The Cup

November 28, 2009

11/28 – Hines Espresso Blend TRAVELED

Hines Origins Organic Espresso Blend
Origin: n/a
Producer: unknown
Farm: n/a
Varieties: n/a
Elevation: unknown
Harvest: unknown
Process: unknown
Roaster: Hines Origins Organic Coffee, Vancouver, BC
Roast Date: November 3, 2009

Catadors: Jeremy, Ilenia, Jenny, Kimmy, Rebecca, Stephanie
Liked It: Ilenia, Stephanie
Hated It:

Fragrance/Aroma/Break/Brightness/Flavor/Body/Aftertaste:
ginger, peppers, zesty, crushed, toasted, bittersweet chocolate, dried apricot, smoked, soft, deep, coffee candy, tangy, grass, dark chocolate milk, milk chocolate, light leaves, onions, dried herbs, lightly savory, nutty, sweet chocolate, slightly fruity, sour, mild, semi-bright, slight, flat, tart, medium bright, hearty, burnt, pretentious broth-water, sweet-sour, watery, bittersweet baking chocolate, black pepper spices, medium body, not substantial, medium, watery, ashy, dark chocolate nut, nutty.

Comments:
This coffee begins with soft, deep coffee candy fragrances and dark chocolate, milky aromas. Surprisingly, it’s mostly medium-bodied and mildly bright. The flavors range from nutty to bittersweet chocolates, and makes room for emergent peppery flavored spices as it cools, wrapping up with a tangy nuttiness, making this a generally exquisite cup.

A nice pairing of tart and dark, warm chocolate smells lead to nutty ashy tastes that seem to gain sweetness as it cools. A medium body makes this a very easy coffee to live with.

The creamy fragrance of crushed toasted sesame seeds draws you to this light-bodied coffee. The delicate aroma leads you to a light tarted cup, whose strong flavor of greens, particularly kale leaves ends complexly.

This medium bodied cup of coffee is for the nonchalant coffee drinker. This coffee has a savory and zesty fragrance of ginger and fresh garden pepper. The taste is hearty yet light, which is perfect for someone who doesn’t take pleasure in the heavy coffee taste but still needs the caffeine.

Jay’s Notes:
Normally at Spro Towson, our modus operandi is to freeze the coffees we receive for freshness. It’s a somewhat controversial practice that has been born out by years of testing. But one that we’ve discovered maintains a high level of flavor and quality. Some argue that the beans will be damaged by the freezing, however, the water content in roasted coffee is under five percent, meaning that the amount of water present in the bean is too small to do structural damage due to freezing.

This coffee arrived to Towson around the 11th of November and was promptly taken home for my trip to Nicaragua where we needed coffees for judges training. I took two five pound bags of this espresso blend on my one week trip to Managua where the coffee flew from BWI-IAH-MGA in my checked baggage, then flew back home the same route in checked baggage again.

During its’ stay in Nicaragua, the bag of coffee remained sealed and was left out on the table in my hotel room at room temperature. No special care was taken for the coffee other than not to open it.

Meanwhile, the rest of the coffee was frozen per our usual practice. This tasting is to see the difference that aircraft travel and room temperature storage might have on coffee versus our normal practice of freezing. In hindsight, what I should have done was taken a third bag of the coffee and placed it in room temperature storage to see what difference, if any, the pressurized aircraft cabin would have on the coffee. But I didn’t anticipate actually returning from Nicaragua with the coffee so…

11/28 – Hines Public Market Coffee Espresso FROZEN

Hines Origins Organic Espresso FROZEN Organic Fair Trade
Origin: n/a
Producer: n/a
Farm: n/a
Varieties: n/a
Elevation: unknown
Harvest: unknown
Process: unknown
Roaster: Origins Organic Coffee, Vancouver, BC
Roast Date: November 3, 2009

Catadors: Jeremy, Ilenia, Kimmy, Rebecca, Stephanie
Liked It:
Hated It: Rebecca/Jeremy ?

Fragrance/Aroma/Brightness/Flavor/Body/Aftertaste:
smoke, woody, bitter, cocoa, crispy, burnt leaves, popcorn kernels, chocolate, bark, cherries, honey wheat, burnt soup, fresh-dried clothes, toasted almonds, oats, milky, sugar, caramel, rich, saturated, smoky, toasted walnuts, rum, chocolate-covered nuts, fairly mellow, a touch bitter (1% Milk bitterness?), burnt sugar cubes, cow pies, medium brightness, dark, flat to medium sparks, no brightness, smoky, burnt, herbal tobacco, sage, bitter wood pencil shavings, burnt pretzel, dirty muddy tobacco, medium body, heavy, strong, medium, heavy, leaves and smoke, serious, bleh, burnt acorns, pretzel, bitey, orange.

Comments:
Casual coffee with reliable cocoa & honey wheat scent and flavor. Medium in body and brightness with strong tones of tobacco. this coffee will consistently bring the same taste cup after cup.

This coffee has a pleasant aroma of dried cherries, chocolate and toasted almonds. This cup is medium bodied with a strong taste of pretzels that is similar to those you find at your favorites corner stand or baseball game. This cup of coffee is best paired with a sweet dessert to balance the salty aftertaste.

This coffee begins with chocolatey, woody scents, mingling with rich aromas of sugar and caramels. Its subdued brightness and bittersweet woody flavors makes this a medium bodied and hearty cup. On certain occasions this seems best for an after-dinner drink.

The crisp smell of popcorn kernels welcomes the saturated and smoky flavor of this coffee. Its mellow brightness has just a touch of bitterness, which compliments the dark and tangy tobacco flavor. This cup leaves you ready to start your day.

Strong tones all around, nutty aroma with hints of bitter chocolate. Heavy body and ashy aftertaste. For the person who likes burnt foods and black coffee.

Jay’s Notes:
As part of our normal production methods at The Spro Towson, we routinely receive and freeze our coffees for maximum lifespan. Through years of testing, I’ve found frozen coffees to perform as well as their non-frozen counterparts, with the additional benefit of extended usable life.

This particular bag was roasted on November 3rd and arrived at Towson around November 9th and was immediately put into frozen storage and pulled from frozen storage for today’s cupping against the same lot of espresso that I took with me to Nicaragua.

Without a doubt, there’s a marked difference between the two coffees, not that one was necessarily worse than the other, just different. Canadian Barista Champion Mike Yung relates to me that Matt Lee, owner of Toronto’s Manic Coffee, stores their Hines Espresso for a 14 days before using to allow the flavors to develop.

The Hines Espresso has been with us at both Jays Shave Ice and Towson Spro since June 2004 and it’s been one of the most consistent espressos I’ve ever tasted. Notes of cocoa, fruit, body and nuttiness on the finish make it my favorite espresso and the one that we will always have in our grinders as our primary espresso.

Powered by WordPress