Make Flavoured Gourmet Coffee At Home

Posted by CoffeeAdmin on 30 Jan 2010 | Tagged as: Gourmet Coffee

Make Flavoured Gourmet Coffee At Home


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Did you know that you can even find gourmet flavoured coffee in your local market these days? Anyway, what IS gourmet flavoured coffee? Well, gourmet coffee generally speaking consists of an ordinary style of premium ground coffee with one of more non-coffee flavours included to help accentuate the taste of the coffee and its bouquet as well. Putting it bluntly, it’s a high-grade coffee with special flavours added. What does that mean for you when you’re trapped at home? You can do it yourself if you have the correct “bits and pieces”. If you are really set on doing this, you need to do some basic research to discover what’s required, where to find them, how to prepare them and – obviously – how to make the optimum blends. Of course, right here on the Internet is not a bad place to start looking for the information you need. If you are a label-reader, that’s another way to discover what’s in that stuff that you like best. Just read the labels on the packages of whatever it is you like best at the local store and even the local coffee shop.

When you have decided what flavours you want to instill in your coffee, get all the contents together for the grand occasion. You might choose French vanilla, almond schnapps, cassis, banana cream liquor, the good old standby, chocolate, walnut, and whatever else appeals to your taste buds. Just a small amount, perhaps applied with an eyedropper, and your normal (although still special) coffee becomes something extraordinary. The amazing change that comes from these additives is the reason that most people who have tasted flavoured coffee can never revert to the standard product.

What is described above is not the only way to acquire special flavours in your daily coffee. For example, you could throw a vanilla bean in with the coffee when you are grinding it, or a small piece of cinnamon bark. Other possibilities are to add a drop or two of some essential edible oils to your coffee, or some powdered product (cacao comes to mind), or your favorite flavoured liqueur, or even a little Bailey’s Bristol Cream. The changes will be almost miraculous.

When you’re making up larger quantities of flavoured coffee, you need to be aware of some limitations on storage. If the flavouring is resistant to deterioration, then your can safely store the mixture for some time in a Mason jar or similar air-tight container. Others – particularly fresh components – need to be consumed within a day or two at the most. Some people store their mixtures in the refrigerator, and some even in the freezer, although many think that reduces the impact of the special flavours. Others just store in in tightly closed containers on the shelf.

The real advantage you have in mixing your flavoured gourmet coffee yourself is that you can experiment without having it cost you the earth in coffee house bills. Not only that, at home, you are limited only by your imagination, and all that at an affordable price. One other thing is that you are not restricted to only one additive – you can make combinations like peaches and cream, or chocolate and cherry liquor. Many people have discovered their own special favourites at home, and your guests will be amazed at your inventiveness, and perhaps fall in love with some of your house specialties.

The main thing is that you enjoy your own products and also inventing the new ones to test out. Gourmet coffee and flavoured coffee will never be the same for you again!

Make Flavoured Gourmet Coffee At Home

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Choose Your Best Gourmet Coffee

Posted by CoffeeAdmin on 21 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: Gourmet Coffee

Choosing The Best Gourmet Coffee

Exotic To Espresso And More

Coffee around the world is amazingly popular – why is that? Well, one reason is that it is a beverage that has dozens of variations, most of which are extremely popular somewhere, but probably not everywhere. You don’t know the different ways coffee can be prepared? Well, here are the most popular ways to make and serve coffee, the most popular gourmet-style coffees.

Espresso might be the most widely strewn coffee style world-wide. It is made by steaming the grounds with a strong jet of steam. An espresso machine is a necessary piece of equipment to make espresso, but it gives delicious results. The liquid coming from the steaming process is served black, very hot, and very concentrated in a small cup. The taste is bitter, but 100% coffee, which makes the selection and roasting of the beans critical for good espresso. [N.B. this is the way I like it best!]

Cappuccino is a great way to get your morning coffee. Together with a measure of cream and spices (nutmeg and chocolate are the typical ones) you get a mild coffee that tastes like just the thing to start off your morning without jarring you awake. The cream or milk often is heated using a steam coil from the same machine that makes the espresso, and this has a typical, unmistakable, ripping sound that brings delight to cappuccino appassionati.

American coffee usually is not termed a gourmet coffee. It carries various denominators such as “dish water”, and the so-called sophisticated coffee drinker (“SCD”) makes fun of American coffee. For the SCD, American coffee is too weak, watered-down, full of things that don’t belong in “real” coffee like lots of milk and sugar (or artificial substitutes), and pieces of donuts and toast. But often, this is the same thing that his children consume (“eat” or “drink”?) for breakfast from a medium-sized bowl. “Gourmet”? I guess not, but still very popular!

Fancy coffees come from many places around the world and are typically geographically defined. There is Turkish coffee, Arabic coffee, and various sorts of different coffees from places like central Africa, South America, the far north on various continents, and also either blended with special spices, or laced with alcoholic beverages, or both. A widely popular so-called coffee in North America is made with chickory, a grassy vegetable, not a bean or berry at all, and other drinks are made from various other coffee-substitutes.

Then (but not finally – coffee is never finished!) there are the coffee deserts that are served cold, rather than hot. Typically the most popular local coffee is the basis for these – in North America it is served over ice cubes or crushed ice and sweetened, but as a cooling beverage rather than a desert. In Europe, it tends to be a stronger (again local) coffee poured over ice cream and served as a parfait. Of course, there are also various other concoctions served as deserts, like tiramisu, and alcoholic delights such as Bailey’s Cream Liqour and Tia Maria for afterwards.

Looking at what we just discussed, there probably are hundreds of different blends and styles of coffee that are served around the world. The real trick is to find the ones you like, and stick to them! Don’t just sit there, get to work! :-D

Choosing The Best Gourmet Coffee

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Posted by CoffeeAdmin on 20 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: General

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