If you grind your own beans, give it a quick roast in your hot wok and let it cool before you grind it. The difference is dramatic.
It may be great, but I'd kind of like a store in the GTA. They don't even have one in Canada, according to their web site.
Wow, $60/lb!!! The good doc was paying $20/lb but that was long long time ago. Inflation must have taken its toll eh??? How about Gevalia coffee? It is a mail order outfit but not sure if they do business in Canada. They have some excellent coffee at about $8 per 1/2 lb. Of course, some very expensive one too if you can spare the change. LOL!!!Had a few bags of it given to me as gifts over the years and it's nice, but not worth $60/lb.
Cuban coffee, Cubita, is in that class, IMHO.best is always subjective but if you prefer less acidic/bitter coffee Indonesian/Asia-Pacific coffees are they way to go like a Sumatran or New Guinea. There's a few Latin American coffees that aren't that bitter, some Colombians and some Guatemalens, but thats a pretty dominant characteristic of the region.
The Aeropress is amazingly good. The microfilter is lab-grade (or better), durable, and probably reusable. It makes the best coffee concentrate for ice cap . Stick some in a blender with ice and mik, and Timmies will curse your name and miss your money.Percolating is absolutely the worst way to make coffee, as the coffee is heated to too high a temperature (making it bitter) and then recirculated through the coffee again. Seriously, get a French Press.
I'm skeptical of that aero-press just because it says micro-filter. I have a vacuum type machine with a microfilter and it takes all the goodness out. The screen of the French press doesn't filter everything out and the sediment adds richeness and smoothness to the cup, IMHO.
They will ship you a box overnight if you wish...It may be great, but I'd kind of like a store in the GTA. They don't even have one in Canada, according to their web site.
So I have to be home to get my coffee delivered or have it sit on my door step until I get home. There's easier ways to get a great cuppa.They will ship you a box overnight if you wish...
So that 'was' you.Still gotta endorse:
http://coffeetree.ca/
Bloor & Jane area, they roast their beans on premise (which you can smell walking down the street), and I believe they carry a variety of beans (when in stock) which you can order.
I have found interersting beans at Everyday Gourmet Roast at the St. Lawrence market, in the basement. They roast lots of beans on-site.Two places recommended in the earlier thread for that special coffee were;
http://www.greenbeanery.ca/bean/home.php
http://www.darkcitycoffee.com/catalog_fairtrade.html
French press is the way to go for the smoothest coffee, but it is more work and don`t forget to grind the coffee a lot less to keep the grinds where they belong. Out of the cup and in the pot.
As for the thread try;
https://terb.cc/vbulletin/showthread.php?259305-This-coffee-taste-like-crap!&highlight=coffee
https://terb.cc/vbulletin/showthread.php?231169-Any-coffee-bean-buyers&highlight=coffee