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Sad State of Commercial Espresso

Postby GreatDane on Mon Jan 09, 2006 2:46 am

(split from the GS3 article feedback thread)

Chris,

Thanks for the great review. I wish I had taken a trip to Portland for a shot or two. In your review, you wrote about how fussy you are on your espresso. That is great! However, most of us home-baristas are more fussy than pros. I have to take my shoes off and my wife's shoes off to count the number of good home-baristas that have served me an awesome shot. I can count on one hand the number of pro baristas that have served me great shots and two of those fingers are taken up by my two visits to Stumptown. One of the best shots I have ever had came from a Krups machine that a home-barista had dialed in! It was a 3/4 oz shot of pure delight! From reading this review, you ought to be amazed that any of us can get a good shot. The irony is those who have the 5 figure machines can only make swill! The real shame I find is the last two espresso shops I visited had the true automatic machine, the self grind self dose, self shot, and should be self drunk type machines. It is nice to see LM taking the home barista seriously. We may be the only true baristas left with the move to putting in the super-auto machines and hiring people that could care less about coffee. Most shops are looking for just making money. I talked to a gal who is a professional barista last week who takes her craft seriously. She said her new owner only cares about the bottom line!

Les
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Postby malachi on Mon Jan 09, 2006 2:53 am

GreatDane wrote: We may be the only true baristas left with the move to putting in the super-auto machines and hiring people that could care less about coffee.


Do be cautious when saying things like this, please.
There are a lot of serious, passionate pro baristas - for many of them statements like this are very hurtful.
Read this (perhaps one of the most profound posts of 2005) for some perspective on the issue.
"Taste is the only morality." -- John Ruskin
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Postby IMAWriter on Mon Jan 09, 2006 11:58 am

malachi wrote:Do be cautious when saying things like this, please.
There are a lot of serious, passionate pro baristas - for many of them statements like this are very hurtful.
Read this (perhaps one of the most profound posts of 2005) for some perspective on the issue.

Yes...Chris, please do not take Great Danes' post as being representative of the typical "home barista's" general sentiments....
I'm hoping his comment was a sort of "back-handed" compliment to those baristi able to work with proper equipment, as opposed to fully auto grind/tamp/pour etc...
Rob
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Postby GreatDane on Mon Jan 09, 2006 12:05 pm

Chris,
The last thing I want to do is hurt or offend or be disparaging to the true barista. I count many of them as my friends (you included even though we have not met face to face yet). What is hurtful is the move out in espresso-land to settling for average. I spent about an hour last week listening to a Pro barista literally sobbing on the phone as she shared the lack of concern and passion for quality coffee that the new owner of her place of work has. I had heard many good things about Carabou coffee and Peets. However when given the chance to try both of these establishments, the only thing the baristas knew was which button to push. I went to a new coffee house here in Roseburg that was getting some good reviews. When I walked in they had all the equipment. I was told they had a week of solid training before opening. I asked for a ristretto and the barista said, "What is that?" He was a willing learner, so I had the chance to walk him through the steps and got a passable drink. I was in Albuquerque, NM last year and went to "the best coffee shop in town." They had a Probat roaster and the smell was heavenly when I walked in. They also served wonderful breakfast and lunch. I ordered breakfast and a double shot of their espresso blend. I couldn't believe what I saw! Again they had all the equipment. I talked to the owner and after breakfast (I had four hours before my first meeting), I did a 2 plus hour training for the owner and their barista on how to pull a shot. They had never tasted a nice thick rich crema laden espresso before. Basically the guy they bought their equipment from showed them where to plug it and and how the switches worked. I earned a free breakfast every morning for the next 3 days! The problem is the world out there that is willing to settle for Maxwell House and Foldgers is also willing to settle for lousy espresso. I am hoping the true barista will rise up and change the way it is! However, as long as the world of coffee is the way it is, I will pull almost all of my shots at home because it is the only place (except Alchemist John's and Mike McKoffee's or Stumptown) that I know I am going to get a good espresso. The real world seems to be willing to accept lousy coffee.

Les
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Postby malachi on Mon Jan 09, 2006 3:46 pm

Just because the (vast) majority of US coffee shops don't care about quality doesn't mean that there are no great, caring coffee businesses out there.

In addition to Stumptown, such a list would include:
- Intelligentsia (Chicago),
- Counter Culture (North Carolina),
- Terroir (Boston),
- Ritual (San Francisco),
- Elysian (Vancouver BC),
- Albina Press (Portland OR),
- DOMA (Couer D'Alene ID),
- Murky (Washington DC),
- Victrola (Seattle WA),
- Grumpy (NYC)
and the list would go on, and on... the above are more regional illustrations than anything else. At this point, in fact, I find that almost everywhere I travel has a decent coffee bar within easy reach. There are exceptions, but even here things are changing. A couple years ago, there was no good coffee in San Francisco. Now you have three options. Every day some new coffee bar opens up somewhere that is doing it right. And it's no longer confined to the urban markets. I've had great coffee in towns down to 3,500 people.
"Taste is the only morality." -- John Ruskin
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Postby GreatDane on Mon Jan 09, 2006 5:19 pm

Chris,

That is a point well taken! I am glad there are places to get good espresso. However we both know that is the exception and not the rule! Wow, 3 places in San Francisco. There is one in Eugene, but I always forget the name. The point I am trying to make can be illustrated by my home town here in Roseburg, there are slightly over 100 places you can order an espresso. Out of those 100 places there is one where you can get an acceptable shot, not a good one, not even close to a great one. We have 4 Dutch Bros. doing a bang-up business. I have talked to their baristas and they could care less about the quality of their shots. One of them told me, "who cares I am just going to be putting flavors and sugar in 90% of them. So, if you cruise down to Roseburg and ask where can I get a good espresso. The common advice is going to send you to at least 5 places I know of that will serve you swill. You have a 1% chance of finding "My Coffee" on the first try. My big hope Chris to to see a loud voice from the Professional Barista as to what is happening. Has there been any discussion among the Professional Baristas to certify shops as to their commitment to quality? To me it is a sad commentary that a well trained person can pull a better shot on a Krups Gusto than a "pro" can pull on a La Marzocco Linea. The whole point of my post as it referred to your great review on the LM GS3 is that finally we are going to get a machine according to your review that will allow the home-barista many of the same features as the $10,000+ machines have.

Les
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Postby miKe mcKoffee on Mon Jan 09, 2006 5:55 pm

Knowing the Dane as I do I know his intent was sincerely not to belittle or degrade the few places that do care but more a commentary on the general sad state of reality. Agreed there are places great espresso can be found, unfortunately it seems the exception not the rule. Go to any town and go to 10 places at random for espresso, what are the chances of getting a great (or even passable) ristretto? For example two sources where listed for Portland, OR out of how many thousands or tens of thousands cafes and espresso stands! If espresso stands and cafes were carbon based the ratio of finding coal versus those rare diamonds is likely similar! The problem is easily and readily finding the diamonds.

I have nothing but the highest respect and admiration for the true professional like Chris. While those at his level might be considered PhD Baristas (Doctorate of Shotology :wink: ) I'm maybe a College Freshman at best.

Hopefully the Third Wave's battle against the primarily to totally money focused shops will gain continued broad reaching victories.
Mike McGinness, Head Bean (Owner/Roast Master)
http://www.CompassCoffeeRoasting.com
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Postby malachi on Mon Jan 09, 2006 6:20 pm

Oh... believe me... I know how bad 99% of all coffee in the US really is.
I'm not arguing that point - I'm in fact one of the ones who bitches about it most frequently.

I'm just asking for some sensitivity about the issue. I know that the vast majority of coffee available commercially is terrible. I know that most coffee businesses care less about quality than about their neon signs. But it's hurtful and insensitive and really does not help the situation to say things like:

To me it is a sad commentary that a well trained person can pull a better shot on a Krups Gusto than a "pro" can pull on a La Marzocco Linea.


and

The irony is those who have the 5 figure machines can only make swill!


and

We may be the only true baristas left with the move to putting in the super-auto machines and hiring people that could care less about coffee.


These sorts of statement are the equivalent of what you used to hear from folks in the SCAA about the ignorance of consumers, about how laughable home espresso and the "alties" are, etc.
Neither are true - both are insensitive and disrespectful.


Professional baristas are, in fact, working incredibly hard to try and change the situation in the US. This is, in essence, the goal of the BGA. There is little doubt that the barista jams and education sessions, coupled with the BGA booth at the SCAA show and demos and training sessions has had a direct impact on the spread of good coffee. But the BGA has been around less than 2 years and has had to overcome a lot of barriers due to various SCAA stuff. There is progress - but it's slow.

As for certification... well... I'm the wrong person to ask. I am deeply opposed to such an idea. It's to my mind a bureaucratic solution that is unlikely to work and more likely to do damage than anything else. I look at Transfair or any of the SCAA "certification" programs and shudder. Instead, I'm hoping we continue to organize and educate and agitate. It's been working so far. Just give us a little time. We've got decades of miseducation and misinformation to overcome and the big coffee companies are doing their best to counter any push towards true quality. It's going to be an uphill battle, and I doubt we'll ever represent more than 10% of the market. But that's 10 times what it was when we started.
"Taste is the only morality." -- John Ruskin
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Postby GreatDane on Mon Jan 09, 2006 7:35 pm

Chris,
I dont mean to be insensitive.

Chis said, "I'm just asking for some sensitivity about the issue. I know that the vast majority of coffee available commercially is terrible. I know that most coffee businesses care less about quality than about their neon signs. But it's hurtful and insensitive and really does not help the situation to say things like:"............

I hope you noticed I put "pro" in quotes. I don't consider these people to be professional baristas. Unless getting a paycheck for pulling shots makes you a professional. The reality is what I shared.

I am shocked that the large commercial espresso places like Peets and Caribou have moved to super-automatics.

Having had the opportunity to pull shots on a La Marzocco Linea was an awesome experience. I didn't realize a machine could be so stable. I have to work pretty hard to get those kind of shots on my Expobar. However 80% of the time I do. The other 20% go down the drain.

To me this is what a shot should look like
Image

I just find it to be so sad that there are great baristas that are not given there due. I also find it sad that so many people have been ruined to what is one of the greatest experiences in beverages and that is a good shot! I have begged and pleaded with many of my guests in my home to just try a good espresso! Most ask how much sugar I added when they finally had the courage to give it a try. I was amazed at our last gathering of homeroasters how many had never had an espresso since being so disappointed in the experience afforded them at a "pro" establishment. Why put out big buck for equipment when you don't care for the beverage? I bought my first espresso machine to prove to myself that it wasn't any good! When I dialed in my first good shot, boy was I surprised!

So is there a list of BGA members and where they practice?

Les
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Postby another_jim on Mon Jan 09, 2006 7:47 pm

I think the quality focused cafes are winning the head to head battle with chains and poor cafes. In Seattle there were a zillion Starbucks, but none close to one of the star cafes we talk about was doing too well. Intelligentsia's downtown Chicago store is doing so well they are opening up a second one 4 blocks away. There's all sorts of cafes in jumping distance from both locations, but the existing store is always full (good for me, since I like to stand in line for shots -- maybe when the GS3 tech hits the multigroups, I won't have to); and I'm sure the new one will be too. On alt.coffee we're twitting Nick Cho of Murky for being a millionaire after an article described him as a new wave entrepreneur.

It's true that the taste difference is especially apparent in a straight shot; but a good milk drink will knock the socks off a bad one too, especially when the bad one has the cardboard foam over watery swill from superautos or poorly trained personnel.

If you also add in that very high priced COE coffees and equivalent are selling out quickly when they come from high reputation roasters, I think we're well on the way to seeing the formation of a "superspecialty" market niche of superior cafes and roasters. Of course, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery; so the sign that this is definitely the case is when someone advertises their coffee or espresso as "almost as good as a COE coffee or WBC barista" Don't laugh, down under, Paul Bassett is shilling for Sunbeam espresso machines ("almost as good as I would make"); it'll be happening here soon too.
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