Monday, February 29, 2016

10 Amazing AeroPress Posters (And One That Didn’t Go Over So Well)

posters

It’s World AeroPress Championships season, which means original poster artwork for various national events around the world are flying in fast. The vast majority of these artworks, from independent artists in each host nation, are worthy of our admiration and acclaim. There was also a stinker. Gaze along with us as we profile 10 of the best 2016 AeroPress posters submitted to date—and one not so good one.

Scotland

scottish_aeropress_poster_2016

This architecturally minded poster is sure to get folks out to the upcoming Scottish AeroPress Championship event in Edinburgh, hosted by Brewlab & Steampunk Coffee at The Dissection Room on Thursday, April 21st. Will there be live music? Yes. Will there be donuts? Evidently, yes. Will there be beer? Of course. Find our more here! 

Western Australia

aeropress_poster_web

Surf’s up, bruv, as you and Your Mate can ping a bit of pong, press an Aero, and go chuggawugga on a tinny of Tiger or twelve at the Western Australia AeroPress Championship. This event happens March 4th at the Five Senses Academy in Perth. More information via Facebook bro, nice one.

United Arab Emirates

160216_uae_championship_poster_300ppi

People in the Middle East are really stoked about AeroPress this year. A few weeks ago we featured art from the first-ever Saudi AeroPress competition, and now it’s time for folks in the UAE to make their tournament debut. This event in Dubai happens in a sweet mobile coffee truck, and will feature coffee (the famed Finca Tamana) roasted in Berlin by The Barn. Learn way more here.

Sweden

sac_poster_2016_a3

Koppi Roasters in Helsingborg, Sweden will host this year’s SAC, co-hosted by Dear Coffee I Love You, whose Brian W. Jones designed this delightful poster (as well as the event’s official 2016 ACME cupping bowls). Judges include repeat World AeroPress Champion Jeff Verellen, Coffee Collective founder Klaus Thomsen, and Telescope founder Nicholas Clerc. An impressive amount of natural wine will be consumed at this event. Learn more here!

Brazil

campeonato_bras_aeropress_2016

We’re super into this impressionistic mural-style poster for the Brazilian AeroPress event, going down March 26th in Curitiba, ParanĂ¡. Brazil’s new wave coffee scene is young and passionate, and we’d bet this event, happening at Nex Coworking, will be one of the funnest and coolest in all the global AeroPress calendar. More info here. 

South Korea

kac2016_poster_01_e

No fewer than 27 sponsors are onboard to make this an exceptional event on March 12th in Seoul, to be hosted by Design Coffee. Surely that is the most sponsors ever for a single national AeroPress event? Learn much more here. 

Wales

wales2016

Another first-time entry in the World AeroPress Championship circuit, the good people of Wales will gather together in Cardiff on Saturday, March 5th for an event hosted by La Marzocco UK and Waterloo Tea. Get more info and sign-up here. Pob lwc!

The Netherlands

dac_postera2_2016_defrgb

This poster sports some truly eye-catching Dutch design by Vincent Meertens for an event hosted by Amsterdam’s own Coffee Company, happening Saturday, March 19th. This is a huge event in the Netherlands, and happens in conjunction with the Amsterdam Coffee Festival weekend in March. More information here via Coffee Company.

Irish AeroPress Championships

iac_web-2

We’re really excited to be sponsoring (and sending along swag) to this national championship event, hosted by First Draft Coffee at The Fumbally, Dublin, on Thursday, April 14th. Learn more here! 

Pacific Northwest AeroPress Championship

pnw_heartroasters_aeropress_regional

Here’s another fantastic competition we’re proud to sponsor, hosted by Heart Roasters at their roasting HQ in Portland, Oregon on March 25th. This poster was designed by Elizabeth Chai, a Sprudge contributor and the organizer of the 2016 US AeroPress Championship events, recently announced here.

Singapore

insert-post-here

The poster from Singapore’s Common Man Coffee Roasters—a cafe with Australian origins in the city’s CBD—was met with an international outcry on Twitter and elsewhere, and the poster has been pulled from the World AeroPress Championship website. We’ll update when a new poster goes live.

Much more information on all the events is available at the official World AeroPress Championship website.

The post 10 Amazing AeroPress Posters (And One That Didn’t Go Over So Well) appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/1OJk1jX

Bell Tower Coffee: Portland’s Serene Church Cafe

taborspace bell tower coffee ristretto roasters one stripe chai mount tabor presbyterian church portland oregon cafe sprudge

In an impressive coffee landscape like Portland’s, it can be easy to turn a blind eye to every corner cafe, the ones that keep neighborhoods humming and make up the wholesale bread-and-butter of the city’s specialty roasters. Then again, it’s often those hidden-gem cafes that tell the most interesting stories.

Recently rebranded Bell Tower Coffee, annexed in a church in the city’s Mount Tabor neighborhood, is one of these. The cafe ups the bar of what one might expect from “church” coffee, and presents a business model that feeds the community in more ways than one. Under the umbrella of Taborspace, the Mount Tabor Presbyterian Church’s non-profit community enrichment program, Bell Tower serves everyone from musicians renting rehearsal space in the Church’s multipurpose rooms, to moms and babies visiting for dance classes, freelancers utilizing the church’s free Wi-Fi and ample seating, and now coffee folks, drawn in by the cafe’s offerings and sleek Southeast Belmont Street signage beckoning just down the hill from regal, forested Mount Tabor.

taborspace bell tower coffee ristretto roasters one stripe chai mount tabor presbyterian church portland oregon cafe sprudge

Building on the mission of Taborspace to gather and strengthen the community by repurposing a historic, sacred space, Bell Tower helps raise funds to maintain the church and functions as a job training program. The baristas are all volunteers—mostly students or part-time artists looking for coffee world skills to translate into later employment. Many go on to work in cafes across the city and outside of Portland, or to open their own businesses.

Until recently, Bell Tower was pretty out-of-sight; if you lived locally, you knew about it, but few passersby knew to climb the stone steps to the heavy door leading into the base of the church’s 100-year-old bell tower. Those who did were rewarded with a serene (and undeniably unique) atmosphere in which to caffeinate.

taborspace bell tower coffee ristretto roasters one stripe chai mount tabor presbyterian church portland oregon cafe sprudge

The small, foyer-like bar and counter area at the bottom of the Bell Tower (twisting steps ascending off it lead to offices, a staffroom, and the bell itself) greets customers first. Jewel-toned stained glass windows let in warm light behind the bar (once featured on Portlandia) and over a small pew-like bench lined with tables. Neatly lined bottles of syrup and spicy One Stripe Chai (brewed in the basement by the cafe’s barista trainer, Joshua Weinberg) fill the sills, while a tiny glass case by the register houses goods from Portland’s prevalent Bakeshop. The chalkboard menu is simple, with traditional espresso drink sizes, only a few add-ons, chai, and a curated tea list from the Jasmine Pearl Tea Company. A vegan cocoa-cinnamon chocolate sauce is made in-house, while shots of Ristretto Roasters blends and a guest roaster (currently Nossa Familia Coffee) are pulled on a La Marzocco Linea Classic. Additional eats, including sandwiches from Molly’s Grown to Eat and kid-friendly items, fill a small fridge by the door.

The small area feels more like a clubhouse than a church. Taborspace founder Lauren Moomaw, program manager-in-training Madi Goldsmith, and Ristretto Roasters owner Din Johnson have each worked over the years to establish Bell Tower as a welcoming, albeit whimsical space. (Elegant, etched-wood signage out front, added on last fall to beckon new customers, was the crowning touch.)

taborspace bell tower coffee ristretto roasters one stripe chai mount tabor presbyterian church portland oregon cafe sprudge

The cafe’s reach extends into the church’s main gathering space, the Copeland Commons, with colorful stained glass, high ceilings with rustic wood rafters, large leather armchairs, and a massive hearth. The Commons is filled on weekdays and Saturdays, when the cafe is open, with laptop users (long stays are encouraged, as one of Taborspace’s goals is to provide a living room-type office for those who need it), families, retirees, friends catching up, and plenty of folks filtering in from Taborspace’s for-rent community rooms.

Bell Tower’s status as a non-profit sets it apart from the rest of Portland’s craft coffee scene. And though it wasn’t the original goal, Taborspace (by way of Bell Tower) has strengthened the coffee community, too, with well-trained baristas and Weinberg’s One Stripe Chai line, which has a growing list of Portland accounts. Goldsmith and Moomaw have a working vision of expanding the Mount Tabor program to other churches, reviving spaces based on the needs of their neighborhoods. That may mean other cafes and training programs, but in the meantime, Goldsmith is excited about organizing trips to roasteries for Bell Tower’s baristas, establishing relationships with organizations helping those struggling to find employment, and working with other local businesses.

taborspace bell tower coffee ristretto roasters one stripe chai mount tabor presbyterian church portland oregon cafe sprudge

“I want to develop more partnerships with coffee shops and roasters because we’re training perfectly capable workers and it would be nice to have a pipeline for all of these people,” says Goldsmith. “I want to focus on partnerships and opportunities for our volunteers to learn more.”

For their part, the volunteers all seem grateful to be there. For some, it’s paid off in ways they never imagined. Weinberg’s trajectory into coffee, and then chai, was a winding one eventually landing him a few days a week volunteering at Bell Tower. Now he laughs heartily while describing the customers that come in off the street, demanding to know where the strong smell of ginger and cardamom is coming from, and jokes about the man-sized mortar-and-pestle he will eventually need to keep up with demand for One Stripe.

Bell Tower Coffee at Taborspace is located at 5441 Southeast Belmont Street, Portland. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Regan Crisp is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Oregon. This is Regan Crisp’s first feature for Sprudge. 

The post Bell Tower Coffee: Portland’s Serene Church Cafe appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/1pleLhW

Hedge Coffee: San Francisco’s Stylish Mobile Coffee Cart

hedge coffee cart catering company pop up san francisco mr. espresso mobile capsule sprudge

In San Francisco, it sometimes seems as if one could blindly hurl a rock and hit the storefront of a specialty coffee shop. And yet, in the ever-expanding world of tech, where companies offer nearly everything to their employees, specialty coffee has found a new place to stretch. Major players like Twitter and Facebook may pride themselves on the steaming cups of exemplary joe made available to their employees at any time of day. But for those companies that haven’t invested in providing in-office caffeine, a new, relatively sparsely occupied niche has opened: the mobile coffee cart. Simply put, the mobile cart, adorned with an upscale espresso machine and all of the necessary coffee-making accouterments, wheels the experience (and the drinks) of specialty coffee right to your doorstep. And taking the lead is Hedge Coffee.

hedge coffee cart catering company pop up san francisco mr. espresso mobile capsule sprudge

Married couple Alex and Olga Sobal—immigrants from Belarus and Russia, respectively—started Hedge Coffee in December 2015 (just two scant months ago) to fill the catering-sized hole in the San Francisco coffee market. The goal, as Olga says, is to provide “great coffee anywhere.” The Sobals found that, though there were some mobile carts serving the needs of San Franciscans, none of them seemed to focus enough on quality. Alex Sobal, the quality-control expert at Oakland’s Mr. Espresso, saw a business opportunity. “We position ourselves,” Olga says, “as the first specialty coffee catering company. We always tell people, ‘Don’t expect skim sugar-free vanilla lattes—it’s not what we do.’ ”

Purchasing a Barista Capsule from Modbar, the couple used their respective skills—Alex comes from an architect background, while Olga has a master’s in journalism—to build not only an attractive coffee cart, but one equipped to dole out consistently fantastic beverages using beans sourced and roasted through Mr. Espresso. And the result is something to behold.

hedge coffee cart catering company pop up san francisco mr. espresso mobile capsule sprudge

I visited the couple’s Hedge Coffee pop-up at the Ampersand flower shop and event space in the Mission. (Though corporate coffee service is their intended moneymaker, the duo is still working to get the word out.) Alex Sobal, thick blond dreads hanging to his mid-back, stood behind their gorgeous reinvention of the coffee cart. Sporting a glossy off-white veneer with the simple, elegant Hedge logo in black lettering, the beautiful cart features a remake of the vintage Faema E61 espresso machine and a Mazzer grinder on its flank. Upon close examination it seemed that everything had been tweaked down to the smallest detail—matte-black milk pitchers matched matte-black bags of coffee and the matte-black FETCO brewer tucked away behind the Faema, all of them offset by the cart’s clean surfaces and the splash of bright red espresso cups lining the top of the E61. The Hedge logo—two asymmetrical columns of white, embossed letters on a black background—was designed by Alex. “We have saved so much money doing all the creative work ourselves,” he says, adding, “Creative thinking in general helps to solve problems…creatively.” Everything they’ve done is informed by the mobile-coffee-cart experience they envisioned.

hedge coffee cart catering company pop up san francisco mr. espresso mobile capsule sprudge

A specialty coffee cart is not just defined by its appearance, of course—the coffee it serves is paramount. And Hedge Coffee does not slump in that regard. In the vein of Mr. Espresso, the coffee turned out from this beautiful cart is dark and rich, whether with milk and/or sugar, or nothing at all. Somehow, the coffee feels classic, a refined throwback to an espresso that existed before terms like Third or Fourth Wave coffee came along. Which fits what the Sobals are doing, as their coffee cart, tucked among the sprawl of flowers when I visited, is a reinvented nod to the simplicity of the past.

hedge coffee cart catering company pop up san francisco mr. espresso mobile capsule sprudge

And though coffee carts are frequently just segues to brick-and-mortar shops, Alex and Olga don’t plan on heading down that path. “We’ve never really thought about [having a cafe],” Olga says. “We were thinking about renting a small place for tastings, but we want to be more flexible with our time—and having a physical location requires all of your time. And, well, we aren’t ready for that yet.” In the meantime, the couple looks to spread the word of what they’re doing while also hoping to grow beyond the single unit, adding more carts and becoming what Alex Sobal refers to as a “mobile coffee company.” For now, the pair are doing what they can to fill this gap in San Francisco’s otherwise crowded coffee market. And they’re doing it with a style and charm all their own.

Visit Hedge Coffee’s official website and follow them on Twitter and Instagram.

Noah Sanders (@sandersnoah) is a Sprudge.com staff writer based in San Francisco, and a contributor to SF Weekly, Side One Track One, and The Bold Italic. Read more Noah Sanders on Sprudge.

The post Hedge Coffee: San Francisco’s Stylish Mobile Coffee Cart appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/24x5js5

Sunday, February 28, 2016

LPN’s February Natural Beauty & Wellness Faves

Spring is on its way, but the weather is still cold enough up here to warrant a few skin faves that are good for those dry skin blues and transition temperatures. This month’s faves is a lot on skincare, but I’ve also tucked in one fave for the spirit.

Here’s what I’m loving this February:

Living Libations Cell Serum & Dew Dab

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Living Libations is a seriously cool brand. I came across them when I was traveling home for Christmas and this Indie Canadian brand is doing great things with ingredients and all the love they put into their products.

My favourties this month? Their Dew*Dab & Cell*Serum.

Dew*Dab is their go-to spot treatment for your skin: a potent serum for tiny lines, cuperose (those tiny little red bumps on the face that aren’t acne), little bumps, scars, discolourations and blemishes. It’s an all rounder spot treatment – yes, lines and acne. While the ingredients are powerful, it is gentle enough to use undiluted on the areas of “interest”. :) It’s pure and wild crafted ingredients include undiluted essential oils of Cape Chamomile, Rose Otto, Cypress, Frankincense, Immortelle and Lavender. And it’s smell? Divine!

Cell*Serum on the other hand is a is phytonutrient face food that seeps into cells for cellular respiration and rejuvenation. Powerful anti-oxidants enhance sovereign cellular function. Another cool mix of ingredients in a serum include organic: cumin seed, broccoli seed, jojoba oils, with MSM infused into seabuckthorn berry, frankincense, cinnamon, chamomile, lavender, turmeric, and immortelle. ****Beware now though – this is (probably) going to make your face flush and go red for 30 minutes or so. Don’t be alarmed, but be prepared. The cinnamon and cumin bring blood to the surface of the skin infusing the cells with fresh oxygen and nutrients. I’d recommend not putting this on just before a date ;)****

So what’s the science behind turmeric? We’ve seen that twice now (before we saw it in Vintner’s Daughter).  Substances like cinnamon and turmeric contain phytonutrients that contain mild electrophiles, (the ability to attract electrons), they up-regulate the body’s protective transcription factors, thus activating skin-protecting anti-inflammatory proteins with the added benefit of inhibiting the enzymes that breakdown elasticity and collagen.

Where to Buy: 

Online at Living Libations - Dew Dab for $30 USD for 5 ml

Online at Living Libations – Cell Serum for $40 USD for 15 ml

Concealer Love: Hynt Beauty Duet Perfecting Concealer 

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Ok, so a few weeks ago I did a concealer round up, when I was desperately looking for something effective for my under eyes (a little more sleep might have done some good, but this time of year can be tough). I found some wonderful products while on my trip in Copenhagen (read the post on concealers here), but I hadn’t yet come into contact with this amazing natural corrector. Well, this one literally blasted me into a whole other level of concealer love (yup, that’s a thing and I just made it up). This is it, an official LPN fave. Under eyes, over spots, anything that needs correction, Hynt’s full coverage duet concealer is lightweight (won’t settle into lines after blended properly) and moisturizing enough that dry skin won’t look cakey. Just a little dab will do.

Where to Shop:

Shop online internationally at Eco Diva Beauty for $24 USD 

Dry Skin Saviour: Herbal Gypsies Dream Catcher Face Lotion

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Winter skin blues are still my nemsis these days — even though the days are getting longer up here in the north, the chilly air is still finding ways to keep the skin dry. Well, to all my boho babes, this herbal concoction from Herbal Gypsies.

Made with moringa oil, coconut oil, shea butter and vegan wax, this face cream is super hydrating, nourishing and natural. The essential oils of patchouli (helps with excess oil), frankincense (tightens the skin), bergamot (fights bacteria) and jasmine (tones the skin) make it a beautiful hydrating night cream (aromatherapy facial? Yes please!). All products are created with non-toxic, organic, plant based gems. The moringa powder (which they harvest themselves) its 90+ vitamins and minerals, antioxidants and omega oils kick up the skin’s glow by reducing fine lines and dark spots – antioxidants help fight free radical damage, while Vitamin C helps reduce fine lines and Vitamin A helps build collagen in skin.

Where to Buy:

Online at Herbal Gypsies from $9 USD

LPN’s Luxe Pick: Maya Chia Astaxanthin + Chia Ultra Luxe Face Oil

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Umm hello? Where have you been all my life? There is something going on in the natural beuaty industry these days, and it’s nothing short of wonderful. Every time I turn around I feel like another amazing facial oil is coming out of the wood work. This month? I’m loving the Maya Chia Super Couple Astaxanthin Chia Ultra Luxe Face Oil. This nutrient rich oil/serum combo is multi-correctional. Here’s why: revitalizes aging skin by combatting inflammation, prevents and reduces wrinkles, increases skin’s firmness, lightens age spots, brightens skin tone, moisturizes and protects against free radical damage.

What makes this oil so awesome? Supercritical chia seed oil first (packed with omega fatty acids, antioxidants & minerals), then Astaxanthin extract, which is from a type of green algae shown to have more than 65x more strength than Vitamin C to fight free radicals (clinically proven) – whoa! It also contains a host of other skin loving ingredients such as jasmine absolute, Bulgarian rose absolute, sandalwood, carrot essential oil and many other.

Where to Shop:

Online international at Maya Chia for $85 USD

Body Love: Saharjan Organic Body Ritual Ayurvedic Oil

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

In the last post, Kelsi talked about Ayurvedic massage to help boost our immunity. Looking for the perfect oil to get started on that ritual? Here it is! Ayurvedic line Sahajan focuses on purity and organic Ayurvedic ingredients that are effective on your skin. Sahajan puts the word “ritual” in their body oil for a reason, massage with natural oils is an important element of Ayurvedic treatment, but it’s not easy to find the time. So, utilize the time that you would to put on body lotion after the shower, to gently massage the body to awaken the lymphatic system and help stimulating the body to shed toxins. Like you would with a dry body brush, move the oil up towards the heart as you massage it in. Focus extra attention around the throat, around the breasts and under arms, to release build up toxins and even help lower stress.

The key ingredients include coconut oil, which hydrates deeply, sesame oil, which is used to stimulate skin and almond oil, a rich source of vitamin E that helps repair the skin from oxidative damage.

Where to Shop:

Online international at Sahajan.com for $55 USD

Post Cleanse: Mel Millis Phytonutri Rose Hydrolate Mist Tonic

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

My love of facial mists is no secret – this became especially apparent while I realized how helpful hydrosols and mists were on planes while I traveled long on long haul flights. But that love grew into a full blown affair and I use hydrosols or mists on the daily – with a real preference for those that contain rose. Mel Millis is a pure hydrolate, extracted during the distillation process of the essential oil. This is just 100% certified organic Rose flower water. Perfect for soothing and healing skin, reducing redness and perfect for the most sensitive of skin types.

Some other love for Mel Millis? The packaging is plantable – infused with British wild seeds, you can plant some wild floEco Diva Beauty for $34 USD for 50 mlers in your garden.

Where to Shop:

Online international at Eco Diva Beauty for $34 USD for 50 ml

Wellness Read: You Can Heal Your Life by Louise Hay 

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Louise Hay is a brilliant author when it comes to helping us dig into that uncomfortable stuff and get real. She’s well known for saying “If we are willing to do the mental work, almost anything can be healed.” After curing herself from cancer, she has a lot to say about the roots of illness, and the idea of “dis-ease”. This book has been a best seller for many years, and it’s no surprise.

But before you do, be ready to hear the truth. If you’re not open to hearing it, then this book will just lay on your shelf for years. Open up your heart and your head to the idea that yes, we can heal if we choose to face the problem head on. If we acknowledge where our difficulties are really rooted.

This little book could actually change your life, if you heed the wise words.

Where to Shop:

Online international at Amazon.com for $8.75 USD

Happy February, Beauties! Looking forward to breaking into spring next month with my March faves!

X

K

 



from Living Pretty, Naturally http://ift.tt/1TI1BGR

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Because I Could

The bottom

I went out for a weekend walk today, just planning on going around looking for birds. Eastern Bluebirds were the goal of the day.....and of course I found a pair fighting with a Robin before I even made it to the Heifer Pasture.



I could backdate them a couple weeks or more, because I've been hearing them, but I didn't trust that I recognized their call well enough.

Looking back down from half-way up.
Anyhow, as I walked across the bottom of Seven-County Hill, a Blue Jay called from the top.

Down from the top

Other directions



It has been years and years and years since I walked up, but it felt like a challenge and so....don't listen to the people who denigrate trying to walk 10,000 steps a day. A very short time ago I would have been hard pressed to make this walk. Today i enjoyed it.

Wanna see a video?

from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/1TefUob

The Peggy Channel....Mystery Package

The box.
Looks innocent enough, right?
But when I saw the flaps were closed, I realized that something was missing.....

An important part of the new recliner saga was the box. There wasn't a soul in this house too old to see its magical potential. Lucky is the family that has a toddler as an excuse.......

Or should I saw somebody?
As I looked at the closed flaps a tiny hand poked out and pulled them tighter closed.
And then a small person popped them open with a huge laugh. hHaha, grandma, I fooled you.

The box is so big that I didn't see that she wasn't the only one in there until her daddy started laughing too.
What a fine place to watch Paw Patrol.

After all, what a shame to waste a good box.......




from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/21pB72O

You can Tell


When they really have something... crows that is. Normally their calls are just a casual neighborhood report. Look, look, can you see? Hey, look.

When they are on a raptor, however, their caws ring like swords, slash, hack, bang, crash. Touche, take that. And that. And that. You can tell when they mean it.

They were on something this morning when I came downstairs. It sounded like a riot out there. I didn't get outdoors fast enough to see what it was. Prolly just the local Red-tailed Hawk pair though. They are here almost all the time, and the crows bedevil them endlessly. 

I keep hoping for an owl. Any owl. We have Great Horned Owls in the back, but I only see errant feathers stuck in bushes where they took out rabbits and mice.....maybe some day.

Anyhow, where Alan works they are near the sea and so they frequently see the big raptors of the watery places. Not long ago he was watching a crow bombing an Osprey, acting all that and a bucket of rice, as Liz would say.

The big bird took just so much of the little fellow stabbing at his back feathers. Then he flipped over, flew upside down for a second, nabbed the crow....pinch....with his big, sharp talons. 

And dropped him. Boom shakalaka. No more crow. 

I wish I'd seen that.

from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/1LkXsHp

Friday, February 26, 2016

Announcing The US AeroPress Championships—Regional & National Dates!

aeropress-poster

Big news today from our partners at the World AeroPress Championship, with major implications for our readers in the United States. Today WAC has announced a series of regional AeroPress events happening across the United States, with dates set for Chicago, Los Angeles, Portland, and New York City. These events will feed into a massive national U.S. AeroPress Championship event, held in conjunction with the SCAA Expo in Atlanta, Georgia. 

Event hosts include G&B Coffee in Los Angeles (March 11th), Variety Coffee in New York City (March 17th), Heart Roasters in Portland (March 25th), and Everybody’s Coffee in Chicago (February 27th). The national championship event will happen in Atlanta on Saturday, April 16th at Chatahoochie Coffee, with the winner moving on to compete in June at the World AeroPress Championship in Dublin, Ireland.

First place winners at each regional will receive a free flight to Atlanta to compete in the national event. 2nd and 3rd place regional finishers will be guaranteed a place at the national event. Let’s learn more about each regional, and gaze together upon their excellent posters.

Chicago

Chicago_MidwestRegionalAeroPress_EverybodysCoffee_AeroPress_Regional

Designed by David Salinas, Department of Brewology.

Midwest Regional AeroPress Championship

Everybody’s Coffee

Saturday, February 27, 2016

This event will happen in conjunction with The Great Lakes Coffee Showcase, a new indie coffee event in Chicago. More info for this event is available at http://ift.tt/1Q5Mo37

Los Angeles

LA_BottomLeft_GandBCoffee_AeroPress_Regional

Designed by Dyemond Obryan.

Bottom Left Regional AeroPress Championship

G&B Coffee (Grand Central Market, 317 S Broadway, Los Angeles)

Friday, March 11, 2016

6-8pm

Kyle Glanville & Charles Babinski are hosting an LA regional competition at their eponymous, iconic cafe in downtown Los Angeles  Signups are now underway, so if you’re an interested competitor, you should act act quickly to make the bracket. 

New York City

NYC_VarietyCoffee_AeroPress_Regional

Designed by Justin Buschardt.

East Coast Regional AeroPress Championship

at Variety Coffee (Cafe & Roastery, 146 Wyckoff Ave, Bushwick)

March 17, 2016

7pm

Variety Coffee are hosting a multi-borough affair at their Wyckoff Ave location in Brooklyn. Signups are happening now—we predict this will be a wildly competitive and memorable event.

Portland / Seattle

PNW_HeartRoasters_AeroPress_Regional

Designed by Elizabeth Chai.

PNW Regional AeroPress Championship

at Heart Roasters (Roastery, 923 SE Hawthorne, Portland)

March 25, 2016

7-10:30pm

Longtime AeroPress enthusiast Wille Yli-Luoma of Heart Coffee is hosting this event at Heart’s spacious and tastefully appointed new roastworks in SE Portland. Signups start Monday, February 29 at 10am. Join this event’s Facebook group for more information, and visit www.pnwaeropress.com for all the latest. 

For much more on the world of competitive AeroPressing, visit http://ift.tt/1gJ2Yoq and follow these American events on Instagram @U.S.AeroPressChampionship

 

The post Announcing The US AeroPress Championships—Regional & National Dates! appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/21nGH5O

Inside Stone Creek Coffee’s New Colombia Field Report Box Set

colombia-package

Since launching our weekly Nice Package feature series on coffee packaging design in 2015, we’ve been overjoyed by the response. Roasters from around the world have reached out to have their brands featured, and we’ve been on the receiving end of some stunning, gorgeous, and innovative submissions. But a recent Package arrived at our door that took things a step further, from our friends & partners at Stone Creek Coffee in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It’s a brand new project called Field Reports, grown out of Stone Creek’s Case Study box sets designed to shine a light on notable producing partners in different coffee growing regions. We couldn’t just admire the box for its beauty alone; this Field Report demands a deeper look.

To learn more, we reached out to Stone Creek’s co-owner Eric Resch, as well as Stone Creek Director of Coffee Christian Ott, to talk lot building, coffee varieties, producing country “soulmates”, and where the Case Studies / Field Reports project is headed next. At time of publication there are Field Report box sets remaining from Stone Creek, but act quick if this piques your interest—this is a limited-edition project.

colombia-nice-package-box

Please tell me a bit more about the design inspiration behind the box set. Why the posters? Why the box set style?

Christian Ott: The goal behind our box set project is to create something that is immediately accessible for our customers to engage with. It is easy for us to geek out on really high-end coffees (and we often do in our lab), but often, these coffees are not accessible to the general public (especially here in Milwaukee, where roast and low acidity are often preferred). Our goal in a kit is to explore one topic—but make it both simple so that anyone could pick it up and learn something but also geeks can still dig it. This is our first “Field Report” Box Set, where we dive deep into a particular origin. The format of a box set allows us to provide a customer with multiple examples of whatever theme we are working on. Moreover, the poster is a concise way of communicating both visually and anecdotally what we are doing.

There’s a line in the box set poster that says “Colombia is our coffee-producing soulmate”—but why? Where does that affinity come from for Stone Creek?

Eric Resch: We consider Colombia a “soulmate” because a lot of the specialty coffee produced in Colombia has the potential to meet our criteria. Due to the terroir, processing, and drying constraints, we tend to find many Colombians have that special balance of “Sweet, Clean and Juicy.”

We are also currently stoked about Colombia because it is so diverse. We love being able to find fresh jammin’ coffee throughout the year. Finally, I get jazzed to find 85, 86, 87 coffees on the table from places others might not consider.

colombia-box-open-stone-creek

Your field report poster shares a lot of information—elevation, variety, geography, beer consumption (lol)—so please talk to me about why you included the info you did. And was there any info you had to leave out?

CO: There is so much that you can explore in Colombia, and for this one we had a two-page list of ideas that we had to cut down. What we wanted to do was provide a simple overview of the 2-3 things we thought were unique to Colombia. We came up with harvest cycles, growing regions, varieties, and a little bit on processing. However, yeah, there was still a ton of information that we could have added in.

What inspired the Field Reports project? What have you profiled so far, and where do you want the project to go next?

CO: This is our first “Field Report” of a given country. We’ll likely target 1-2 countries per year. We also do “Case Study” box sets, where we do an experiment with a producer—so far we’ve done Case Studies on “One Coffee, Three Processes,” “One Coffee, Three Roasts,” “Honey Processing,” and “One Farm, Three Altitudes.”

colombia-bags-line-up-stonecreek

The other person in all this is Danilo Caro, your coffee producing partner, who sounds like he has a fascinating history converting from dairy farming to coffee growing. I’ll avoid making the obvious “Wisconsin love of dairy farmers” joke but I’m just curious—what’s your relationship like with Danilo? Has he seen the Field Report box yet? What does he think of all this?

CO: Our relationship with Danilo is brand new. In fact, we were just lucky enough to be cupping in Colombia when we did. Danilo had just delivered his first set of samples to the team at Azahar—and they happened to be on the table when we arrived. As we often say, the cup does not lie—and these coffees scored extremely well. You could tell right away that something was up (in a good way). We went to go visit Danilo the next day and got a chance to walk El Vergel and see all the old/heirloom trees on his farm. I know that he knows that we bought his coffee and that we were asking a lot of questions after the fact. We have a Box Set in the mail to him right now…we are looking forward to hearing his feedback.

I do this sometimes, though. I get excited about a coffee—buy it—and then need to figure out what to do with it. I knew that I had three different lots from El Vergel, and I thought about doing a Case Study on different compositions of varieties in a “blend”. But thought that would be too complicated and unclear to the customer. Also, Danilo is still going through the farm (he’s only had it for a few years) and learning all the coffee on the farm. So, I wanted to paint it as a quick snapshot of old varieties, undisturbed, and tell the story of an entire country through the lens of those coffees.

In the box set poster, you talk about the coffee varieties growing at El Vergel as “the past and future of Colombian coffee’—expand on that please.

CO: The past refers to the varieties growing on the farm. As we were walking through, for some reason, there was a whole bunch of different Colombia, Castillo, Caturra, and heirloom varieties planted throughout the farm. Each new generation of Colombia/Castillo plants are slightly different—the same with Caturra or any other variety. So, we stumbled into something that was pretty amazing.

The future refers to the way Danilo invested back into the farm—and knowing that specialty route is the only way to make it happen. In just a year, he had to completely renovate all the walking paths and invested in the wet/dry milling operations. His picking was fantastic. This farm could have easily been delivered to a cooperative coffee mill for generations without understanding the quality here. At some point, it may be fun to separate out the varieties and see how each one contributes to the overall cup profile, but that’s probably a couple years down the road.

Which lot in the box is your personal favorite?

CO: I’m a fan of very subtle and delicate flavors—so I’m drawn to Lot 2. There is a distinct passion fruit flavor in this coffee followed by a sweet graham cracker finish. According to Danilo, this lot is about 20% Yellow Colombia, 80% Red Colombia with scattered Red/Yellow Caturra, and a few heirloom trees.

colombia-np-coffee

Each lot is a blend of different coffee varieties—were you able to try, say, Yellow Bourbon or Caturra coffees from Danilo on their own? Lot building (like wine blending or choosing hops) is a real art and I’m just curious if you can expand on that a bit for us.

CO: Indeed, it’s an art, and I think it’s an unappreciated one at most. I can’t speak well to what goes through a producer’s mind when he/she plants mixed varieties on a farm in terms of cup profile. But, I do wager they think about sustainability.

Many specialty roasters today are infatuated with single-variety coffees. While they’re sexy and taste amazing, they’re not necessarily sustainable in the long term. Monocultures scare me—and they should scare everyone who loves amazing coffee. Given the severity of diseases like coffee rust and broca, we should be encouraging farms to have a strong diversity of coffees. Indeed, all the different varieties can contribute uniquely to a cup quality, but equally important is the terroir and processing done to those varieties. For the longest time, we had this negative perception of Catimors. However, when you taste something like Danilo’s coffees (primarily Colombia/Catimor varieties), you get a glimpse of how insignificant varieties may be to the overall cup profile. Could a Gesha or Ethiopia Typica score a point or two higher? Probably.

Jordan Michelman is a co-founder and editor at Sprudge. Read more Jordan Michelman on Sprudge.

The post Inside Stone Creek Coffee’s New Colombia Field Report Box Set appeared first on Sprudge.



from Sprudge http://ift.tt/1pcxITP