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Free burr Grinder From Zach & Dani's

$30 Burr Grinder Free!  Just Pay $6.95 For Shipping.

For a limited time, Zach & Dani’s Coffee Grinders are available absolutely free (just pay $6.95 shipping and handling). Forget about the retail price, you’ll get the highest-quality grinder for almost nothing!

The Zach & Dani’s Burr Grinder  is a must for the distinguished coffee connoisseur. It gently shaves the coffee beans rather than chopping them. This keeps the coffee from heating as it grinds and preserves the delicious flavor of your freshly roasted coffee.

Why do people love the Zach & Dani’s Burr Grinder? Consistency. It’s the key to the perfect cup of coffee. It can be set to grind the beans at eight different levels of fineness.

This Burr Grinder includes a handy store and dispenser for your fresh grounds. click here to get this must have for the home coffee drinker.

 

[tags]burr grinder, free coffee grinder, free burr grinder, coffee grinder[/tags]

Brewing from beans roasted at home.
By Jenny Lim

McClatchy Newspapers (MCT)

Smokeless Coffee Roasters To Roast Your Own Coffee At Home.

HILTON HEAD, S.C. – For most java lovers, making a morning cup of joe simply requires a coffee pot.

Tim Judge, however, requires a propane-fueled barbecue pit.

When you roast your own coffee beans, you apparently need some additional equipment to get your daily jolt of caffeine. And if you’re like Judge, that may call for a Brinkmann Pro Series 7231 three-burner gas grill.

Judge, owner and sole roaster of Judge Java, a Hilton Head Island gourmet coffee roasting company, does what a growing number of coffee aficionados are doing: use their very own coffee roasters to fire personal batches of unscathed, pea green coffee seedlings, until the beans’ skins caramelize and crack, plumped and darkened into some preferred shade of brunette.

The best coffee is consumed within one to three days of roasting, said Judge, a java junkie who decided to start his wholesale coffee bean business on the island at the start of this year. Now that personal roasters are on the market for less than $100, more caffeine devotees are buying the machines so they can add roasting to their repertoire of coffee-consumption skills.

People are starting to realize you can buy these little machines for $89 to $99, get green coffee, roast it and have it in the morning,” Judge said.

Of course, the Hilton Head coffee seller uses a slightly pricier contraption. Thanks to the Internet, Judge figured out how to implant a motorized, rotating, stainless steel cylinder into a propane gas grill – turning the meat griddle into a $1,200 coffee furnace. Along with smaller roasters,

Judge peddles replicas of his transformer grill, which he uses to roast six varieties of green beans and concoct Judge Java’s Hilton Head Heritage Brew, a Sumatra bean blend. Most of his coffee is for wholesale, though he retails individual bags of beans for those who want to pick up an order from his warehouse.

Roasting green coffee, it seems, is serious business.

And perhaps an increasingly popular one, too. As of this week, the Web site Coffeegeek.com had nearly 31,000 posts to its online forum about home roasting, the second most popular discussion next to talk of espresso machines and grinders, which boasted 92,000 posts.

There is a distinguishable flavor difference between just-roasted beans and the store-bought grind, according to Judge, a self-taught roaster who said he harnessed his coffee prowess through Web sites about java.

“Once you start roasting, I don’t think you’ll ever go back to buying,” he said.

The businessman preaches his fresh-is-best gospel at an unsurprisingly caffeinated clip of speech. He lists his preferences for green beans at a fervent pace: They’re less processed, he insists. They’re cheaper, too, selling for a quarter to half the cost of roasted beans. And coffee, Judge suggested, can be good for you.

“Antioxidants!” Judge exclaimed, rationalizing that as long as a mug of the a.m.-haters’ nectar stays free of whipped cream and sugar, it can, in fact, offer health benefits. Never mind that Judge calls coffee a “legally addictive substance” and takes his with cream, sugar and Ovaltine, thank you very much.

“Coffee isn’t the worst `ism’ in the world,” he said.

It should come as no shock that a man who manages to roast coffee beans on a propane grill would wear a Hawaiian shirt while doing it. Behind Judge Java’s warehouse on Beach City Road last week, Judge shoveled a plastic cup into a bag of green Sumatra beans six times and tossed the seeds into his grill-roaster’s metal tube, with the glee of a kid at Christmastime.

Regardless of the hardware used, the coffee-roasting process is generally the same: Green beans are plopped into a 400- to 500-degree roasting machine. After the device rotates the sizzling beans for about five to eight minutes, they make the sound of bursting popcorn kernels. Another three to five minutes later, the beans erupt into a second round of applause. After a few more minutes, the seeds are ready to be dumped onto a tray, where the chaff from the pods can flutter off the toasted beans.

“Whee!” Judge cried out, as the 48-year-old poured five pounds of Heritage Brew onto a wire net and whirled his oven-mitted hands through the browned pebbles to separate and cool them.

Learning to roast green coffee beans may be an art best learned through practice. Judge said his first batch was under-cooked. But he’s slowly becoming a coffee bean-whisperer of sorts, learning to listen for the brew’s readiness after the second pop.

“You have to hear it,” Judge said. “It’s all about the cracks.”

The New Jersey native said he gets Judge Java’s beans from a wholesaler in Charleston. Judge’s warehouse now stores 1,500 pounds of green and roasted beans – including Colombian, Kenyan AA, organic Peruvian and Rainforest Alliance Costa Rican coffee, as well as the Sumatra beans that make up the bulk of the Heritage Brew blend.

Though Judge is a former antiques seller and mail order company owner and currently also sells home bars and cigar humidors, he is particularly – what else? – perky about his new venture as a coffee roaster.

In fact, he seems to have only one ounce of negativity when it comes to all things coffee.

“I always wonder: If you’re drinking coffee, why decaf?” Judge asked. “Decaf is for people who don’t drink coffee.”

 

[tags] coffee roaster, roast coffee beans at home, roast coffee beans, smokeless coffee roaster[/tags]

My Coffee Is Cold

Cold Coffee Brewer For Iced Coffee Recipes 

By Jon Bonné  MSNBC

Updated: 4:13 p.m. PT Aug 20, 2004 

The more you think about it, the more clear it becomes that hot-brewed coffee is by no means a culinary dictate.  I personally gave up drip coffee for espresso years ago, finding that filtration brought too little flavor and too much caffeine into the mix.

Others find regular coffee too acidic. Of the estimated 54 million Americans who suffer heartburn, according to the National Heartburn Alliance, three-quarters say it can be caused by beverages.

Cold-brew systems largely solve these problems, which may be why Toddy claims 20 to 30 percent of its customers are coffee lovers who find regular brews too much to stomach.

No heat, no plug
It’s not an immediately comfortable transition. The technology is profoundly low-tech: a plastic pitcher with a fabric filter, sitting atop a carafe that catches the finished product. No electricity needed, just gravity, a pound of ground beans and nine cups of cold water. That and 10 to 12 hours steeping time.

“We live in a culture that almost demands something be complicated,” says Brett Holmes, a partner in Houston-based Toddy Products. “It’s got to have a plug.”

The resulting concentrate is strong stuff. Toddy recommends three parts of either hot or cold water to one part concentrate, depending on how you like your coffee, not unlike an Americano.

During a two-week test in the MSNBC.com newsroom, the 3-to-1 ratio was rarely used, given our preference for maximum coffee in minimum time. My own fave was 1-to-1 with cold nonfat milk.

As it turns out, cold brew is familiar to the caffeinated elite.  Many die-hard coffee fiends swear by systems like Toddy, which retails for $35, or the similar Filtron.  Seattle’s Best Coffee fessed up earlier this month that they have for years used industrial-sized Toddys to brew concentrate for cold coffee drinks, and will now sell Toddy systems in their stores.

None other than Seattle’s Best founder Jim Stewart brought Toddys into the chain’s back rooms because they could turn out flavorful coffee without astringent or chemical qualities. Even after the coffee chain was bought by java megalith Starbucks, it opted to keep its own brewing traditions, including the Toddy.

“We’re not just trying to make up another of what everybody else is doing,” says Shannon Jones, Seattle’s Best’s director of field marketing.

Breaking the rules
The more you think about cold brew’s weirdness, the less weird it seems. After all, coffee has been around since before 1000 A.D., depending on whose version of history you believe, yet it was initially thought to have been eaten as a berry, not brewed.

Who decided on the drip method anyway? Prior to the early 1700s, when the Europeans developed a rudimentary coffee filter known as a biggins, coffee grounds were usually left in the brew. It wasn’t until 1908 that a German housewife named Melitta Bentz devised a paper filter for drip. 

Even the precise espresso process — now a backbone of coffee consumption — wasn’t engineered until 1901. So why should the world be governed by the laws of Mr. Coffee?

“I can serve hot or cold coffee at the same time, and I can serve a large group without standing in the kitchen for a good 30 minutes pouring hot water through a drip filter,” says Toddy fan Kristin Yamaguchi, who first bought one to conserve space in her tiny Yokohama, Japan, kitchen.

Yamaguchi became an instant convert. While she prefers coffee cold, she not only enjoys hot Toddy but unlike regular coffee, can drink it later in the day and without food.

Four decades ago, a similar rethinking of coffee norms prompted the creation of the Toddy, due to sell its one millionth unit this fall.

In 1964, a newly graduated chemical engineer named Todd Simpson, ordered coffee in a small cafe in Guatemala. He received a small carafe of cool concentrate and some boiling water, which set him wondering whether his mother — who couldn’t otherwise stomach coffee — might be able to enjoy the cold stuff. She could, he devised a formal brewing device and the Toddy business was born.

Smoother on the stomach
Though coffee aficionados have murmured about it for the past 30 years, Holmes and his former college roommate, Strother Simpson  — Todd’s son — now hope to take their contraption to the big leagues, including a marketing campaign, a redesign of the plastic pitcher and a line of ready-to-mix bottled coffee and tea concentrates. (As many Southerners will attest, tea can be cold-brewed, too.)

Where cold brew truly comes from is a total mystery. The Simpsons believe it may be an ancient Peruvian method, and coffee concentrates first showed up in 19th-century America. Another theory traces it back to Java. The trail seems to stop there. 

What’s apparent, though, in Toddy’s independent lab tests and in our own less scientific tastings, is that cold concentrate contains far less acid and a good bit less caffeine.

Toddy claims to brew up two-thirds less caffeine than regular coffee; in a side-by side test using Starbucks’ regular blend, the Toddy version had a pH of 6.31 and 40 mg of caffeine per 100 grams of coffee, while Starbucks store-brewed clocked in at a pH of 5.48 and 61 mg of caffeine. (Lower numbers on the pH scale, which is measured logarithmically, denote more acid.)

In a beverage near you
Not all our newsroom testers were convinced. One enjoyed the taste but thought the mechanics of cold brewing were a bit much. (He compared it to a fondue pot.)  Another suggested coffee fans who cherish a full dose of acid and caffeine might be turned off. There were inevitable comparisons to instant coffee.

Still, a carafe of concentrate remained fresh over a week, with no dulling of flavor. It even avoided absorbing the tastes of the newsroom refrigerator’s other contents — possibly the first beverage ever to avoid that fate. 

Potential uses kept emerging. Camping trips.  Coffee ice cubes for undiluted iced lattes.

Seattle’s Best recently announced it will take over café operations at more than 400 Borders locations, so Toddy concentrate could soon appear across the nation — though you might not know you’re drinking some. (Seattle’s Best’s Naughty Toddy and JavaKula iced drinks, among others, feature it.)

I’m likely to stick to my espresso machine at home. But cold-brewed coffee may just become a regular work habit, and not just because the always-overheated communal coffee pot fills me with dread.

 

[tags]brewing cold coffee, toddy maker, cold coffee, iced coffee drinks[/tags]