Roastmaster's Blog
TOP 10 coffee gifts
I'm sure you're scrambling to figure out what to buy for certain people on your holiday gift list. You've probably been googling to see what cool new gifts are out there for people who love coffee, and who doesn't love coffee? Well, google no more. I have compiled a list of my TOP 10. The top 10 things that, if I didn't own the DoubleShot, but I were still me, I would be stoked about getting for Christmas (which makes shopping for ME a lot harder). Here it is, David Letterman -style: from number 10 to number 1!
10. A DoubleShot gift card. If you just have no idea what to get, but you know they like coffee, get them a gift card. Buy a card in the DoubleShot or buy one online HERE. We can even email you a coupon to send to your favorite coffee drinker so they can buy on our website!
9. The new DoubleShot Corporate Mastermind Tshirt! You know your friend loves the DoubleShot. Get them a shirt so they can let everyone else know. It's the new design, it's just arrived, and it comes in two colors: blueberry or split pea soup.
8. The Thermos Sipp stainless steel travel tumbler is the most popular cup we've ever sold. They're so popular that it's hard to keep them in stock. Rightfully so. All we get is positive feedback from these awesome cups. They keep coffee hot for hours and hours, they don't leak, they're indestructible, and they come with the stylish DoubleShot logo right there on the side. This cup has been missing from our shelves for a few days, but the new shipment will be here today. Order now, or stop in to get one before they all go bye bye again!
7. The DoubleShot proprietary coffee travel kit. I've been using one over the past year, and it's just been a lifesaver on the road. I got the idea when I was packing for my trip to Tanzania, and it took me a few months after my return to fabricate the missing link to the whole kit: The Connect3 Adaptor Ring. This ring, which I construct by hand right here in the DoubleShot basement, makes it possible to screw the Hario Skerton hand grinder directly onto a Nalgene bottle (I prefer this stainless steel version), so you can grind and brew with the H2JO right in the bottle. Saves tons of space and makes brewing on the road a piece of cake. See a video of how it all works here: http://www.doubleshotcoffee.com/products/connect3-adaptor-ring
6. Gooseneck kettle. I've been using one of these kettles for so long that whenever I try to make a pourover without it, I remember how much I like my kettle. Available in electric or stovetop models.
5. Everything you need to make a pourover (except the kettle). Get your friend a Hario V60 pourover cone, some filters, and the DoubleShot filter crib to keep the cone filters neatly stacked on your counter, and they'll be in coffee paradise. This is the method and the equipment I use every day to make my coffee, so you know I think it's good. There's really no need to own an auto-drip if you're patient enough to make coffee by hand. It's so much better. Watch a video of how it works: http://www.doubleshotcoffee.com/products/hario-v60-dripper
4. A burr grinder. I've often said that, second to great coffee beans, the biggest difference I've ever noticed in my coffee brewing has been in the grinder I'm using. Anyone using a blade grinder to whirly chop their coffee to smithereens is not getting the most out of their coffee. A burr grinder uses a set of grinding disks that adjust to grind consistently coarse or fine, depending on your brewing method. A consistent grind size will change anyone from a coffee drinker into a coffee taster.
3. Subscription! Get someone signed up for our automatic coffee shipments. One pound of coffee will be shipped to them either weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly for 6 or 12 times. They'll remember you each time a pound of coffee shows up at their door, and they'll thank you every time they see you. Sign up online and we'll get started shipping whenever you say the word.
2. Maduro coffee beans plus a MADURO chocolate bar. This is THE gift for someone who is a coffee and chocolate lover. The Maduro, an exclusive natural coffee from Colombia (only available at the DoubleShot), is just an amazing coffee, and since we're always trying to push the envelope, we teamed up with a chocolatier to produce a chocolate bar made with Belgian dark chocolate and bits of crushed-up Maduro coffee beans, roasted right here at the DoubleShot roastery. Satisfy two vices with one awesome gift.
And the number one gift on my list this year is...
1. The Perci Red/Lycello box set. THIS is the ULTIMATE gift. The best gift ever. It's a 2 Barrel Project double wooden box, containing the Perci Red experience and the Lycello experience. This set is extremely limited and will only be produced as they are ordered, so order yours today. If you want this before Christmas, you'll have to get it done asap. My dad has been nice enough to build some more Double-boxes for this awesome gift set, so you still have time to get one, but you should hurry. The box is solid and beautiful, and the lid is etched with the DoubleShot and 2 Barrel Project logos. Two Gesha coffees, one washed and one natural, in one box - and each with their own cup! (If I can't have this, I'll have one of each, Lycello and Perci Red.)
Happy holidays!
Experience: The 2 Barrel Project
It's raining and about the time the sun would set, but for the storm clouds. I've opened a window at both ends of the house, so I'm listening to the disjointed pittering and pattering of two different rainfalls in stereo. Inside, my house is made of hardwoods and leathers and antiques and sticks I brought home from Colorado and I'm currently reclining on a dark chocolate Chesterfield sofa in front of the idle fireplace. And the whole situation begs for one thing.
I ruminate over my humidor and finally decide on a very nice cigar from Jaime Garcia (that's HY-may). Every bit of a 66 guage (1 1/32" diameter), this barrel of a cigar smokes cool and flavorful. But when it's time to perform my pre-smoke ritual of cutting, feeling how moist and tightly wrapped the tobacco is, and tasting the dry-draw, I was surprised to see the tip pre-clipped. I love my Xikar cutter, and I felt a bit sad it didn't make a showing at tonight's performance.
There's something to the rituals we perform when we partake in things we enjoy, and I can't help thinking these little ceremonies are part of the enjoyment. I can appreciate the professional cut on the conical cap of this Reserva Especial, giving me the draw Jaime intended when designing this cigar, and I can appreciate the simplicity and sealability of a screw cap on a bottle of Martin Ray Pinot Noir; but I love the part of wine drinking that is cutting the foil and pulling the cork. And leaving my corkscrew out of the game is poor form.
That's one thing I love about making coffee. It's not enough to scoop ground coffee into an auto-drip; there's an experience here that is missing. Like preparing to smoke a cigar or drink wine or have a cocktail (You don't use an auto-cocktail-maker, do you?), preparing to drink coffee has its own set of unique rituals. The most famous coffee ritual is in Ethiopia. The ceremony involves roasting, pulverizing, boiling a couple of times, and drinking together. My coffee ceremony usually involves a hot water dispenser, an electric grinder, a pourover cone, and my special cup. I enjoy making coffee by hand. It's simple, whether it be a pourover or presspot or aeropress, or any number of methods available today, and hand-brewing changes coffee from a drink into an experience. A ritual. A ceremony.
I grew up going to a church on Wednesday nights and twice on Sundays that sang old hymns and baptized in a pool before the congregation. We knelt to pray and sat quietly while the minister preached lessons from historical accounts of the Bible. Evangelists evoked images of fire and brimstone, and camp meeting every summer was held in an open-sided tabernacle where sweat accumulated and flies were attendant. As I got older, the church modernized and exchanged hymns for prayer choruses, history for funny stories, and kneeling for standing, suits for chambray. And the rules of the church, the rituals of the church, the ceremonies were exchanged for a book on How to Grow Your Church. The simple act of kneeling to pray exhibits a reverence that I felt was lost.
That's the reverence and ritual I want to bring to you with coffee. No kneeling or praying is required, but just taking that extra effort in your coffee-making will make the experience more rewarding. The coffee will taste better and you'll feel more connected to the process. Take the time to smell the beans when you open the bag. To boil some water and then grind the coffee and linger over its fragrances for a moment. Brewing is a craft. It's a romantic and simple craft and it will open the door to an enjoyment of coffee you've never experienced. Your coffee-drinking should be an experience.
The 2 Barrel Project: micro-lot experiences
We're focusing on that experience even more with a series of super-coffees starting next month. The DoubleShot Coffee experience for you at home is going to be magnificent with each of these unique micro-lot coffees. Each one will come to you with accompaniments and tasting notes and brewing instructions that will elevate already-amazing coffees, so you can get the most out of the whole ritual. Look out for this new series we're calling the 2 Barrel Project*, commencing in a big way with a Gesha from Volcan, Panama.
And in the mean time, pick up a pourover or a presspot or an aeropress at the DoubleShot and add a little ceremony to your coffee time.
* Named for our Jabez Burns 2 barrel sample roaster, where we discover great coffees in 200 gram batches.