Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
one of us |
I myself like Dallmayr a lot, which is made in Germany. Made in a press-pot its one of the best things on earth.. Sort of like beer, everyone has a favorite... | ||
|
one of us |
Buell I'll send you some fine Cajun coffee If you send me some of that Dallmayr coffee. Doug Humbarger ------------------ | |||
|
Moderator |
Peet's coffee in Berkley http://www.peets.com/, one of few things good coming out of that part of world. I'm trying to recall the best beans I've had from them, and as I recall they were either Tanzanian or Sumatran. As I recall, Tanzanian has been tough to get due to political instability, but it is an outstanding bean. Good coffee is served strong and black. Now when we talk international, I really like Turkish coffee, and Thai ice coffee. [This message has been edited by Paul H (edited 03-07-2002).] | |||
|
one of us |
Bear Claw- What is Cajun coffee? I'd be willing to try some out... you can email me at scoutsniper36@hotmail.com
| |||
|
Administrator |
Buell, Best cup of coffee I've ever had was in Zimbabwe. It was very early in the morning by the fireside. After I have finished my first cup, and went for another, I picked the coffee jar to see what make it was. It was made in Zimbabwe, and very clearly marked: 30% REAL COFFEE! I have no idea what was the other 70%, but it sure tasted great then. ------------------ www.accuratereloading.com | |||
|
<ovis> |
French Market Coffee from New Orleans. | ||
One of Us |
Venizelos (Greek Prime minister in the early 20th century) brand Greek Coffee. It is ground up into a fine dust and you boil it in a small copper pot on top of a stove with one heaping teaspoon per small demi-tasse cup of water. The whole muddy mess is then pored into the cups. All of the coffee mud settles to the bottom of the cup and you drink down to the top of the mud. You must then turn the cup upside-down on the saucer and wait for the coffee grounds to dry on the sides of your cup and make a cool pattern. This pattern is then read by the nearest little old lady who will, undoubtedly, be able to see your fortune in the grounds. Since I am usually on vacation when I have my grounds read, my most common fortune is, "you will be going on a long trip" . . . Thanks grandma. Enjoy, JohnTheGreek | |||
|
<Daryl Elder> |
Commercially, Tim Horton's; otherwise the best cup(s) of coffee I've ever had was in Mazanillo. | ||
one of us |
The best coffee I've ever had was COMMUNITY COFFEE. I was introduced to it in Louisiana on a hog hunt. I now have it shipped up in 10lb quanities.
quote: | |||
|
one of us |
My favorite coffee comes straight from Colombia, La Bastilla.....A light brown coffee, that is at its best served fresh with a press-pot. SMOOOOTH........ I think I'll have cup now. | |||
|
one of us |
Saeed! You have some experience with Swedish coffee don�t you?....... Here in Sweden we like the coffee really strong! On my last trip to US with some shooting buddies I brougth a kilo of the Swedish prime brand Gevalia. We offered our American friends a cup every now and then. They got a funny look on their faces and started to talk about paint stripper, battery acid and stuff like that Jagermiester is absolutley spot on! Get a good coffee and don�t care if it�s a bit more expencive. I rather have one good cup of coffee a day than five so so tasting cups! Stefan. [This message has been edited by Stefan (edited 03-07-2002).] [This message has been edited by Stefan (edited 03-07-2002).] | |||
|
<Deafdog> |
Hi Buell Organically grown Arabica Coffee. Grown locally in my area and in my garden. Light roast. However I have to admit I prefer Tea. Madura Tea,Daintree Tea and Nerada Tea all Australian teas with Madura local to me. I drink both black and green tea. Regards Deafdog ------------------ | ||
One of Us |
Actually, my coffee is the best. I custom blend my own and grind it so it is "just so". Life does not begin in the morning until I have that first cup. I will be taking my blend with me when I return to Africa this year as they DO NOT know how to make a good brew there! ------------------ | |||
|
one of us |
Ann, Saeed and I and a bunch of other guys take offese to that comment! Whatever it is we drink there (Ricoffee? I think, I can't remember) is the best stuff in the world. SO it is 30% coffee, who cares! Bring it to the states and you might not be able to pass it off as coffee, but there....my, my I feel like I am there right now. I think it is the anticipation of the hunt that is missing in all other coffees. Put some of that in a can of Community coffee and I will be even more addicted! ------------------ | |||
|
one of us |
Jamaican Blue Mountain Coffee ------------------ Regards, Mark | |||
|
one of us |
Geeeeezzzzzz, what a bunch of pantywaist. "Oh my gawd, we have to go back. I forgot my press pot." Have I become involved with a "Fraiser" show? ROFLMAO!! Its pretty obvious that none of you cliff dwellers have drank coffe made in a speckled pot boiled on a camp fire. Without a strainer so you have to kinda keep your teeth clenched to strain out any grounds that got served up. Its cold. A nice tracking snow had fallen during the night. You can reach up and grab a star if you choose. You're camped at @7000 feet and you're waiting for it to get light enough for you to get up to the high ground without taking a stick in the eye. You're hunkered up to the fire, eating a bacon and egg sandwich, your second. Up on top, an elk squals. Another answers from acrost the draw. You look at your buddies and grin and take another scalding sip of the best damn coffe in the world. | |||
|
one of us |
beemanbeme- You should try taking coffee with you that is turkish ground so you dont get the grits in your mouth... If you are a serious coffee drinker you would be prepared to make coffee anywhere, and great tasting coffee at that!
| |||
|
one of us |
Segafredo Zanetti (Italy) | |||
|
One of Us |
beemanbeme, My family used to be in the livestock business in Southeastern Utah and I still have a couple of the BIG speckled pots that were used over the fires in the sheep camps. These things have a base diameter of probably about 16 inches and are abot 2 feet high! These folks were anything but "pantywaists". Regards, JohnTheGreek | |||
|
one of us |
Ah...the first time...I ever had fresh ground real coffee. About 1982 at the Post Office Mall downtown Anchorage before it was taken over by Kalifornians (no offense to those in the Occupied Territories of Kalifornia). I walked in the entrance and the richest scent of coffe, followed it until I found the Perfect Cupboard. A tiny little place. I went in and about fell over when I saw the prices. $9.00 a pound!? Remember this was in '82 dollars. Little German fellow asked me if I had ever had real coffee? Sure, Folgers. He got a look on his face, pulled out a little hand grinder and told me about real coffee as he ground up just enough for one cup. MAN that was good tasting coffee. Since then I have never had store bought coffee if I was able to help it. Ditto what everyone sez, don't skimp on one of the few affordable luxurys in life. | |||
|
<Mr_Magoo> |
Stewarts Coffee. Period. Nothing else comes close to the smoooooooth flavor of the private blend columbian.
Enjoy if you dare. | ||
one of us |
I'll look for some of the German coffee while I'm over there. On a side note... one of the cheerier moments of my very, very, VERY early life, was when, as a child, Mom would let me grind the coffee beans she bought at the A&P store. For me, as a little kid, that was the coolest thing in the whole wide world! I don't have a lot of happy memories from childhood, but that's definitely one of the few. Russ ------------------ | |||
|
<Red Green> |
The best cup of coffee I've ever had was made from green coffee beans my brother roasted. Can't remember where they were grown, but it was very good. [This message has been edited by Red Green (edited 03-08-2002).] | ||
<MontanaMarine> |
PAWildcatter, I'll second your choice. Jamaican Blue Mountain. But I admit to enjoying the hell out of C-rat and MRE coffee on more than a few occasions(imagine that!?!?). I guess it can be relative to the environment. MM | ||
Moderator |
quote:
| |||
|
one of us |
In a report by the Consumer Report, a panel selected Folgers 100% Columbian. Thats what we drink. In a percolator at home and out of a big speckled pot in camp. BTW, I feel pretty safe in saying they weren't brewing Turkish reddy wet in those big speckled pots on that Utah round up. More than likely, Arbuckles brewed strong enough to melt a branding iron. | |||
|
one of us |
YOUR ALL WRONG!! IT'S MOM'S!!
------------------ | |||
|
one of us |
I heartily agree PA Frank. The absolute best coffee in the whole world is the coffee my Mom makes. When I go to visit I try to get there early while the pot is on. The worst coffee??? Thats easy. The supposed coffee that is brewed in the Officers Dining Room of any Texas Department of Criminal Justice unit. It sort of resembles turpentine. Good luck and good shooting | |||
|
Moderator |
For those adventurous enough to try roasting at home, here is another link: http://www.intelligentsiacoffee.com/ It is located in Chicago so it is a little closer than Sweet Marias might be to some people, but they charge more too. Also you can taste the samples there so you know what you are getting. A thing that I have noticed with these home roasted coffees is that the beans seem to have 3 components, the initial taste, the body, and the aftertaste. The beans usually don't have all the components that is why there are so many blends out there. If you try roasting your own, I have had good luck using a hot air popcorn popper and I do it outside too. It makes not really much smoke but creates a lot of fumes and they don't smell too coffee-like when the beans are green. It is interesting to see though, as during the roasting process the beans "pop" or crackle, almost like popcorn! Ive tried all other sorts of roasting methods- wok, pan in the oven, cast iron pan on the stove, and the popper works pretty good for me. | |||
|
one of us |
Bl� Mocca Toscana - black as tar, or Italian Espresso Amaro. (http://www.kraftfoodsnordic.com/KFM/Web.nsf/bla_mocca.htm) Drinking bad coffee is some sort of self-torture. Fritz ------------------ | |||
|
<hornblower> |
quote: Dallmayr or Onko or Jacobs make a good basis , the rest is some good cognac , some whipped cream on top , decorated with chocolate to make it a R�desheimer coffee ! | ||
One of Us |
Wendell I think you and Saeed have seasoned your food with too much gun powder over the years . That Riccoffee (aaaccckkkkKK!) is nasty stuff, wonder where they lost the other 70%? Even a Rooibos was better than Riccoffe!!! There will be a couple bricks of Folgers in my luggage this summer. ------------------ | |||
|
one of us |
Here's a small recipe for all of you (this is meant for *after* a long cold day of hunting: - Take one large cup [This message has been edited by Wachtel (edited 03-08-2002).] | |||
|
Moderator |
quote: My favorite way to drink Vodka is Absolute out of the freezer in a shot glass. But I just may have to try some Swedish coffee on our next hunt | |||
|
<Red Green> |
Paul H, Roasting your own beans is actually very easy to do. I rely on my brother, so I've not had to make the investment. A little trial and error, and you can make some wonderful coffee. What's nice about it is that green beans have a long shelf life, so you can have a stash of different kinds of beans and have a different cup of coffee each day of the week because you can roast only what you'll use the next day. You can also experiment and make your own blends. City roast the same beans one day, espresso roast the following. Same beans, different taste. Totally up to you and what you like. | ||
one of us |
It's colder than a well-digger's butt and it's raining when you wake up and look out the tent from your toasty sleeping bag...staring at the coffee pot just out of reach.....the Captain of the Swedish Bikini Team pours a cup and brings it into the tent for you while you stay warm in the sleeping bag....the best coffee in the world. | |||
|
one of us |
fla3006: I visited my friend few days ago. He made cup of coffee for me. I tasted it, used to some smacks and bad smell of cheap coffee, but now nothing wrong, so I tasted it again and it was perfect. I told him, this coffee is really god, you used filtrated water or so ? No, it is Segafredo Zanetti.
| |||
|
one of us |
quote: I hate to be simplistic here, but, um... does this reference have anything to do with R�desheim? I try to go there at least once every time I have to pull duty at Wiesbaden. There's a little wine shop there, run by some Japanese folks, that I always try to frequent. It's really a quaint little town, right along the Rhine, and there are quite a few nice restaurants there, too. I love going there for dinner, when I have time and transportation. Russ ------------------ | |||
|
one of us |
Best coffee I ever had was some fresh Kona my buddy brought back from a vacation trip to Hawaii. Not the crap they send over to the mainland, either. This was the good stuff, grown up on the sides of the volcanoes and so rich it is like dark chocolate and as smooth as silk. Hard as I tried, I couldn't talk him out of more than a few ounces of beans to grind. That coffee would almost be worth a trip there just to get some GOOD beans. My second favorite coffee is Sumatran closely followed by Tanzanian, when I can get it here. However, the roast makes all the difference with Tanzanian, IMHO. Anne is right about one thing, they don't know how to make coffee in RSA. I don't know what that instant stuff was that they claimed was coffee on the counter of the lodge each morning, but it sure wasn't coffee! I'm pretty sure it didn't even start out as beans. A couple of mornings there, I could have sworn it was ground from the droppings of whatever was passing by in the night. And that is about the nicest thing I can say about it. I will probably bring some good coffee with me next time and a press, but I'm afraid I'll spoil the PH's in camp forever! | |||
|
Powered by Social Strata | Page 1 2 |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
Visit our on-line store for AR Memorabilia