Not to mention the ridiculous waste of packaging the Keurig system requires. You'll lose your B-Company certification over that.My experience with K-cup machines has been uneven, to say the least, and they remain pretty far down on my list of preferences.
American coffee
Re: American coffee
Re: American coffee
No such thing, can't stand the stuff.Sue U wrote: As for what's "good" coffee generally,
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: American coffee
I'm with you there. It almost cost me my license for practicing without caffeine.Gob wrote:No such thing, can't stand the stuff.Sue U wrote: As for what's "good" coffee generally,
Re: American coffee
Maybe you would like coffee if you stirred in a bit of Marmite....Gob wrote:No such thing, can't stand the stuff.Sue U wrote: As for what's "good" coffee generally,

- Sue U
- Posts: 9143
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Re: American coffee
I'm so sorry for you.Gob wrote:No such thing, can't stand the stuff.Sue U wrote: As for what's "good" coffee generally,
GAH!
Re: American coffee
No need for sorrow Sue, I love my Rosy Lee.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: American coffee
Most coffee is brewed way too weak...but you can duplicate that Starbucks taste for a fraction of the cost! Here is how:bigskygal wrote:American coffee does generally suck, I agree - and I'm an American who loves coffee.
Ever since Starbucks became a big thing, little coffee shops have opened up all over - but many of them make coffee that is not a whole lot better than what you get in a typical cafe, it just has tons of icky-sweet flavoring added in, and it costs a few dollars more.
I never bother ordering coffee at most cafes/restaurants, because it is so rarely good. It is generally either too weak, or has the nasty flavor of a never-cleaned pot or brewing machine - or both.
The absolute best coffee I ever had at a regular cafe was at a bed & breakfast attached to an open-to-the-public cafe in Quebec City.
The best coffee I've ever had in America has been Starbucks - either at Starbucks, or served in one of the various hotels where I have attended conferences that carried Starbucks product and obviously had pre-measured packets so the staff couldn't screw up the brew.
I don't know why most Americans brew weak-ass, nasty-ass coffee - but in my life experience, it's true that many of us do. I buy very good quality coffee for my office staff, and they manage to make it taste terrible when they brew it, too.
Make any instant coffee according to the directions, let cool. Put it on the stove & bring it to a rolling boil. Remove from heat. Dip a dirty sweat sock and steep for one minute. Tastes just like Starbucks!
I like really strong coffee...but find Starbucks revolting.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Re: American coffee
It will keep much longer if NOT on a hotplate. The place I get coffee uses Thermos bottles...it will keep an hour and a half with absolutely no loss of taste.TPFKA@W wrote:The secret to good coffee is to drink it shortly after brewing. The life of a pot of coffee, for optimal taste, is no more than 15 minutes after brewing.
Pretentious, twatish anti-Americanism.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Re: American coffee
My wife is the same way. The SMELL actually makes her sick.Gob wrote:No such thing, can't stand the stuff.Sue U wrote: As for what's "good" coffee generally,
She demands I run the kitchen exhaust fan when making coffee.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.