When Frank Sinatra recorded The Coffee Song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hc_Y4oqdP0I
coffee had yet to reach the levels of esteem it enjoys today. The song tells
about Brazils huge problem of what to do with all the coffee it produced, what
to do? We will get back to this in a moment.
Coffee began global spread from the Ethiopian region or
province called Kaffa. Nearly all plants of the species Coffea arabica are
thought to be descendants of plants from Kaffa. The word coffee dates to the
late 16th-century, and is derived from the Dutch word koffie, this word was derived
from the Turkish word kahve, the Turkish pronunciation in Arabic is qahwa.
Legend has it that a goat herded watched his animals acting strangely after
consuming small red cherries from a bush. Forbidden from eating the berries he
threw them into a fire to destroy them, but he had a change of heart and
scooped the burned berries up and placed into a pot of water to cool. The
resulting liquid was aromatic and flavorful and so the first cup of coffee was
born. Coffee was certainly being brewed for enjoyment by the 11th century and
became a stable in Muslim lives by the 13th century.
By the 15th century coffee from Sudan, Arabia, Yemen was
being traded and shipped through the great Yemen port of Mocha. The the 16th
century the Dutch brought live "mocha" plants back to the Netherlands
to be cultivated in greenhouses and were soon shipped to lands where the bushes
could flourish such as Malabar in India and in 1699 they took some plants to
Batavia in Java.
The first coffeehouses or kaveh kanes opened in Mecca, first
European coffeehouse opened in Venice in 1683 and quickly spread throughout
Europe and into Great Britan. The oldest coffee house in the world still
brewing coffee today is Caffe Florian in Piazza San Marco Venice. Like the
modern day Starbucks coffee houses became gathering houses for social and
political and business ventures, the international insurance corporation
Lloyd's of London began a humble beginning in a coffee house in 1688. The
Boston Tea party began in a coffeehouse (The Green Dragon) as did the New York
Stock exchange and the bank of New York in a Wall St. coffeehouse.
The Dutch first brought the plant to Surinam the smallest
sovereign state in South America in 1718 from which coffee soon spread to
Brazil and other South and Central America countries. Then quickly into the islands
of Cuba and Jamaica, where today some of the world's most expensive coffee is
grown (Jamaican Blue Mountain.)
Along with coffee, two other beverages began to imported
into Europe from the Americas and India during the 17th century, tea and cocoa.
All three struggled for a place in the hot beverage consuming public eventually
all sharing differing markets and all becoming worldwide favorites but it was
the demand for coffee that gave the other two their beginnings.
In 1930 the Brazilian government approached a small baby
food producing company from Switzerland to create a new instant coffee that increased
the dwindling coffee exports of Brazil, while production was high exports were
low . It took eight years but in 1938 Nestle introduced Nescafe.
Instant coffee was not a new idea; it was originally
invented by a Japanese chemist named Satori Kato in 1901 and had been marketed
and sold by various companies with disappointing results. Nescafe
revolutionized the way instant coffee was made. Nestle developed a new process
for dehydrating the concentrated coffee which vastly improved the quality. On my last trip to Africa I visited the King
in Cameroon to discuss with him his coffee exports to Italy, together we shared
a cup of Nescafe freeze dried coffee which was the only way the King drank his coffee.
The two main types of coffee beans are Robusta and Arabica,
when green the beans of Robusta will have a smell of raw peanut while Arabica
beans will very much like blueberries. Once roasted both coffees takes on other
more complex aromas and of course
flavors.
While most Arabica beans must be grown in higher mountainous
regions of 600 meters above sea level or
higher Robusta beans are harvested from areas under 600 meters . Robusta beans have
higher yields in the harvest and the finished product tends to be far more
bitter than the Arabica cousin. Most store shelf blends will contain a mixture
of both of the two types of beans. The best blends are 100 percent Arabica, the
Chef K blend is a blend of green Arabica beans from Brazil, Ethiopia, Sumatra
and Cameroon then dry air roasted to a medium dark color and quickly cooled to
prevent the beans from continuing to cook after they are removed from the roaster.
Green coffee beans have an amazing ability to retain their
freshness for months, some even for
years, when you consider the storage facilities of the major manufacturers green beans must be able to maintain quality.
While true for green beans the same does not hold true for roasted beans. Once
coffee has been roasted the process of breakdown begins, the beans will
deteriorate quickly, oxygen, light, heat
and moisture are all enemies of the roasted bean. Keep your beans in an air
tight container in a cool dark place away from any heat source (cabinets above
stove tops.) You may store your beans in the freezer but never in the
refrigerator. Refrigerating the beans will cause them to absorb odors and
moisture from other things stored within the area. While freezing allows the
bean's to maintain most of their flavor be sure to use only what you require
and never allow the frozen beans to thaw which causes them to take in unwanted
moisture. It is best to portion out what
you require and then freeze the portion packets thus you may only use exactly
what you need as you need it.
The hoax of vacuum sealed packages for freshness should also
be discussed here. Large companies know that fresh roasted coffee releases
carbon dioxide and therefore the beans would damage any container they may be
packed into therefore the roaster must allow a time period of 12 hours to
several days for these gases to dissipate. As we have seen the beans would now
be stale and vacuum sealing would be to seal the stale beans in the container
not freshness.
Coffee should be
ground just prior to use, ground coffee keeps it fresh taste for a very short
time (two days at most) after that oils within the beans leach out and the
brewed result is bitter in taste. Stale coffee will always produce an inferior
cup.
Grind your coffee to
the requirements of your brewer, very fine for an espresso, medium grind for
drip brewers and French presses. Using a
very fine grind for your everyday coffee will produce an inferior cup of coffee
and will be more expensive as you will use more coffee than what is required to
brew a very good cup.
While all people enjoy differing strengths in their brew and prefect that cup of
"Joe" is an art, you
cannot ignore the basic formulation of a
great cup of coffee from which you can experiment and prefect your art. The
requirements for a very good drip brewed coffee in first your water, pure water
must be used, straight tap water is a definite "NO", tap water of
course contains minerals, sodiums, chemicals and fluoride. The purer the water
the better the coffee. Next grind the coffee that you require to a medium grind
using 11/2 to 2 tablespoons for each 8oz of water. Here is where you get to
experiment, ideally your brewer should be producing water at a temperature of
190F for drip brewers and 200F for espresso so use a little more or less
grounds to create your preferred blend.
Let your coffee be coffee macchiatos, cappuccinos, and lattes
are just teases to the great coffee which be found within.
Brazil Nut Coffee Cheesecake
2 1/2 cups crushed chocolate cookie crumbs
1/2 cup crushed roasted Brazil nuts
1/2 cup butter, melted
Non-Stick Cooking Spray
32 oz Cream Cheese, softened
1 cup Sugar
1/4 cup coffee liqueur
1 teaspoon instant coffee granules
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
4 large eggs
4 (1-ounce)
bittersweet baking chocolate squares
Mocha Sauce follows
1. Stir together cookie crumbs, Brazil nuts and butter;
press mixture into bottom and up sides of a 9-inch springform pan coated with
cooking spray.
2. Bake at 350° for 10 minutes. Cool crust in pan on a wire
rack. Reduce oven temperature to 325°.
3. Beat cream cheese and 1 cup sugar at medium speed with an
electric mixer until blended. Add coffee liqueur, coffee granules, and 1
teaspoon vanilla, beating at low speed until well blended. Add eggs, 1 at a
time, beating just until yellow disappears after each addition.
4. Remove and reserve 1 cup cream cheese mixture. Pour
remaining batter into prepared crust.
5. Microwave chocolate squares in a medium-size glass bowl 1
minute or until melted, stirring after 30 seconds; let cool slightly. Stir
reserved 1 cup cream cheese mixture into melted chocolate, blending well. Spoon
chocolate mixture in lines on top of batter in springform pan; gently swirl
with a knife.
6. Bake at 325° for 1 hour or until almost set. Turn oven
off. Let cheesecake stand in oven, with door closed, 30 minutes. Remove
cheesecake from oven, and gently run a knife around outer edge of cheesecake to
loosen from sides of pan. (Do not remove sides of pan.) Cool on a wire rack.
Cover and chill at least 6 hours.
7. Remove sides of springform pan.
Mocha Sauce
1 (12-ounce) package semisweet chocolate morsels
1/2 cup whipping cream
1 tablespoon butter
1/4 cup espresso
Preparation
Cook chocolate morsels, whipping cream, and butter in a
small heavy saucepan over low heat, stirring often, 2 to 3 minutes or until
smooth. Remove from heat, and stir in the brewed coffee. Serve sauce warm
Coffee Crusted Steak
2 (8 oz) ribeye steaks
2 tbsp Chef K steak seasoning or Montreal Steak Seasonings
super fine ground coffee
1/2 tbsp olive oil
1/2 tbsp butter
Mix the seasonings with ground coffee. Coat the steaks heavily with the mix and allow to set
at room temperature for 30 minutes. Heat a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium
heat, and add the butter and olive oil, and heat until the butter is just
browned. Cook steaks for 3 mins on each side. Let rest on a plate covered with
foil for 5-10 mins before serving.
Coffee Crusted Ahi Tuna With Cilantro Sauce
2 lbs Yellowfin tuna steaks
1/4 cup Jamaica Blue Mountain Coffee ground fine
3 tbsp Chef K Creole seasonings
2 tbsp clarified butter
Cut the fish into 4-8 oz or 6-6 oz portions
Mix the coffee with the seasonings and coat the fish.
Heat the butter in a skillet and sear the tuna for 1 minute
per side or to rare depending on the thickness of the steaks.
Sauce
½ cup chopped fresh
cilantro leaves
1 jalapeño, seeded,
de-ribbed, minced
4 teaspoons fresh
ginger, peeled and grated (use a microplane grater)
4 garlic cloves,
grated
Juice of 4 limes
⅓ cup soy sauce
¼ teaspoon sugar
Salt and freshly
ground black pepper
¼ cup extra-virgin
olive oil
In a mixing bowl,
combine the cilantro, jalapeno, ginger, garlic, lime juice, soy sauce, sugar,
salt, pepper, and ¼ cup of olive oil.
Drizzle half the sauce over tuna and serve remaining sauce
on the table. Either serve as whole tuna steaks or sliced