November 2007

Monthly Archive

Brewing the Best Coffee

Posted by gourmet coffee snob on 19 Nov 2007 | Tagged as: Gourmet Coffee Snob Sez

How to make your coffee taste the best it can possibly taste.

Start with delicious water. Coffee is almost all water, so the better tasting your water is, the better your coffee will be. Use the freshest, coldest water you can find. Filtered water is great! Distilled water is frequently flat tasting, though.

If you're after the best possible coffee, don't store your beans in the freezer. It sounds reasonable because the aromatic oils won't disperse as readily, but the transitions between cold and warm and back to cold can cause condensation which will only bring the taste of your coffee down. Keep your beans in a cool dark place, out of the sunlight, and grind them freshly every time you want some coffee.

Measure your grounds carefully. A good rule of thumb is one Tablespoon of grounds per five ounce cup– or just under two scoops for each normal sized cup. You can use more or less; adjust the strength of your coffee to taste.

Place your grounds into a french press. It's a long cylinder with a screen on a stick. A french press gets the most flavor out of your grounds, and you wind up with some particulate sludge in the bottom of your mug. This is the sign of a delicious coffee.

Bring your water to just about boiling, not quite boiling. Pour the water over the grounds and get a lot of motion in the water. You're after the opposite of slow careful pouring that floats the water over the grounds. Use the motion of the pouring water to mix the grounds and the water thoroughly.

Set the screen over the top of the water but do not plunge the french press pipe yet. Let the coffee steep for four to five minutes and then slowly press the sticking-up handle of the screen down, squeezing the grounds out of the water. If you don't let it steep long enough, the coffee will be watery, and if it steeps too long, it will be bitter.

Pour your cup and then store the rest of your coffee somewhere warm, like a thermos. Get the majority of the grounds out of the hot water so that it will not continue to steep and get more bitter.

You can read more writings by Russ Gilman-Hunt at Argh WebWorks

Gourmet Coffee Health Benefits Perk Up Coffee Production and Sales

Posted by gourmet coffee snob on 03 Nov 2007 | Tagged as: SpotaJava Coffee, gourmet coffee snob

Gourmet coffee consumption is good for your health, according to several respected clinical studies over the past 3-5 years, and the coffee drinking public has noticed.

Verified health benefits have driven coffee production and sales of gourmet coffee substantially higher. The National Coffee Association maintains a web site called coffeescience.org Coffee Science which outlines benefits of coffee which cites scientific studies proving the health benefits of coffee consumption.

The list of health positive effects is a long one, starting with the long recognized hallmark benefit of coffee-induced mental alertness. Coffee is also a well known diuretic which can be beneficial to the heart, kidneys, liver and may help relieve hypertension. Coffee is a recognized as the number one source of anti-oxidants by the American Chemical Society.

Coffee can help reduce the incidence of Diabetes, Colon Cancer, Skin Cancer and Liver Cancer. Additional studies have found that risk of Parkinson's Disease, Alzheimer's Disease, Gallstone Disease, Gout and even Dental Cavities are each reduced by drinking 3 to 5 cups of coffee daily. It has been shown that gourmet coffee enhances mental capacity, physical endurance and alertness.

 Coffee has been observed to reduce symptoms of Attention Deficit Disorder in children and adults. A recent German study demonstrates that soluble fiber in coffee has proven health benefits as well, with fibers called "polysaccharides" in the coffee which serve as food for beneficial bacteria in the human digestive system. The stronger and more plentiful the good bacteria are in our gut, the less room there is for harmful bacteria in the digestive system.

Both Tanzanian Peaberry coffee and Premium Connoisseur Peaberry coffee are available at http://www.spotajavacoffee.com. The exotic Kopi Luwak coffee from Indonesia is the most expensive coffee in the world and is a total waste of great tasting coffee beans and you money. SpotaJava coffee company focuses on specialty gourmet coffees not readily available in the US. Rare Gourmet coffee is our business so we make shopping with them risk free. If you are happy tell a friend; if you are not tell us 

~~Sherrill~~
the gourmet coffee snob sez
Always Drink Better Coffee
SpotaJava Coffee