Wednesday, May 31, 2017

The Science Behind Coffee Withdrawal

It’s not a lack of coffee that gives me a headache, it’s all the stupid questions that seem to swarm around my uncaffeinated moments. Surely I can’t be required to know with 100% accuracy if I’ve already changed my six-month old daughter’s diaper or not when I haven’t had any coffee. That’s downright unreasonable, right?

Obviously, not having coffee doesn’t have much effect on me, but others aren’t so lucky. Headaches, lethargy, and irritability are just of a few of the side effects of forgoing caffeine. But have you ever wondered why this is? A recent article from Food & Wine examines the science behind the headaches.

As Food & Wine notes, caffeine is still addictive (which sounds a little judgy to me, but whatever), and with not feeding the monkey comes withdrawals.

According to the article, caffeine works by adhering to adenosine receptors in your brain, keeping the neurotransmitter from binding to those receptors. Adenosine slows down brain activity and causes you to feel sleepy, so when caffeine keeps it from binding, it keeps you from feeling sleepy. The brain compensates by creating more and more adenosine. So once you stop drinking coffee, all that adenosine comes back withe a vengeance, causing a strong desire to sleep and a throbbing headache.

So whenever you are feeling foul because of a dearth of coffee, blame your brain. It’s conspiring to make you feel worse. Or don’t ever stop drinking coffee. That’ll show your stupid brain who’s boss.

It’s like that old saying goes, “Distance makes the heart grow fonder, but it makes the head ache stronger.”

Zac Cadwalader is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network.

*top image via StickyComics.com

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East One Coffee Roasters Bring Unfussy Coffee And Fare To Brooklyn

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

On an unassuming corner in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Carrol Gardens, at the intersection of Carroll and Court Streets, used to be home to a beloved red sauce joint called Casa Rosa. It opened in 1979 and ran a steady business as a local favorite until 2013, when its owners closed down shop for good. But Casa Rosa was never replaced—in fact, the storefront remained vacant for years. That is, until Tom Cummings saw it had come on the market.

“People have, for a while now, been peeking in through the boards and construction to see what’s coming,” Cummings says. Now it’s no secret—East One Coffee Roasters has arrived. “We’ve been soft open for just a few days,” he adds. “And the neighborhood seems to be excited.”

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

Cummings and his longtime partner, Morten Tjelum, envisioned East One as a space of intersection for exceptional coffee and approachable food—they’re open in the morning to supply patrons with a caffeine fix all the way through dinner service.

“Older women have come in this week,” Cummings says. “And they are like my mom—they tell me about the neighborhood, and we can chat for hours about food and coffee.” East One isn’t Cummings’ first coffee rodeo, however. “I was living in Denmark and the coffee scene wasn’t very good—around 1996,” he says. He spent that time owning an American restaurant in Central Copenhagen before selling it to work for IKEA, where he stayed for 15 years.

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge
east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

“But I couldn’t shake the coffee thoughts I was having,” Cummings says. “So I decided to do the independent thing and we opened New Row Coffee. You know, it’s quite simple, I’ve been in food all my life—from watching my family cook when I was young, to having my own places all over. But this was when I became truly introspective and thoughtful, and coffee just felt like my life was taking me towards it.”

It was also taking him toward New York, where he’d be inspired by Ninth Street Espresso before opening Free State Coffee, also alongside Tjelum. Here they fiddled with batch brews and deepened a passion for their product. “Coffee is all about bringing multifaceted people that can do great things,” Cummings says. “And so we brought that to New York.”

Waiting for them was James Stahon, East One’s head of coffee (the three met through Sprudge Jobs), who now roasts on-site in a gorgeous glassed-in area with a Diedrich IR-12.

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

“I tasked James to find blends that were acceptable to the mass palate of New York,” Cummings says. “But isn’t a typical city roast so often found in this town. We wanted to stretch that palate—and that’s the longer term vision for us.” East One currently serves an everyday coffee for local New Yorkers, but will soon buy seasonally from individual lots and offer those coffees as lighter-roasted options.

“We currently work with Crop to Cup, who let me work before we had our own space,” Stahon says. “We source three coffees from them—Sonar, a blend from Guatemala, Ethiopia, and Tanzania; Guji, which is an Ethiopian Sidamo; and then Prism which is the filter blend, [and] also Guatemala, Ethiopia, and Tanzania.”

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

He explains that the process of finding a flexible coffee, for use as both drip and espresso offerings, was lengthy. “I started the sourcing process not at the best time—it was in the off-season so I couldn’t find fresh arrivals,” Stahon says. “We did so many cuppings looking for the perfect components. I didn’t want that fermenty taste—we wanted a quieter taste.” Now he feels as though he has it.

Next on Stahon’s agenda is finding single-origin coffees to “exercise the muscles of taste,” he says. “We want to challenge ourselves and our clients but to remain approachable. And that means slightly stepping outside of what you think coffee could be.”

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

Selina Ullrich, East One’s coffee and operations manager, echoes Stahon. “This neighborhood is also ready to be challenged. You can actually make progress with a good explanation,” she says, adding that there’s a certain pleasure in watching customers move from “this won’t stress you out coffee” to more complex cups.

In appreciation of the role water plays in the coffee process, East One will support international charities focused on clean water initiatives. One of the first examples is Three Avocados, a non-profit dedicated to bolstering access to clean water in coffee-growing regions.

east one coffee roasters brooklyn new york cafe sprudge

For those in the area, this may just be your new favorite neighborhood cafe. But with a strong local base, it won’t be long before the East One corner is a destination worth traveling to.

East One Coffee Roasters is located at 384 Court Street, Brooklyn. Visit their official website and follow them on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram.

Daniel Scheffler is a Sprudge staff writer at large. His work has appeared in T MagazineTravel And LeisureMonoclePlayboyNew York MagazineThe New York Times, and Butt. Read more Daniel Scheffler on Sprudge.

Photos courtesy of Ethan Covey

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Talking About Talking About Taste And Smell With Linguist Ilja Croijmans

ilja croijmans interview odor naming is difficult coffee wine research nijmegen netherlands sprudge

ilja croijmans interview odor naming is difficult coffee wine research nijmegen netherlands sprudge

Meet Ilja Croijmans, a Dutch scholar doing pioneering research into the language that humans use to describe smells and tastes. People in the business of beverages and, for that matter, anyone who is fastidious about flavor will be intrigued by his findings, which are summarized in his report “Odor Naming Is Difficult, Even For Wine And Coffee Experts.” Croijmans, who is completing a Ph.D. at the Centre for Language Studies at Radboud University Nijmegen, published the 2015 article with Asifa Majid, his university mentor and an affiliated principal investigator with the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics.

But take note, Team Coffee, the research revealed that wine experts were more consistent in describing the wines they tasted than coffee experts were with coffees. And Speciality Coffee Association of Europe-trained professionals were about as consistent in their coffee judgments as laypeople. Say whaaa? Excusez-moi? Sprudge lobbed such protests (along with more scientific questions) at Croijmans—himself a Scotch whisky fan known to brew sour stout at home and keep an AeroPress at work.

In the article, you say that articulating odors is a challenge for speakers from “WEIRD”–that is, Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic–cultures compared to some others. Why is that?

One possibility we investigated is that this is because WEIRD cultures don’t have the words to talk about smell. For example, the Jahai, a hunter-gatherer community in Thailand, have about 12 words for smells that can be compared to our words for colors. Those words are short, abstract, used very often, and can be applied to many different smells. For example, “the smell of bat droppings, smoke, ginger root, and petroleum are all described with the word cŋɛs,” as found by another cited study in the article. But in WEIRD cultures, we don’t have a vocabulary for smells like the Jahai, so we come up with other strategies. When we describe smells, we often use comparisons or references to source terms, for example “tastes like chicken” or “smells like flowers.” This might be part of the explanation: We don’t have the words to specifically talk about smells.

Another possibility is that we just don’t get enough practice describing smells in our daily lives. This is why odor and flavor experts are so interesting: They get plenty of practice putting their sensory perceptions into words.

In view of this cultural discrepancy, you conducted a study to see if the specialized training that flavor experts from WEIRD cultures undergo could make them better at naming smells than laypeople. What did you find?

We asked wine experts, coffee experts, and laypeople to describe the smell and the flavor of different wines and different coffees as well as more “simple” smells, like lemon and cinnamon, and tastes, [like] sweet, sour, bitter, and salty. Then we looked at how consistent they were—that is, how many of the same words the different experts mentioned for the same coffee or wine. What we found surprised us: Only wine experts were more consistent in describing smells and flavors—but only smells and flavors of wines, not of coffees or the other smells and tastes. However, the same finding did not hold true for coffee experts and their consistency in naming smells and flavors of coffee.

ilja croijmans interview odor naming is difficult coffee wine research nijmegen netherlands sprudge

Photo courtesy of Ilja Croijmans

You had 22 wine professionals (each holding a WSET Level 3 Award), 20 coffee professionals (holding an SCAE Diploma), and 21 laypeople come to Nijmegen. Can you describe the methodology used to test their coffee palates?

I prepared five different coffees for each participant by grinding the coffee very shortly before the experiment and preparing it in the same way you would when cupping coffee. I asked the participants to smell each coffee, describe the smell, then taste the coffee, and describe the flavor. Importantly, I instructed all participants, including the wine experts and laypeople, to slurp! This is something that comes naturally to coffee experts because it is important for the flavor of coffee but is not so natural for laypeople.

What was most important for us was that the coffees were distinct—for example, using a Brazilian and an Ethiopian, both of which have very distinct flavors. We expected this to provide enough opportunity for participants to say interesting things about the smell and the flavor of each coffee. In addition, the coffee had to taste the same on each day, so I would carefully monitor the temperature of the water because this influences taste. We used coffee roasted in exactly the same way for each participant, from the same batch of beans. To achieve this, we worked with coffee roaster Björn Aarts. Also important was for the differences between coffees to be somewhat comparable to the differences between wines. We did this by looking for parallels between coffee and wine production; different grape varieties parallel different coffee varieties, and we used both wines and coffees from different origins and continents.

And how do coffee experts compare to wine experts?

Interestingly, coffee experts did not agree on coffee smells and flavors the way wine experts agreed on wine smells and flavors. In terms of this agreement, coffee experts were more comparable to laypeople. What we did find is that coffee experts use significantly more concrete source terms, like “fruit” or “peanut,” than laypeople, and fewer evaluative terms like “nice” or “disgusting.”

What accounts for the differences?

One hypothesis is that wine language is much more incorporated in our culture. You find wine descriptions everywhere, but not coffee descriptions. It could be that wine experts get more opportunities to talk about wine. With current developments in the coffee industry, with more and more coffee descriptions everywhere, it’s interesting to keep track of the developments. Perhaps once coffee language is more engrained in our culture, like wine language, we can repeat the experiment to see if the coffee experts have “caught up!”

And the differences between professionals and laypeople?

Overall, you see that experts use much less evaluative descriptions than laypeople. For laypeople, the fact that something tastes good or bad is incredibly important, but this seems less important for experts; they judge it based on the different flavors, whether there is balance, et cetera.

What implications does your research have for coffee professionals?

It is extremely hard to improve your sense of smell or taste in terms of sensitivity, but it seems possible to become more sensitive to particular smells if you train enough. For example, think of a specific coffee fault that you could train your sensitivity for by smelling over and over again. The research isn’t very conclusive, but it seems you can become more sensitive through training, though this is restricted to that specific smell. I can offer a wine example because this is what most research has been done on: Wine experts seem to be able to become more sensitive to this thing called “ladybug taint,” the smell that wine gets when ladybugs contaminate the grape juice during fermentation. Wine experts are more sensitive to that smell—they actually seem to smell it better than laypeople.

In terms of language, we show a somewhat similar picture. It is important to practice your language by talking to other people about the smell and the flavor of coffee. Take every opportunity to talk about what you smell and taste. If our hypothesis is true, this will improve your ability to describe coffee, and that would make the entire expert community agree more on the language of coffee.

What might this mean for everyday coffee drinkers?

If all coffee experts agree on how to name flavors and smells of coffee, drinkers might benefit because they could more easily learn what they like in a coffee. It would then matter less which barista you went to for your espresso because they would all speak the same “coffee language,” and be able to explain in the same terms how their coffees taste. So this would improve consumer-directed language, and the consumer’s expectations would be better met. Having a consistent vocabulary further professionalizes the field, too. Ultimately, coffee drinkers would benefit in every way.

So what comes next to further this research?

I already hinted at this, but it would be interesting to see what happens in 10 years in the field of coffee, and then repeat this study! Coffee and coffee expertise is a topic that deserves much more attention in the same way wine and wine expertise already receives attention from the scientific community. Besides the parallels between coffee and wine, there are also marked differences between the two beverages and expertise types—these differences alone deserve research.

Read more about Ilja Croijmans here and follow him on Twitter.

Karina Hof is a Sprudge staff writer based in Amsterdam. Read more Karina Hof on Sprudge

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Marshmallows


Imagine my delight when writing the Farm Side this week led me on a tangent that turned out to be a lot of fun. 

I guess I shouldn't have been surprised though...that is often the case. I will start to do a bit of research to flesh out an idea and discover something I had never imagined. There is often more to the history of things than appears on the surface.

This week it was the history of marshmallows....

Pretty unexpected, huh? I figured they were invented maybe in the 19th century or so, by some confectioner in a room behind a candy store somewhere, but the reality is much more interesting.


And it has been heartening a way to read that Congress, as well as the mainstream and alternate press, are finally taking notice of this story. This has popped up on farm pages for ages and I have written about the "mini'mountain range" nonsense several times, here, as well as in the Farm Side in more detail. Bout time the bigwigs took notice of the egregious stuff going on in the name of environmentalism.  Maybe now things will get better, although I should know better than to expect that.

A-a-and...it's raining again as usual. I got up to write while the house was quiet to find it sprinkling lightly. The birds were doing a mighty dawn chorus, although the dawn itself was darned thin soup. Suddenly, with a crash, it began to pour. Now it is steadily sploshing down, drip, drip, drop, drop, drizzle, drizzle, drizzle.

Enough already! I feel like Forrest Gump. (thanks Rich)

 "One day it started raining, and it didn't quit for four months. We been through every kind of rain there is. Little bitty stingin' rain... and big ol' fat rain. Rain that flew in sideways. And sometimes rain even seemed to come straight up from underneath. Shoot, it even rained at night..."





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Tuesday, May 30, 2017

The Coffee Guide To Munich

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Munich, home of Oktoberfest and lederhosen, Viktualienmarkt, and weisswurst. And…coffee. Yes, the southern Bavarian city has a drinking tradition besides beer! If you’ve ever been to Munich, you might have even come across the name Dallmayr, a famous coffeehouse and roaster (among other things) for more than 300 years.

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Munich’s Viktualienmarkt

Munich is also known as the “northernmost city of Italy.” The inhabitants of Munich love to stroll around, to sit outside, to see and be seen. If the Italian coffee tradition is still slightly out of reach, Munich is interested and learning.

For your next visit, coffee fan, you might want to take more time to explore the city beyond the usual sights, because Munich’s specialty coffee scene has been evolving over the past five years, with two new cafes just opened in fall 2016. Since 2015 Munich has also been home of the 2016 German Coffee Championships, which took place in November, and the city’s coffee future is bright.

Mahlefitz

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Peter Schlögl, owner of Mahlefitz, has a background in wine. The way to specialty coffee, as we know, is not far from there: both offer broad varieties in flavors and approaches. Mahlefitz, Schlögl’s roastery and cafe, opened in January 2014. His roasting style, as well as the interior design of the cafe, are very much inspired by Scandinavia. The chairs, for example, are vintage from 1950s and ’70s Denmark. The roasts that come through his Loring roaster—one of only two of its type in Germany—are light, bright, and juicy.

The keen-eyed might notice one detail, something many specialty shops aim for (but usually concede to customer demand): there’s no sugar here. If you try the espresso, though—pulled with a Synesso—you can taste the sweet precision that goes into every shot. That said, you should definitely try one of the cakes for your sweet tooth, or, if you’re up for something more savory, a freshly made sandwich or the housemade granola.

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

After three years in business with Mahlefitz, Schlögl is ready to launch a mobile version. “It is my approach to offer as much as possible of the coffee supply chain, from green coffee to the cup,” he says. “With the espresso bike, I want to take the next step.” The bike will begin traversing the city later this year.

Mahlefitz is located at Nymphenburger Straße 51. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Man Versus Machine

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

It was my second time visiting Man Versus Machine and my second time talking to Marco Mehrwald, one of the owners. This time, though, I was at Man Versus Machine’s new location in Munich’s Maxvorstadt district, right next to a new university. Both of the cafes show the love for Japan and its culture shared by Mehrwald and Cornelia Mehrwald, his wife and co-owner (exemplified by the huge, folding, indigo-blue fabric on the wall of the new cafe). The Mehrwalds’ personalities can be seen in their beverages and coffee equipment (such as several Japanese teas and Hario filter-brewing gear), as well as in their design choices: the instruction they gave Jon Contino, the designer of their striking logo—a crocodile—came out like this: Scandinavian freshness meets California skate culture meets Japanese attention to detail.

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Besides the light-roasted coffees—via the Probat roaster in Man Versus Machine’s first location, in Munich’s Glockenbachviertel—shipped to coffee lovers and specialty cafes all over Europe, as well as the specialty tea also offered in the new cafe, the espresso at the new location is made with a custom-designed Nuova Simonelli Black Eagle. For filter coffee, you can choose between a BUNN batch brewer or hand-filtered with an AeroPress, Kalita, or syphon. The Maxvorstadt spot also offers the famous Franzbrötchen, another personal touch from the Mehrwalds, since the famous pastry originally hails from Hamburg, where both used to live.

Man Versus Machine has multiple locations. Visit their official website and follow them on Twitter and Instagram.

Café Blá

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Blá means “blue” in Icelandic, and this cafe’s interior and design details reflect the color in a consistent but restrained way. As I sit down with Stephanie Bjarnason, the owner of Café Blá, I notice her shirt is the same color. Bjarnason is an engineer who turned her dream of having her own specialty cafe into a reality at the end of October. Both her personality and that of her homeland, Iceland, shine through in the cafe and also her conversation.

“Coffee, filter coffee, is always the focus in Iceland,” she says. “When someone asks you to meet for tiu dropar—’10 drops’ in Icelandic—they want to meet for coffee. Every household even used to roast its own coffee, in a pan on the stove.” As it is back home, Bjarnason’s focus is on filter coffee. Of course, she offers espresso—pulled from the blue La Marzocco GB5—and with the help of Vits der Kaffee (see below) even created the cafe’s own espresso blend: Àlfrún, which means “secret of the elves.” (The secret in this case is notes of citrus fruit as well as chocolate.)

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

As for Café Blá’s single-origin coffees, two varying filter roasts and espresso roasts are offered, with one of them—right now an Ethiopia Samii—being used for both filter and espresso. For the indecisive customer, Bjarnason will be glad to prepare a Duo (espresso and filter) or a Trio (espresso and cappuccino and filter). What would a Nordic-style coffee experience like this be without cinnamon buns? When ordering coffee at the counter, they sit nearby right at eye level — you literally can’t (and shouldn’t) overlook them.

Café Blá is located at Lilienstraße 34. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Vits der Kaffee

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Located close to the famous Viktualienmarkt, Vits der Kaffee might be the oldest coffeehouse offering both classic-style coffees for the neighborhood visitor as well as a broad variety of specialty coffees from around the world. Business consultant Alexander Vits opened the roastery-plus-coffee bar over 10 years ago. Now the coffeehouse is evenly split: half is still devoted to the classic coffeehouse experience for everyone looking for the German tradition of cake and coffee, including the brown wooden Viennese-style coffeehouse chairs.

The other half is a modern specialty coffee business doing direct sourcing and trading (with partners as far away as Peru), holding courses, and serving filter coffees brewed with a broad variety of gear that is also available for purchase. While talking to Wolfgang Helmreich, roaster at Vits, we drank two cups of Panama Esmeralda, a washed Geisha and a natural Catuai. “We are aiming for transparency with everything we do,” he says. “The sourcing, the roasting on our Coffee Tech Ghibli R15, as well as our wholesale business to cafes and restaurants in Munich and Germany-wide.”

Vits der Kaffee is located at Rumfordstraße 49. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook.

Standl 20

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

vits der kaffee standl 20 café blá bald neu man versus machine mahlefitz munich germany coffee cafe guide sprudge

Johannes Bayer, who worked as a barista at Vits while studying, is probably known best to coffee fans as the roaster behind JB Coffee. He is also now the owner of a cafe, Standl 20, which opened in May 2015. Bayer says he’s been in the roasting business for many years already (his studies in education never came to be used) selling his coffees all over Europe, but he’s been underrepresented in Munich itself. After using a short video to introduce the cafe concept behind Standl 20 to the landlords who rent the market stands at Elisabethmarkt, Bayer now runs the only coffee stand at the market, serving coffee from within a tiny space that’s especially cozy during wintertime, when I visited.

Bayer wants to push the creative part of coffee by offering a variety of signature drinks—served hot or cold, depending on the season—with either a Marco batch-brewed filter coffee or an espresso pulled from a custom Kees van der Westen Mirage as their base. The newest addition to the menu is a mokka, which is prepared traditionally in hot sand.

Standl 20 is located within Markt am Elisabethplatz. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Melanie Böhme is a freelance journalist based in Frankfurt, Germany. Read more Melanie Böhme on Sprudge.

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Garage Coffee Tokyo: Slow And Steady In Shibuya

On the outskirts of central Shibuya—just past the towers of H&M, Don Quijote, and the Bunkamura department store—is a curious space with a small van inside it. That van contains an espresso machine, a grinder, a hanging plant, two stuffed animals, and a few other miscellaneous bits and pieces. If you can find this van, you’ve found Garage Coffee.

Owner Shinichiro Yamashita says the shop is named for its short history—before Garage Coffee, the space was literally a parking garage. When that endeavor went south, Yamashita was invited to turn the space into a dedicated coffee shop and roastery, and he opened Garage Coffee in June of 2016.

Yamashita says his van is ideal for coffee deliveries and outdoor events, but it’s also a subtle nod to his humble beginnings with Motoya Express, a van-based coffee catering service. At that time, he liked the freedom of the work more than coffee, but eventually he discovered roasting and opened a small coffee shop in the quiet neighborhood of Heiwajima to follow his passion. The old Fuji Royal at the back of Garage Coffee has been his trusty sidekick ever since.

“Although I get better at roasting with time,” he says, “I’ve really come to realize that, no matter how good you get, the beans are everything.”

This is part of the reason Yamashita serves a comparatively small range of coffee: Ethiopia Yirgacheffe, Burundi Buzira, and two blends. These days he’s less interested in variety and more interested in serving a selection of his favorites, which run the spectrum from light to dark.

When I first met Yamashita, he said he saw light roast as sashimi (raw fish) and dark roast as grilled fish: While one pursues a purity of flavor, the other looks to craft something new through cooking and experimentation. And playing with these ideas is clearly his favorite thing about working with coffee.

“Roasting is just really interesting,” he says. “I get excited when we get new beans to roast, and I love the anticipation of discovering the potential in a new coffee. I also like that blends offer a chance to create something new. It’s fun.”

The interior of Garage Coffee feels like a rehearsal space for a ’90s indie band: a chain-link fence, simple bench seating, plastic drums for stools, and walls dotted with posters and postcards. There are even a few amps by the wall, playing the day’s soundtrack.

Although the cafe space is usually quiet and relaxed, Yamashita says the pace of the neighborhood took some getting used to: There are more tourists and fewer regulars. He loves the variety of people that visit, but he misses connecting with the local community. The area has both benefits and drawbacks. He says it’s a popular location he never thought he’d find himself in and attributes the luck he had finding the location to the changing identity of Tokyo’s population.

“I don’t think coffee has changed a lot, but I do think that people are changing,” he says. “They understand coffee more and know more about it. There’s also more media, both domestic and international. The change hasn’t been big, really—it’s been slow and steady.”

And when I think about it, slow and steady is a good description for Yamashita and Garage Coffee as well. In his little coffee shop with his little van, he has introduced a slower pace of life into one of Tokyo’s busiest locations, while finding steady work doing the thing he loves most.

Garage Coffee is located at Shibuya-Ku Maruyamacho, Hotel En Garage, 1-1. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Hengtee Lim is a Sprudge staff writer based in Tokyo. Read more Hengtee Lim on Sprudge.

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Monday, May 29, 2017

Some Gave All



The boss's best high school friend did not come home...he still tells stories of their adventures as lively young men. We visit the cemetery every now and then...

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Sunday, May 28, 2017

Mason Lake

We tried Pecks for a boat rental and fishing trip, but there was no one at the marina, so we headed North.

Open freshwater mussels like this were scattered everywhere. Raccoons been busy maybe...


There we discovered a road, heretofore unmarked, which took us to a little kayak and canoe launch on Mason Lake, which is a really nice little gem south of Indian Lake.

12 little Mallards swimming in a row


The kids fished for a while, while I hunted for birds, as I had forgotten my fishing license (it is now in my camera case). They hooked some bullheads, which promptly dragged their lines under rocks, and saw a nice Small Mouth Bass as well.



The birds were enthusiastic, and included the first Veery of the year, Ovenbirds, and Red-eyed Vireos.



Alas, the blackflies were even more eager at their work and Alan wanted to barbecue, so we came on home fairly early. Fun trip though. I have always liked that little lake and it is even better to actually be able to access the shoreline and adjacent woods.


There was even a Ruby-throated Hummingbird enjoying an apple tree plumb laden with bloom
And with bumblebees, as it is finally warm enough for them to be out pollinating.



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Saturday, May 27, 2017

Week of Birds

Baby Grackles. Their parents have utterly fouled...or should it be fowled...my garden pond,
dumping fecal sacs into it. Can't wait until they fledge.


LOTS of these around this year

Brown Thrasher. They nest in the wild roses near the lawn

Baby Starling, yippee skippy




from Northview Diary http://ift.tt/2qpAt5k