20
Jan 2010

i've never had coffee this good before

Swissgold

As part of my ongoing coffee snobbery, I recently purchased a swissgold® KF 300 One-Cup Coffee Filter, a gold-plated manual drip filter. I've been on a quest to use my own beans via the Keurig and just haven't been getting the best results with the reusable My K-Cup filter. Since discovering that you could get simple hot water from a Keurig, I wanted to try using a simple manual drip filter with some quality beans and see what would happen.

The end result was pure heaven. Place over your cup, add the grounds on top of the filter, place the water filter on top and pour your hot water over, covering with the lid to keep things warm. Incredibly simple, and very easy to clean: just tap the grounds into your compost and rinse/wash with soapy hot water. I didn't realize how much oils and flavor I've been losing to paper filters, or how much I could control the brew compared to our old french press. I'm brewing Intelligentsia's House Blend and the taste was leaps and bounds better than the same grind put through the Keurig directly.

I'm already on my second cup within the hour; this filter is going to be dangerous to my health at this rate. :-)

Filed under  //   coffee   filter   intelligentsia   keurig   manual drip   swissgold  
11
Jan 2010

why Intelligentsia doesn't carry fair trade coffee

You used to carry Fair Trade coffee, why don't you anymore?

We believe that the Fair Trade model is not really designed for a company like ours.  It was created to try to balance trade inequities in the commodity business and to discourage traders of commercial or entry-level Specialty Coffee from under-paying and exploiting cooperatives. This was specifically designed to monitor the international financial transactions between the exporting cooperative and the importer. In recent years it has also been used to enforce labeling practices of roasters.  Generally speaking, these coffees have historically been purchased under conditions of extreme anonymity—no traceability, no accountability. We support the existence of Fair Trade and believe that it has had a net-positive effect on coffee trade.

We do not, however, buy commodity coffee; we buy boutique coffees of the very highest quality, and we travel and work very closely with the growers themselves.  We spend days at a time with them, we sleep in their houses, and we are engaged in a continuous dialogue with them about how to grow together and benefit.  Experience has shown us that we can achieve better results through our own efforts and attain a higher level of transparency than we could by simply purchasing Fair Trade coffees.  Lastly, it is important to us that the producer gets maximum return for their work. Many of our coffees come from cooperatives that are Fair Trade certified, and we could easily make them Fair Trade coffees.  If we did so, Intelligentsia would pay a commission to Fair Trade for the use of the Fair Trade logo.  Our belief is that the money makes a bigger and more positive difference when it goes directly into the hand of the producer. Instead of buying the right to use a label we just give the money to the grower.

We will continue to buy coffee from Fair Trade certified cooperatives, but in these instances Intelligentsia is choosing not to pay for the marketing rights of Trans Fair and FLO.

UPDATE: Thanks to @kevindaum for reminding me to mention that they trade directly instead, which was the whole reason I found their "Not Fair Trade" fairer trade model interesting. :-)

 

Filed under  //   coffee   fair trade   intelligentsia