Jonathan Alan Withers

Archive for the ‘Abroad’ Category

Tell Eveeerrryyonee!

In Abroad, Industry on March 2, 2011 at 3:12 pm


My good friend and associate Ian Levine will be competing second in the Southwest Regional Barista Competition this Friday at 11:30am. His coffee is delicious and his presentation is smooth as a baby’s bottom. Please cheer him on in person or via the live feed!

For more information on Team Verve, teams from our wholesale accounts Bellano, Bloom, and The French Press (fb), and their adorably ferocious competition, check out the USBC bios page!

Santa Cruz via Portland

In Abroad, Home, Industry on July 22, 2009 at 4:06 am

Short update to show I’m alive and well. This afternoon we finish the move to Santa Cruz. Early tomorrow morning we’ll leave for two days at Crater Lake, then four of coffee, music, beer, food, and general culture in Portland.

We’ll be back and settled into our new place on the third of August, when I’ll report for duty for two weeks of bar shifts to kick things off.

Hope to see you up there soon!

No Distribution

In Abroad, Bar, Industry on May 13, 2009 at 2:03 am

I’d like to write about a new dosing technique I was recently exposed to, and my thoughts on my work with it so far. First, something in the way of back story.

In the 2007 WCBC finals, Kyle G and Chris B shared the uh, stage-area for their overlapping 15 minutes of preparation/performance, respectfully. Before time had started, Sarah Allen engaged Chris in some light banter. I forget the lead-up, but she must have hit upon the subject of the cool new grinding toys, as Kyle is moved to good-naturedly taunt Chris: “You ain’t got no distribution!”

General laughter, as I think to myself, “what a great coffee insult!” But oh no, when that first espresso is ground, I see I should take Kyle more literally. Chris has a distribution, in the sense that he gets the coffee into the basket. Portafilter angling? Fork knocking? Grooming? Leveling? Tamping? Nope! (OK, he tamped) That modified Anfim is timed so accurately, and swept so efficiently, he just doses the full weight into a clean little pyramid in the basket. Beautiful.

This is all old news, of course. In the time since then, we’ve seen the mass production and proliferation of similar grinders. Technique has changed to adapt to this new machinery, much to the tune of what as demonstrated in competition that day. Still, I had never given much thought to applying what I’d seen and learned from this new generation of grinders to traditional doser models.

On a trip to Verve not so long ago, I spent some time harassing Jared and Ashley during their shift. After waiting for their bar seating to clear out, I grabbed a seat and enjoyed a great vantage of their workspace. And it’s from here that Jared gets me thinking about all of this. On the bar are three stock Majors: flat burrs, doser (maybe a little sweep mod? Didn’t ask.), untimed…but employed like a Mazzer E series. He rests the portafilter on the fork, no angling or rotating, doses a neat little pile, knocks it at regular intervals, and tamps. This being new to me, I have some questions. Jared obligingly answers them & pulls a shot to show me again. His general philosophy? In a year grooming will be another dark age relic of espresso preparation. I think I may be starting to agree with him.

Ok. Onto some complete thoughts on this:

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Reciprocal Training (part 1)

In Abroad on December 23, 2008 at 10:17 pm

We are primarily a wholesale roaster. The bar brews a lot of coffee, certainly, and sells more pounds/week retail than any cafe of its size I’ve yet seen. But compare the weight used there to the numbers found on the order sheet at the roastery, and one will begin to contemplate the fate of all this coffee leaving our hands.

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