roblumba wrote:Why is that I feel like you are trying to defend there practices?
Because -- not necessarily for the first time -- you seem to be reading what you want to read, and not what I'm saying.
Robert, I work -- now -- in the legal field, but for many years, I was a magazine editor and writer. I take things perhaps a bit too literally.
roblumba wrote:. . . this scooped on date is just a deception to the consumer. It's simply deceptive marketing practice. I really don't see why you are trying defend this, but for some reason you feel very strongly that they should be given more of a haha very funny response rather than a more serious response from the coffee community.
de·cep·tive adj., causing one to believe what is not true or fail to believe what is true.
I'm not sure it's deceptive, Robert. Clearly it's not illegal to place a "Scooped On" date on your package, any more than it is a "Best By" date, a "Roasted On" date, or no date whatsoever. Starbuck's "Scooped On" date
IS factually accurate. It's not their "fault," so to speak, if consumers misread the information.
On the other hand . . . you (and Dan) are, IMHO,
absolutely correct: coffee labeling standards are virtually non-existent, and should be tightened up! Roasted coffee beans -- whether whole bean or ground --
are perishable and should be treated as such.
Should there be a "more serious response from the coffee community"? Abso-f***ing-lutely! That's the whole reason I brought this to your attention and posted this. It IS laughable. It IS ridiculous. It is also perfectly legal . . . unless things change. So, Robert, let me ask you a question: have you sent an email or letter to Starbucks about how silly this is? Are you outraged only on Home-Barista, or doesn't this really matter to you, since you aren't their customer . . .
What motivation does Starbucks have to change? Why did they close their stores for 3 hours to train their "baristas" (and I use that term loosely) how to steam milk? Why did Starbucks start this stupid, silly-a$$ "Scooped On" dating? Why did Starbucks invest in new machines -- yet stick with super-autos

?
Could it be that -- even though they are the McDonald's of espresso -- they're feeling the heat, not only from the Peet's, Tully's, Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf's, and Dunkin' Donuts

of the world, but also from the Vivace's, the Barefoot's, Ritual's, and Intelligentsia's of the world . . . . (OK, the U.S.)
Starbucks
does deserve credit -- not for the "Scooped On" bs, but for actually putting the real roasting date on the blackboard behind the counter! But --
yeah! -- it should be on the bag!