10.17.2008

Kaldi's is excited to announce the 2008 Fall Barista Jam. The event will take place at our roastery on November 7 and 8 and will focus on raising quality at the retail level and preparing for barista competitions. We have some very special guests who will be presenting along with our talented staff of baristas. Check back here, at our homesite or on our events calendar for more details in the week to come regarding registration and schedule.

The jam will include the following:
  • "Love Your Brewer and It Will Love You" presentation
  • "Understanding Co-ops, Microlots, Cultivation, and Quality" presentation
  • "Barista Competition for Dummies" workshop
  • "Cupping Challenge" workshop
  • "Competition Demonstration"
  • "Quality, passion, and service at retail" presentation
  • Latte Art Competition
  • Brewing Methods demonstration and instruction
  • Open espresso machine time and coaching
  • and more to be announced soon
Contact Mike with questions or comments about the jam.

8.22.2008

Cafés to dig - Chicago and KC


Just back from recent trips to Chicago and KC for business and pleasure. I'm a coffee fan by trade and taste. Here's a quick list of cafés to hit while in either town.

Chicago:
Intelligentsia - the South Loop (on Jackson) location is my favorite. Great coffee and aesthetic
Lovely- a great little bakery near Wicker Park. Great barista and patio, too!

Metropolis - on the far north side. Great coffee and the coolest café in town if you've got time.

KC:
Latte land - don't worry about the name - this place is actually rad. The west plaza location was my favorite

Hi-hat Coffee - awesome menu and the nicest baristas in town.

PT's - the best spro in the midwest.

5.08.2008

USBC 2008 - Coffee or Die

Just got back from a week-long trip to Minneapolis for the 2008 World Barista Championship. As many know, I make/sell/deliver/educate-others-about coffee for a living. This was my first USBC and I didn't know what to expect in terms of success or atmosphere going in. Luckily, I got to drive the 600 miles with my coffee-pal and occasional co-worker, Alex McCracken, who has been through such ordeals in the past.

We arrived in Minneapolis last Thursday morning and after briefly saying hello to a few coffee friends from regional competitions and barista jams, we set upon the terrible task of securing last minute dishware and coffee items (think porcelain cups, saucers, shot glasses, windex wipes, lint rollers, table linens, pants, tweezers, basil plants) we forgot.

Thursday quickly grew into Friday and Saturday with occasional bits of Summit beer in-between. Alex and I both went through the stresses and tensions of presenting 12 coffee drinks to seven picky drinkers in 15 minutes - fifteen minutes which turn into days of polishing, practicing, memorizing, and bad-dreaming.

Nevertheless, Alex and I both had success and advanced to the second round of competion. I was thrilled to do so well in my first year of competing, though jostled by the additional round of dishes, worrying, and bad-dreaming that entailed.

The competition was great, but what was better was the community of baristas that get so excited about such events. For the first year, the USBC was streamed live on the interweb, and the commentary coming in from all over the world was great. Immediate feedback and validations for such silly coffee service. I'd like to thank Jon Lewis for his dedication to the coffee community and all he inspires within us budding baristas. If you like coffee, and you like life, read his blog. If it wasn't for Jon, and people like him, I don't think I'd still be able to justify brewing coffee while growing up. Let it flow.


Check out my semi-finals presentation.


And Alex's.