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  <id>10075</id>
  <title>Masters of the Bean</title>
  <published_at>Tue Aug 15 18:19:00 -0700 2006</published_at>
  <link>http://www.chow.com/stories/10075</link>
  <pubDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2006 01:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
  <short_description>A guide to some of the best specialty coffee roasters in America</short_description>
  <long_description>Today&#8217;s coffee connoisseurs want to be on a first-name basis with their roaster. They want to know not only which country the beans came from but which region, or even which &#8220;estate.&#8221; They obsess over freshness and brew time and water temperature.</long_description>
  <img>http://www.chow.com/assets/2006/08/coffee_roasters_270x270.jpg</img>
  <author>Brendan Vaughan</author>
  <category>
    <id>6</id>
    <name>Feature</name>
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        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.budweiser.com/default.asp">Budweiser</a> used to be good enough. <a href="http://www.gallo.com/">Gallo</a> used to be good enough. Even <a href="http://www.starbucks.com/default.asp?cookie%5Ftest=1">Starbucks</a> used to be good enough.</p>


	<p>OK, that last one was a cheap shot. But the point is that it’s now possible to get all <em>Sideways</em> over coffee. Like wine, beer, whiskey, cigars, and olive oil, coffee is now firmly divided into two broad categories: mass and micro. And while Starbucks (a member in good standing of the <a href="http://www.scaa.org/">Specialty Coffee Association of America</a>) does still cling to its position straddling both&#8212;a quality-driven West Coast roaster that just happened to get gigantic&#8212;it’s only a matter of time until that perception is gone. The cognoscenti already regard a cup of Starbucks as dismissively as a bottle of <a href="http://www.robertmondavi.com/">Mondavi</a> merlot: not bad exactly, just so . . . mass.</p>


	<p>Today’s coffee connoisseurs want to be on a first-name basis with their roasters. They want to know not only which country the beans came from but also which region, or even which “estate.” They want to know whether the beans were air or drum roasted. They want to know who roasted them, and where, and how long ago. They obsess over freshness and brew time and water temperature and coffee-to-water ratio. They hold “cupping” parties. They blind taste single-origin coffees and jot down tasting notes like “good clarity” and “ripest cherry; fully developed.”</p>


	<p>So what’s inspiring these rhapsodic scribblers? What makes specialty coffee so special? Broadly speaking, it’s the difference between artisan and industrial, between <em>hecho a mano</em> and mass-produced. Of course, microroasters do use machines to roast their coffees. But the machines are small and run by craftsmen, not operators, who roast carefully, one batch at a time. For example, John Gant, the master roaster at <a href="http://www.gimmecoffee.com/">Gimme Coffee</a> in Ithaca, New York, uses a quarter-bag Sivetz convection roaster, which can accommodate about 34 pounds per roast. Canned-coffee producers use continuous, or high-yield, roasters that flash-roast at very high temperatures.</p>


	<p>But specialty coffee begins long before the roasting stage. Whereas most mass-produced coffee comes from the hearty, disease-resistant, adaptable robusta plant, nearly all specialty coffee is brewed with arabica, a much more temperamental species. There’s also an enormous range of quality within the arabica species (and its subvarietals such as bourbon, typica, and caturra). This is where specialty roasters distinguish themselves. Geoff Watts, chief buyer for <a href="http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/">Intelligentsia Coffee</a> in Chicago, spends about five months a year &#8220;at source,” cultivating relationships with the best growers, coaxing from them the absolute best beans possible, and cupping lots and lots of coffee.</p>


	<p>In the same way that the wine industry celebrates its finest growers and winemakers, specialty coffee roasters are trying to turn their best farmers into rock stars. By going directly to the source or purchasing their beans through online auction sites like <a href="http://www.cupofexcellence.org">Cup of Excellence</a>, the top microroasters are starting to eliminate the middleman, the traditional coffee broker/importer who buys coffee in bulk from cooperatives and sells the beans as a commodity. (Coffee, incidentally, remains the second-most-traded commodity in the world after oil.)</p>


	<p>Obviously, this is great for the farmers. Roasters pay more than traditional brokers, the auction competition drives up prices, and the whole process builds their prestige. It’s great for quality, too, since farmers know they have to deliver the best beans to be included in these auctions. (Cup of Excellence, for example, blind tastes its farmers’ submissions and invites only the best to participate in its auctions.) And it’s great for the environment, since many roasters place a premium on buying mostly, or even exclusively, from growers who practice sustainable agriculture.</p>]]>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Of course, someone ultimately is paying the difference, and that person is you, the consumer. Which raises one of the biggest questions facing microroasters right now: How much will their increasingly sophisticated customers pay for a pound of coffee? Most specialty coffees range from $10 to $15 a pound. But the next level is being tested. One section of Intelligentsia’s website contains five coffees purchased at Cup of Excellence auctions, four of which sell for $11 to $14 per half-pound. Off the charts completely is Los Delirios, a Nicaraguan brew that goes for $25 a half-pound. Roasters point out that even at that price, a cup of specialty coffee is a bargain compared with other high-end beverages like fine wine and small-batch bourbon. But is America ready for the $50 pound of joe? Seems crazy. Then again, so did a $25 bottle of Napa cabernet in 1974.</p>


	<p>Another key question on the minds of microroasters: How big can they get without sacrificing the principles that got them there in the first place? Specialty coffee is about staying small and local. And for certain roasters, that’s making for some tough decisions. “We’re at a crossroads in this industry,” says Phil Anacker, one of the founders of <a href="http://www.flyinggoatcoffee.com/">Flying Goat Coffee</a> in Healdsburg, California, who was forced to turn away business recently because it didn’t “fit the model that we originally got into.”</p>


	<p>“There’s this intense pressure to grow and get big and send your product all over the world and continue to multiply,” he adds. “But if you’re approaching this as I am, which is that if you stay small you can do these special things, then by definition to get big means you can’t do them anymore. We’re trying to grow, but we’re trying to do it in a way that allows us to still have fun. It’s almost un-American. But it’s really important.”</p>


	<p><b>Roasting Coast to Coast</b></p>


	<p>What follows is the lowdown on five roasters from both coasts. They’re not necessarily the best, though they’re all very good. They’re included because together they offer a representative cross-section of the specialty coffee movement. Excellent microroasters are all over the country, and in the local spirit of the movement, you should sample the ones closest to you. “If you’re trying to organize your life in an environmentally sustainable way, does it make sense in terms of fuel costs to have your coffee roasted across the country and then air-freighted to you?” asks Peter Giuliano of <a href="http://www.counterculturecoffee.com/index.php">Counter Culture Coffee</a> in Durham, North Carolina. “I always encourage people to investigate their local scene first.”</p>


	<p>That said, part of the fun of specialty coffee is discovering new flavors, and all five of these roasters would be happy to ship you a few pounds of their beans. Next-day delivery for maximum freshness, of course.</p>


	<p><strong><a href="http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com">Intelligentsia Coffee</a>, Chicago</strong></p>


	<ul>
	<li>Founded in 1995 by Doug Zell and his wife, Emily Mange</li>
		<li>Pounds roasted per year: 1.3 million</li>
		<li>Number of coffees: 30 </li>
		<li>Retail locations: two in Chicago, with a third to come soon; Zell also hinted at a New York store in the near future</li>
		<li>In defense of size: “In order to get a grower or a growers’ cooperative to do anything special, you’re typically required to purchase very close to a container of that coffee, which is about 40,000 pounds,” explains Zell. “So if you’re a roaster buying from an importer’s offering list, it’s not the same as being involved at source.”</li>
		<li>Two great restaurants that serve Intelligentsia Coffee: Rick Bayless’ Frontera Grill and Paul Kahan’s Blackbird</li>
		<li>Most Proustian tasting note: “I don’t know where you grew up, but the Bolivian Apaza-Choque reminds me of those penny caramels that you would steal while your mom was grocery shopping. They were sort of swirly, and there was one that was caramel and orange, and that coffee really reminds me of that, those good old days at the grocery store with Mom.”</li>
	</ul>


	<p><strong><a href="http://www.gimmecoffee.com">Gimme Coffee</a>, Ithaca, New York</strong></p>


	<ul>
	<li>Founded in 2000 by Kevin Cuddeback, an espresso fanatic and former auctioneer</li>
		<li>Pounds roasted per year: 100,000</li>
		<li>Number of coffees: 21</li>
		<li>Retail locations: three in Ithaca, one in Trumansburg, and one in a rapidly hipifying section of East Williamsburg, Brooklyn</li>
		<li>Wittiest retail location: an espresso bar built into a converted 1948 Spartan Manor chrome trailer parked on the campus of Cornell University</li>
		<li>Best-named product: Deep Disco, a medium-dark brewed blend with subtle fruit flavors and a supersmooth body. Ample strength, zero bitterness.</li>
		<li>Mission in life: to get Americans thinking and drinking like Italians. “I would consider myself a huge success if I got to the point where our customers would allow us to ditch the brewed coffee altogether,” Cuddeback says. “My goal is to get people to drink their espresso shots or cappuccinos right at the bar, out of china. How many cases of paper cups have I sent to the landfill this year? But that is . . . ” He pauses, momentarily dumbstruck in the face of the challenge. “I mean, that could take decades.”</li>
	</ul>


	<p><strong><a href="http://www.counterculturecoffee.com">Counter Culture Coffee</a>, Durham, North Carolina</strong></p>


	<ul>
	<li>Founded in 1995 by Fred Houk and Brett Smith and run today by Peter Giuliano and Cindy Chang</li>
		<li>Pounds roasted per year: 600,000</li>
		<li>Number of coffees: 29</li>
		<li>Retail locations: Counter Culture is almost entirely a wholesale business, though you can also order its coffees online</li>
		<li>But they’ll give you free coffee: Fridays at 10 a.m., Counter Culture opens its cupping room to the public. The goal is education, not commerce. “Here in the South, there’s not a real developed coffee culture,” Giuliano says. “So we spend a lot of time and energy bringing people in who may not be that familiar with what special coffees are about.”</li>
		<li>Strength in numbers: Giuliano likes to travel with other roasters when he visits the source&#8212;not just because they’re good friends, which they are, but also to gang up on farmers. “All of us are demanding almost insane things in terms of quality from these growers&#8212;you know, asking them to pick one side of the farm separately from the other because we have an inclination that maybe one side of the farm is better, stuff like that. And we can definitely deliver that kind of a message with more impact when we’re traveling as a group.”</li>
	</ul>


	<p><strong><a href="http//www.flyinggoatcoffee.com">Flying Goat Coffee</a>, Healdsburg, California</strong></p>


	<ul>
	<li>Founded in 1992 by Philip Anacker, Maura Harrington, and Jake Whiteley </li>
		<li>Pounds roasted per year: 150,000</li>
		<li>Number of coffees: 21</li>
		<li>Retail locations: two in Healdsburg, one in Santa Rosa</li>
		<li>Roasting philosophy: “We let each particular coffee determine the type of roast it’s going to get,” Anacker says. “This is in contrast to a lot of roasters, especially on the West Coast, where the deep, dark, heavily oiled roast is very popular. A lot of roasters apply what’s called a ‘signature roast’ to everything. And when we got into this business, we were determined to try not to do everything that way.”</li>
		<li>Biggest challenge: continuing to source the “real amazing stuff, the superlative representation of a region,” amid market conditions that only figure to get more competitive as the demand for exceptional arabica keeps growing. “I have to work harder,” Anacker says. “I have to start going to origin more to find it. And I don’t mind it. It’s the most fun part of the business.”</li>
	</ul>


	<p><strong><a href="http://www.bluebottlecoffee.net">Blue Bottle Coffee</a>, Oakland, California</strong></p>


	<ul>
	<li>Founded in 2002 by James Freeman</li>
		<li>Pounds roasted per year: 30,000</li>
		<li>Number of coffees: 11</li>
		<li>Retail locations: one kiosk in San Francisco’s Hayes Valley plus regular appearances at the San Francisco Ferry Plaza Farmers’ Market (Saturdays) and the Berkeley farmers’ market (Saturdays and Tuesdays); the company also sells online</li>
		<li>Best-selling coffee: Bella Donovan, named after Freeman’s ex-wife</li>
		<li>Roasting philosophy: “We don’t grind coffee and don’t sell any coffee that’s older than 48 hours out of the roaster,” states Freeman. “We treat coffee like fresh food; we stamp a date on the back of every bag. Attempts to prolong the life of coffee in the freezer are as futile as trying to prolong the life of really fresh produce. You can enjoy our coffee at peak flavor for one week after buying it. After that, you should buy more.” All Blue Bottle coffees are roasted in 6-pound batches or smaller. “That’s all that fits in my roaster.”</li>
		<li>Deep thoughts: “I had a professor who used to say that the world is more complex than anything we can say about it. That tends to be true in life as well as the coffee business.”</li>
	</ul>


	<p><em>Photography by Lisa Predko</em></p>]]>
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