coffee for both our Silver Lake coffeebar and the Wholesale Accounts on the West Coast.

Fourth choice, fifth, sixth? Kyle Glanville (winner of the United States Barista Competition and Manager of Espresso Research & Development) has written pages for me already this week. Sarah Kluth (Director of Quality Control) has also written a ton this week. Chris Hallien (our new Director of Roasting) does tons of work with coffee, but since this is first week, I am going to give him more time before I hit him up.

Where does that leave us? You’re hearing from the Marketing Guy.

Hey, don’t stop reading yet because we have a large number of really cool things coming up:

Intelligentsia In Season – I am not going to give away too much here, but let’s just say that no one is going to be able to offer any fresher, better tasting coffees than Intelligentsia. Keep checking www.inseasoncoffee.com for updates.

The Black Cat Project – Intelligentsia espresso is moving to a new and exciting place. Here again, details will be coming, but you should check www.blackcatcoffee.com for updates on our Black Cat Espresso and Kyle Glanville’s training for the World Barista Competition in June in Copenhagen.

New Crop Centrals – Today Sarah Kluth gave us the news that some old favorites will be returning to our coffee line-up in early June. Woo-woo.

El Machete, Panama – This coffee is a new Direct Trade offering that will be available in a week or so.

New Coffee Releases this week – Black Cat, Single Origin Espresso: Anjilanaka, Organic Bolivia; Los Inmortales, El Salvador Micro-Lot: Finca Matalapa; Fazenda do Sertão, Brazil. When one week gives you a Single Origin Espresso, a Micro-Lot from El Salvador, and a Reserve Offering from Brazil, you consider yourself lucky.

And lastly, the focus of this Nod…

This week, we are proud to release our Black Cat, Single Origin Espresso: Matalapa, El Salvador – United States Barista Competition, 1st Place. This is the coffee that Kyle Glanville used en route to his victory at the USBC. It is now available to pre-order, it will be offered web-only and we will only roast it once: Monday, May 26th. Get it while you can!

As always, find our Nods at:
http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/origin/offerings.

Cheers,

Marc Johnson
Director of Marketing
Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea

Popularity: 21% [?]

19

05 2008

And Then There Were Three: New Reserve Coffees from Intelligentsia

Yesterday, Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea, who’s beans we serve with love and extra care, released three reserve coffees that seem quite fabulous. The flavors they leave on my digital palette are expert.

The Black Cat is what Mr. Kyle Glanville (who looks a bit like Sufjan Stevens) served en route to becoming the best barista in the U.S. of A.

Here’s all the info. Links to ordering the beans are at the bottom of the post.

Black Cat, Single Origin Espresso: Anjilanaka, Organic Bolivia

Location: Caranavi

Varietal: Typica, caturra, bourbon

Altitude: 1700 – 1900m

Harvest: Jun – Aug

Flavor: Milk chocolate, cane sugar

Acidity: Bursting tropical fruit candy, pear

Finish: Clean, sweet, orange zest

This espresso is a powerhouse of juicy sweet flavor. Pulled as a short double, your palate is greeted with explosive tropical fruit like kiwis and mangos, which gives way to a buttery body and a lingering, sweet finish. Pulled a little longer and you’ll taste tons of cane sugar while the acidity subsides ever so slightly.

Los Inmortales, El Salvador Micro-Lot: Finca Matalapa*

Region: La Libertad

Varietal: Bourbon, Pacas

Altitude: 1250 m

Harvest: Dec – Mar

Flavor: White grape, apple, floral

Acidity: Citrus, balanced

Finish: Silky, cane sugar

Full of grace and nuance, the Finca Matalapa Micro-Lot introduces itself with delicate floral aromatics. The juicy citrus acidity sits aside notes of sweet apple and white grape as the body glides like silk into a finish of cane sugar and vanilla.

Fazenda do Sertão, Brazil*

Location: Carmo de Minas

Varietal: Bourbon

Altitude: 1200m

Harvest: Jun – Aug

Flavor: Caramel, sweet orange, fudge

Acidity: Balanced, dried mango

Finish: Smooth, buttery, Dutch chocolate

A pulped natural from the Carmo de Minas growing region, this coffee lends itself to an atypical complexity that wins the hearts of washed coffee lovers. The body is smooth and silky as notes of caramel and toffee wash across the palate. The acidity is subtle but worth noting with its Clementine orange juiciness and dried mango fruit tang. Leading into the buttery finish are nuances of cardamom and honey as the end note of Dutch chocolate plays pleasantly on the tongue.

Further:

Popularity: 13% [?]

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05 2008