Archive for October, 2005
Posted on October 19, 2005 - by deCadmus
Unavailable At Any Price?
At Coffee Review, Kenneth Davids has heaped praise on a select group of premium coffees, each of them Cup of Excellence auction lots. The winners — not surprisingly — are pretty much the Who’s Who of today’s specialty roasters, from left coast to right: Stumptown Coffee Roasters’ El Salvador Montecarlos Peaberry, Intelligentsia Coffee’s El Salvador Montecarlos Tablon Crater and Terroir Select Coffee’s Nicaragua Madriz Jose Alfredo Zeledon Cooperative. Ken paints a pretty palate of these uncommon coffees, and awards them 94, 94 and 93 points, respectively. In short, he left me ready to pry open my wallet and try one of each.
The only problem? It doesn’t exactly appear that they’re offered for sale. None of these coffees are to be found on any of these roasters’ web sites, nor are they available on Coffee Review’s companion site, GreatCoffee.com.
Surely it’s a simple snafu. Or, perhaps we’ll all simply read about (and long for) some of the best coffees that are unavailable at any price…
Posted on October 19, 2005 - by deCadmus
Hurricane Stan: The Deadliest Storm You Never Heard Of
Utter the name Katrina, and the recognition is instant… the storm that howled through Louisiana and Mississippi and Alabama, and poured wave after wave of water into the urban bowl of New Orleans will leave physical and emotional scars long after the city — and its residents’ lives — are put back together again.
And Rita, too… so close on the heels of her sister storm, she was the strongest category 5 storm to ever threaten the Gulf of Mexico… though, thankfully, her effects were not so severe as we’d worried.
But what about Stan? Who? Stan, the deadliest hurricane you (probably) never heard of. Stan was a wobbly category 1 storm — a kitten, compared to Katrina and Rita — that nonetheless has wreaked havoc in the mountains of southern Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala. Torrential rains of up to 20 inches triggered mudslides that buried entire villages, and washed away bridges and roads.
The regions hardest hit by Stan are the highlands and lower slopes of Sololá, regions around Guatemala’s Lake Atitlan… the same coffee-centered communities that I visited last January. The village of Panabaj is gone… most of its residents buried, and thus they will remain, interred in the mudslides. San Juan La Laguna is forever altered by wide avenues of mudflows. Finca Dos Marias — high in the cloudforest of San Marcos — is cut-off from the rest of the world. Roads leading to the farm were treacherous at the best of times; now they’re impassable, where they still exist.
Things aren’t much better in the southern border regions of Mexico: Chiapas, and Oaxaca… where rains and flooding and mudslides have scoured away essential infrastructure.
Those digging their way out of the aftermath of Stan need our help. These are mostly coffee-growing communities that have just suffered not only tragic loss of life, but livelihood as well, as anywhere between 50% and 80% of their crop has been lost and it may be impossible to harvest or process what remains.
Sustainable Harvest and Coffee Kids have established funds to provide direct disaster relief to the victims of hurricane Stan — in coffee-growing communities and beyond.
Please give what you can.
Posted on October 15, 2005 - by deCadmus
Autumn 2005 Photos
Autumn has been a curious affair this year… the weather’s been unpredictable; the storied turning of leaves more so. I’ve been taking as many photos as I can, but it’s hit and miss. Here’s the best of the season so far, packaged in a handy Flickr slideshow.
Posted on October 14, 2005 - by deCadmus
Such a Pretty Package… Millstone’s Mountain Moonlight Coffee
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If you’re a parent, or have ever had the dubious joy of giving a gift to a small child (a niece, or a nephew, maybe) then you will be passing familiar with the experience of said child opening the pretty package, glancing appraisingly at the carefully selected gift inside… and then dumping the gift on the floor to play instead with the box it came in. Such is the stuff that memories are made of. (more…)
