Coffee

Coffee

Read everything about Coffee!

  • Home
  • Coffee Store
  • CoffeForLess Coupons

Some of the Reasons Why People Like to Drink Coffee

Posted in Did you know? by
Feb 07 2011
TrackBack Address.

Coffee is one of the most popular beverages in the world. It is the second most traded physical commodity worldwide, ranking second only to petroleum. That is amazing and a good indication of the billions of beans harvested, processed, traded, roasted and sold 24/7 around planet Earth.

There are many reasons why people enjoy drinking coffee:

The brew complements the time spent reading a good book. Reading offers both pleasure and information. Reading offers a view into another world when you can escape the present and pretend to be in another dimension, time or space. Reading offers the opportunity to see the world through someone else’s eyes and to broaden our understanding of the world around us. Drinking coffee provides a sensory experience that adds pleasure to the tongue and palate in addition to the mental enjoyment from reading. Anne Morrow Lindbergh (1906-2001), pioneering American aviatrix and author who was married to Charles Lindbergh, said about coffee “Good communication is just as stimulating as black coffee, and just as hard to sleep after.”

The taste of coffee is simply delightful. Our taste buds are extremely sensitive organs and will “tingle” when stimulated. The four basic tastes are sweet, sour, salty and bitter. Learning where the tongue is stimulated enables the coffee drinker to learn how to taste the basic profile of the coffee. It is delightful to evaluate the taste sensation of the tongue. It takes practice to recognize the ‘tingles.” However, learning where the tingles are on the tongue indicates the primary taste profile of the coffee. For example, a sour coffee will give a “puckery feeling” like a good glass of wine. Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880), French writer and realist novelist said about coffee, “Coffee: Induces wit. Good only if it comes through Havre. After a big dinner party it is taken standing up. Take it without sugar-very swank; gives the impression you have lived in the East…”

Coffee makes you feel upbeat, enthusiastic, “sharper” and alert. It is not unusual to hear how people in the morning are not really ready to be part of the world until after drinking their daily morning coffee. Caffeine helps us become fully cognizant and to feel more alert. Clark Gable (1901-1960), American film actor nicknamed “The King of Hollywood” in his heyday, said, “I never laugh until I’ve had my coffee.”

Coffee is good for you. Research takes place daily on coffee, caffeine and health around the world. Scientists and research institutes worldwide release studies and research reports frequently that support the caffeine health claims, good news for coffee lovers. Basically, coffee has antioxidants and caffeine, two main ways of improving the health of your body. These substances have health and anti aging benefits. Antioxidants help your body repair damage to cells caused by free radicals. These free radicals are produced as a by-product of cells through normal daily activities.

Your ads will be inserted here by

Easy AdSense Lite.

Please go to the plugin admin page to paste your ad code.

Coffee and caffeine are recognized for their positive health benefits and potential functional food attributes. A quote attributed to Alexander King (1909-2007), scientist and pioneer of the sustainable development movement, and co-founder of the Club of Rome, said, “Actually, this seems to be the basic need of the human heart in nearly every great crisis – a good hot cup of coffee.”

Coffee is a beverage you can keep on drinking throughout the day and never really have too much. For example, the ever increasing availability of new flavored coffees offers more choices to coffee drinkers who want to taste and experience more flavors than nature can provide. Looking back at history, we learn that people, hundreds of years ago, enjoyed blending coffee with nuts and spices to create special flavors. Thomas Stearns Eliot, also known as T.S. Eliot (1888-1965), Anglo-American poet, playwright, and literary critic said about coffee, “I have measured out my life with coffee spoons!”

So what about a cup of delicious French Vanilla flavored gourmet coffee?

Timothy (“Tim”) S. Collins, the author, is called by those who know him “The Gourmet Coffee Guy.” He is an expert in article writing who has done extensive research online and offline in his area of expertise, coffee marketing, as well as in other areas of personal and professional interest.

Come visit the author’s website: http://www.ourgourmetcoffee.com

Copyright – Timothy S. Collins. All Rights Reserved Worldwide

Author: Timothy S. Collins
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
Unix inter-process communication (IPC)

No Comments yet »
Tagged as: anne morrow lindbergh, author, aviatrix, black coffee, body, charles lindbergh, coffee, coffee coffee, coffee drinker, cup, dimension time, drinker, drinking, glass of wine, gustave flaubert, indication, mental enjoyment, petroleum, physical commodity, reading, salty, sensation, sensitive organs, sensory experience, space, taste, taste buds, taste sensation, time, understanding

Some of the Reasons Why People Like to Drink Coffee

Posted in Did you know? by
Feb 07 2011
TrackBack Address.

Coffee is one of the most popular beverages in the world. It is the second most traded physical commodity worldwide, ranking second only to petroleum. That is amazing and a good indication of the billions of beans harvested, processed, traded, roasted and sold 24/7 around planet Earth.

There are many reasons why people enjoy drinking coffee:

The brew complements the time spent reading a good book. Reading offers both pleasure and information. Reading offers a view into another world when you can escape the present and pretend to be in another dimension, time or space. Reading offers the opportunity to see the world through someone else’s eyes and to broaden our understanding of the world around us. Drinking coffee provides a sensory experience that adds pleasure to the tongue and palate in addition to the mental enjoyment from reading. Anne Morrow Lindbergh (1906-2001), pioneering American aviatrix and author who was married to Charles Lindbergh, said about coffee “Good communication is just as stimulating as black coffee, and just as hard to sleep after.”

The taste of coffee is simply delightful. Our taste buds are extremely sensitive organs and will “tingle” when stimulated. The four basic tastes are sweet, sour, salty and bitter. Learning where the tongue is stimulated enables the coffee drinker to learn how to taste the basic profile of the coffee. It is delightful to evaluate the taste sensation of the tongue. It takes practice to recognize the ‘tingles.” However, learning where the tingles are on the tongue indicates the primary taste profile of the coffee. For example, a sour coffee will give a “puckery feeling” like a good glass of wine. Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880), French writer and realist novelist said about coffee, “Coffee: Induces wit. Good only if it comes through Havre. After a big dinner party it is taken standing up. Take it without sugar-very swank; gives the impression you have lived in the East…”

Coffee makes you feel upbeat, enthusiastic, “sharper” and alert. It is not unusual to hear how people in the morning are not really ready to be part of the world until after drinking their daily morning coffee. Caffeine helps us become fully cognizant and to feel more alert. Clark Gable (1901-1960), American film actor nicknamed “The King of Hollywood” in his heyday, said, “I never laugh until I’ve had my coffee.”

Coffee is good for you. Research takes place daily on coffee, caffeine and health around the world. Scientists and research institutes worldwide release studies and research reports frequently that support the caffeine health claims, good news for coffee lovers. Basically, coffee has antioxidants and caffeine, two main ways of improving the health of your body. These substances have health and anti aging benefits. Antioxidants help your body repair damage to cells caused by free radicals. These free radicals are produced as a by-product of cells through normal daily activities.

Coffee and caffeine are recognized for their positive health benefits and potential functional food attributes. A quote attributed to Alexander King (1909-2007), scientist and pioneer of the sustainable development movement, and co-founder of the Club of Rome, said, “Actually, this seems to be the basic need of the human heart in nearly every great crisis – a good hot cup of coffee.”

Coffee is a beverage you can keep on drinking throughout the day and never really have too much. For example, the ever increasing availability of new flavored coffees offers more choices to coffee drinkers who want to taste and experience more flavors than nature can provide. Looking back at history, we learn that people, hundreds of years ago, enjoyed blending coffee with nuts and spices to create special flavors. Thomas Stearns Eliot, also known as T.S. Eliot (1888-1965), Anglo-American poet, playwright, and literary critic said about coffee, “I have measured out my life with coffee spoons!”

So what about a cup of delicious French Vanilla flavored gourmet coffee?

Timothy (“Tim”) S. Collins, the author, is called by those who know him “The Gourmet Coffee Guy.” He is an expert in article writing who has done extensive research online and offline in his area of expertise, coffee marketing, as well as in other areas of personal and professional interest.

Come visit the author’s website: http://www.ourgourmetcoffee.com

Copyright – Timothy S. Collins. All Rights Reserved Worldwide

Author: Timothy S. Collins
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
Video news

No Comments yet »
Tagged as: anne morrow lindbergh, author, aviatrix, black coffee, body, charles lindbergh, coffee, coffee coffee, coffee drinker, cup, dimension time, drinker, drinking, glass of wine, gustave flaubert, indication, mental enjoyment, petroleum, physical commodity, planet, reading, salty, sensitive organs, sensory experience, space, taste, taste buds, taste sensation, time, understanding

How the Professionals Describe the Taste of Coffee

Posted in Did you know? by
Jun 16 2010
TrackBack Address.

Professional coffee tasters use a great variety of terms to describe the taste of different coffees in the process normally known as cupping. Why not learn a few of these terms and next time you find yourself at a dinner party enjoying your after dinner coffee you can amaze your friends with your coffee knowledge?

Below are some common terms used – it is not meant to be an exhaustive list

Astringent – A secondary taste sensation noted by a salty sensation on the sides of the tongue. Caused by acids increasing the saltiness.

Baggy – An unpleasant taste often found in weakly roasted coffees that have been stored for a long time in inappropriate conditions.

Baked – A flat aroma with insipid taste often caused by roasting for too long at too low a temperature.

Beany – The smell associated with insufficiently roasted coffee that has not been able to allowed to develop its full aroma.

Bitter – Sharp or biting sensation felt at the back of the tongue often the result of over roasting the coffee bean.

Bland – Lacking in any noticeable flavour characteristics.

Bready – A bread-like taste that can occur in coffees that have not been roasted long enough or at a high enough temperature to bring out the flavor of the oils.

Bright – A dryness or sharpness (typical of Central American coffees).

Buttery – Rich and oily.

Caramelly – Suggestive of toffee or caramel.

Carbony – A burnt of charcoal flavor.

Chocolaty – Suggestive of vanilla or chocolate.

Creamy – High levels of coffee oils suspended in the brew.

Delicate – A secondary taste sensation noted for its weak sweet-subtle feeling just past the tip of the tongue.

Dirty – Unclean smelling or mustiness.

Earthy ‘Characteristic smell of soil or dirt often caused when the coffee beans are stored on the ground after harvesting (typical of Sumatran coffees)

Exotic – Unusual aroma and flavor, such as berry or floral.

Fermented – An unpleasant taste producing a sour sensation. The result of enzyme activity in the green coffee beans changing the sugars to acids in the drying process during harvesting.

Flat – A loss of aroma.

Fragrant or floral – Subtle hints of fragrant flowers such as jasmine.

Fruity – A sweet fruity aroma suggestive of berries or citrus fruit.

Grassy – Suggestive of freshly cut grass.

Green – A faint herbal taste due to the incomplete development of the sugar compounds in the roasting process.

Hard – A hard coffee is poorly balanced. It is a secondary taste sensation of sourness on the bottom sides of the tongue. Caused by higher-than-normal percentage of sour acids. Ranking of hardness ranges thus: strictly soft, soft, softish, softish/hardish, hardish, hard, Rioy.

Harsh – A hard or caustic taste.

Heavy – Higher than average levels of suspended material in the brew.

Herby -. Suggestive of onion or green vegetable.

Hidey – A leather-like odor caused when too much heat is applied during the drying process causing the coffee beans fats to break down.

Insipid – A brew of lifeless character often the result of oxygen and moisture penetrating the bean fiber after roasting.

Lifeless – Thin and flat.

Light – Lower than average levels of suspended material in the coffee brew.

Malty – Suggestive of toasted grains.

Mellow – An overall smooth, mild and delicate flavor lacking in acidity.

Muddy – Thick and lifeless.

Musty – A stuffy or moldy smell which can be a positive trait for aged coffees such as Java.

Neutral – The absence of a predominant taste sensation.

Nippy – A secondary taste of sweetness, associated with a nipping sensation at the end of the tongue.

Nutty – Smell and taste suggestive of roasted nuts.

Oily – The description given to a coffee that has an oily taste.

Oniony – Suggestive of onions.

Peasy – A disagreeable taste that is reminiscent of peas.

Piquant – A sweet, prickling sensation at the tip of the tongue, typified by a Kenya AA coffee.

Point – A coffee with good overall characteristics of acidity, body and flavour.

Potatoy – Suggestive of raw potatoes.

Pulpy – A pungent fruit-like flavor derived from coffee cherry skins.

Pungent – Description given to a full-bodied and forceful coffee.

Quakery – Suggestive of peanuts, often the result of using unripe, green coffee beans.

Rancid – A highly disagreeable taste caused by oxidization of the coffee.

Rich – Strong presence of coffee aromas.

Rioy – An iodine-like flavor caused by continuing enzyme activity that occurs when the fruit partially dies on the coffee tree before harvesting.

Round – The coffee characteristics are so well balanced that no particular taste dominates to experience.

Rough – A secondary sensation noted by its grating, salty sensation on the tongue.

Rubbery – reminiscent of burnt rubber.

Scorched – A smoky or burnt aroma and taste caused when the beans are roasted too quickly at too high temperature which char the surface of the beans.

Stale – An unpleasant taste caused by oxygen and moisture penetrating the beans surface.

Sharp – An astringent taste derived from salty tasting compounds within the coffee.

Smooth – Low levels of oily compounds suspended in the beverage.

Soft – A secondary sensation noted by an absence of any predominant taste on any part of the tongue, except maybe for subtle dryness.

Sound – A coffee with no particular positive or negative characteristics.

Sour – A piercing, sour over acidic taste commonly caused by under-ripe beans.

Spicy – An aftertaste suggestive of cinnamon or clove.

Strawy – Suggestive of hay or straw, often from the result of the loss of organic material from the green coffee beans while in storage.

Strong – A coffee, rich in flavor that gives a strong powerful taste.

Sweaty – A coffee that may have been stored inappropriately resulting in a distinct sweaty taste.

Sweetly Spicy – An aroma suggestive of aromatic spices such as cardamom.

Sweet – free from harshness.

Tangy – A secondary sensation noted by a predominantly sour sensation along the sides of the tongue hinting of a fruity sensation.

Tart – A sour puckering sensation experienced on the tongue.

Tipped – A cereal-like taste caused by the beans being roasted too quickly that chars the tips of the beans.

Thick – A high level of solid material suspended in the beverage giving it a heavy feel.

Thin – A low level of solid material suspended in the beverage giving it a watery feel.

Twisty – A coffee with different negative qualities that vary from cup to cup.

Turpsy – Suggestive of turpentine.

Unclean – Coffee with a distinct off-flavor suggesting they have been kept in an unclean environment. A taste and aroma with a hint of fermenting.

Variety – A qualitative depiction of the gases present in the aroma, nose and aftertaste of coffee’s bouquet.

Watery – Lacking in body.

Weak – A beverage that is not flat but definitely lacks body.

Winey – An agreeable taste that gives the impression of a good wine.

Wild – A distinctive wood-like taste caused by storing the beans too long.

Woody – A coffee with an unpleasant smell and taste similar to dry wood. This can be due to the loss of organic material in the green beans during storage.

Coffee is such a great subject – why not learn more about it at our Coffee School? Learn about coffee, coffee machines and methods of coffee preparation.

Author: Fenton Wayne
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
Excise Tax

No Comments yet »
Tagged as: aroma, brew, Central American, characteristic smell, coffee, coffee bean, coffee knowledge, coffee oils, cupping, different coffees, dinner coffee, dinner party, enzyme activity, flavor, green coffee beans, harvesting, inappropriate conditions, process, result, Rich, salty, sensation, sharpness, smell, Suggestive, taste, taste sensation, temperature, time, tip of the tongue, tongue, unpleasant taste

Categories

  • Coffee Recipes
  • Coupon Codes
  • Did you know?
  • Special Offers

Search Store

Store Categories

  • Blends
  • Decaf
  • Gourmet
  • Ground Coffee
  • Premium
  • Roasts & Espresso
  • Seasonal
  • World
Powered by WordPress | “Blend” from Spectacu.la WP Themes Club