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- From: alopez-o@daisy.uwaterloo.ca (Alex Lopez-Ortiz)
- Subject: Coffee and Caffeine's Frequently Asked Questions
- Summary: All you wanted to know about caffeinated beverages
- Originator: alopez-o@daisy.uwaterloo.ca
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- Archive-Name: caffeine-faq
- Last-modified: January 7, 1998
- Version: 2.98
-
- Frequently Asked Questions about Coffee and Caffeine
- ****************************************************
-
- URL: http://www.cs.unb.ca/~alopez-o/caffaq.html
-
- Alejandro Lopez-Ortiz
-
- alopez-o@unb.ca
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This FAQ is dedicated to all beverages and products that contain caffeine;
- including tea, coffee, chocolate, mate, caffeinated soft drinks,
- caffeinated pills, coffee beans, etc.
-
- There are several newsgroups in which these topics may be of relevance,
- including alt.drugs.caffeine, rec.food.drink.coffee, rec.food.drink.tea,
- and alt.food.chocolate.
-
- Rec.food.drink.coffee is preferred over alt.coffee and alt.food.coffee.
-
- [Image]
-
- 1. The Chemistry of Caffeine and related products
- 1. How much caffeine is there in [drink/food/pill]?
- 2. How much caffeine there is in blend X?
- 3. Chemically speaking, what is caffeine?
- 4. Is it true that tea has no caffeine/What is theine, theobromine,
- etc?
- 5. Where can I find a gif of the caffeine molecule?
- 6. Is it true that espresso has less caffeine than regular coffee?
- 7. How does caffeine taste?
- 8. How much theobromine/theophylline there is in ...?
- 2. How to brew the ultimate caffeine drink?
- 1. What is the best temperature for drip coffee?
- 2. Quality of coffee
- 3. Why you should never use percolators
- 3. Peripherals and Secondary Storage
- 1. Proper care of Coffee makers...
- 2. How to store coffee?
- 3. Equipment reviews?
- 4. What is a French Press/Cafetiere/Bodum?
- 4. Caffeine and your Health
- 1. Caffeine Withdrawal
- 2. What happens when you overdose?
- 3. Effects of caffeine on pregnant women.
- 4. Caffeine and Osteoporosis (Calcium loss)
- 5. Studies on the side-effects of caffeine...
- 6. Caffeine and depression.
- 7. Caffeine and your metabolism.
- 5. Miscellaneous
- 1. How do you pronounce mate?
- 2. How do you spell Colombia/Colombian?
- 3. How do you spell Espresso?
- 4. Where did the term "cup of joe" come from?
- 6. Coffee Recipes and other beverages
- 1. Espresso
- 2. Chocolate covered espresso beans
- 3. Cappuccino
- 4. Frappe
- 5. How to make your own chocolate
- 6. How to make the best cup of coffee
- 7. Turkish Coffee
- 8. Irish Coffee
- 9. Thai Iced Coffee
- 10. Vietnamese Iced Coffee
- 11. Melya
- 7. Electronic Resources
- 8. Administrivia
- 1. List of Contributors
- 2. Copyright
-
- 1. The Chemistry of Caffeine and related products
-
- 1. How much caffeine is there in [drink/food/pill]?
-
- According to the National Soft Drink Association, the following
- is the caffeine content in mgs per 12 oz can of soda:
-
- Afri-Cola 100.0 (?)
- Jolt 71.2
- Sugar-Free Mr. Pibb 58.8
- Mountain Dew 55.0 (no caffeine in Canada)
- Diet Mountain Dew 55.0
- Kick citrus 54 (36mg per 8oz can, caffeine from guarana)
- Mello Yellow 52.8
- Surge 51.0
- Tab 46.8
- Battery energy drink -- 140mg/l = 46.7mg/can
- Coca-Cola 45.6
- Diet Cola 45.6
- Shasta Cola 44.4
- Shasta Cherry Cola 44.4
- Shasta Diet Cola 44.4
- Mr. Pibb 40.8
- OK Soda 40.5
- Dr. Pepper 39.6
- Pepsi Cola 37.2
- Aspen 36.0
- Diet Pepsi 35.4
- RC Cola 36.0
- Diet RC 36.0
- Diet Rite 36.0
- Canada Dry Cola 30.0
- Canada Dry Diet Cola 1.2
- 7 Up 0
-
- Krank2o sample 1 97.7mg/500ml sample 2 101.6mg/500ml
- Lab: Ameritech Labs, College Pt, NY; tested Sep 03, 96
-
- Krank2o middle 96.4mg/500ml
- Lab: Ameritech Labs, tested Aug 29, 96
-
-
-
-
- By means of comparison, a 7 oz cup of coffee has the following
- caffeine (mg) amounts, according to Bunker and McWilliams in J.
- Am. Diet. 74:28-32, 1979:
-
- Drip 115-175
- Espresso 100mg of caffeine
- 1 serving (1.5-2oz)
-
- Brewed 80-135
- Instant 65-100
- Decaf, brewed 3-4
- Decaf, instant 2-3
- Tea, iced (12 ozs.) 70
- Tea, brewed, imported 60
- Tea, brewed, U.S. 40
- Tea, instant 30
- Mate 25-150mg
-
-
- The variability in the amount of caffeine in a cup of coffee or
- tea is relatively large even if prepared by the same person using
- the same equipment and ingredients day after day.
-
- Reference Variability in caffeine consumption from coffee and
- tea: Possible significance for epidemiological studies by B.
- Stavric, R. Klassen, B. Watkinson, K. Karpinski, R. Stapley, and
- P. Fried in "Foundations of Chemical Toxicology", Volume 26,
- number 2, pp. 111-118, 1988 and an easy to read overview, Looking
- for the Perfect Brew by S. Eisenberg, "Science News", Volume 133,
- April 16, 1988, pp. 252-253.
-
- Quote from the lab manual:
-
- Caffeine is present in tea leaves and in coffee to the
- extent of about 4%. Tea also contains two other
- alkaloids, theobromine and theophylline. These last two
- relax the smooth muscles where caffeine stimulates the
- heart and respiratory systems.
-
- The effects of theobromine are, compared to caffeine and
- theophylline, relatively moderate. However, cocoa contains eight
- times more theophylline than caffeine. As well, caffeine has been
- shown to combine with other substances for added potency. Thus
- the effects of theobromine might be enhanced by the caffeine in
- chocolate.
-
- Theobromine is highly toxic to dogs and kills many canids/year
- via chocolate poisoning. It takes quite a dose to reach fatal
- levels (more than 200 mg/kg bodyweight) but some dogs have a bad
- habit of eating out of garbage cans and some owners have a bad
- habit of feeding dogs candy. A few oreos won't hurt a dog, but a
- pound of chocolate can do considerable damage.
-
- Clinical signs of theobromine toxicity in canids usually manifest
- 8 hours after ingestion and can include: thirst, vomiting,
- diarrhea, urinary incontinence, nervousness, clonic muscle
- spasms, seizures and coma. Any dog thought to have ingested a
- large quantity of chocolate should be brought to an emergency
- clinic asap, where treatment usually includes the use of emetics
- and activated charcoal. The dog will thus need to be monitored to
- maintain proper fluid and electrolyte balance.
-
- Pathogenesis of theobromine toxicity: evidently large quantities
- of theobromine have a diuretic effect, relax smooth muscles, and
- stimulate the heart and cns.
-
- Reference:
-
- Fraser, Clarence M., et al, eds. The Merck Veterinary Manual, 7th
- ed. Rahway, NJ: Merck & Co., Inc. 1991. pp. 1643-44.
-
- On humans caffeine acts particularly on the brain and skeletal
- muscles while theophylline targets heart, bronchia, and kidneys.
-
- Other data on caffeine:
-
- Cup of coffee 90-150mg
- Instant coffee 60-80mg
- Tea 30-70mg
- Mate 25-150mg
- Cola 30-45mg
- Chocolate bar 30mg
- Stay-awake pill 100mg
- Vivarin 200mg
- Cold relief tablet 30mg
-
- The following information is from Bowes and Church's Food values of
- portions commonly used, by Anna De Planter Bowes. Lippincott, Phila.
- 1989. Pages 261-2: Caffeine.
-
- Candy:
-
- Chocolate mg caffeine
- baking choc, unsweetened, Bakers--1 oz(28 g) 25
- german sweet, Bakers -- 1 oz (28 g) 8
- semi-sweet, Bakers -- 1 oz (28 g) 13
-
- Choc chips
- Bakers -- 1/4 cup (43 g) 13
- german sweet, Bakers -- 1/4 cup (43 g) 15
-
- Chocolate bar, Cadbury -- 1 oz (28 g) 15
- Chocolate milk 8oz 8
-
- Desserts:
- Jello Pudding Pops, Choc (47 g) 2
- Choc mousse from Jell-O mix (95 g) 6
- Jello choc fudge mousse (86 g) 12
-
- Beverages
- 3 heaping teaspoons of choc powder mix 8
- 2 tablespoons choc syrup 5
- 1 envelope hot cocoa mix 5
-
- Dietary formulas
- ensure, plus, choc, Ross Labs -- 8 oz (259 g) 10
- Cadbury Milk Chocolate Bar
-
- More stuff:
-
- Guarana "Magic Power" (quite common in Germany),
- 15 ml alcohol with
- 5g Guarana Seeds 250.0 mg
- Guarana capsules with
- 500 mg G. seeds 25.0 mg / capsule
-
- (assuming 5% caffeine in seeds as stated in literature)
-
- Guarana soda pop is ubiquitous in Brazil and often available at
- tropical groceries here. It's really tasty and packs a wallop. Guarana
- wakes you up like crazy, but it doesn't cause coffee jitters.
-
- It is possible that in addition to caffeine, there is some other
- substance in guarana that also produces an effect, since it 'feels'
- different than coffee. Same goes for mate.
-
- 2. How much caffeine there is in blend X?
-
- Caffeine Content in beans and blends
-
- (Source: Newsletter--Mountanos Bros. Coffee Co., San Francisco)
-
- VARIETALS/STRAIGHTS
- Brazil Bourbons 1.20%
- Celebes Kalossi 1.22
- Colombia Excelso 1.37
- Colombia Supremo 1.37
- Costa Rica Tarrazu 1.35
- Ethiopian Harrar-Moka 1.13
- Guatemala Antigua 1.32
- Indian Mysore 1.37
- Jamaican Blue Mtn/Wallensford Estate 1.24
- Java Estate Kuyumas 1.20
- Kenya AA 1.36
- Kona Extra Prime 1.32
- Mexico Pluma Altura 1.17
- Mocha Mattari (Yemen) 1.01
- New Guinea 1.30
- Panama Organic 1.34
- Sumatra Mandheling-Lintong 1.30
- Tanzania Peaberry 1.42
- Zimbabwe 1.10
-
- BLENDS & DARK ROASTS
- Colombia Supremo Dark 1.37%
- Espresso Roast 1.32
- French Roast 1.22
- Vienna Roast 1.27
- Mocha-Java 1.17
-
- DECAFS--all @ .02% with Swiss Water Process
-
- 3. Chemically speaking, what is caffeine?
-
- Caffeine is an alkaloid. There are numerous compounds called
- alkaloids, among them we have the methylxanthines, with three
- distinguished compounds: caffeine, theophylline, and theobromine,
- found in cola nuts, coffee, tea, cacao beans, mate and other plants.
- These compounds have different biochemical effects, and are present in
- different ratios in the different plant sources. These compounds are
- very similar and differ only by the presence of methyl groups in two
- positions of the chemical structure. They are easily oxidized to uric
- acid and other methyluric acids which are also similar in chemical
- structure.
-
- Caffeine:
- Sources: Coffee, tea, cola nuts, mate, guarana.
- Effects: Stimulant of central nervous system, cardiac muscle, and
- respiratory system, diuretic Delays fatigue.
-
- Theophylline:
- Sources: Tea
- Effects: Cariac stimulant, smooth muscle relaxant, diuretic,
- vasodilator
-
- Theobromine:
- Sources: Principle alkaloid of the cocoa bean (1.5-3%) Cola nuts and
- tea
- Effects: Diuretic, smooth muscle relaxant, cardiac stimulant,
- vasodilator.
-
- (Info from Merck Index)
-
- The presence of the other alkaloids in colas and tea may explain why
- these sometimes have a stronger kick than coffee. Colas, which have
- lower caffeine contents than coffee are, reportedly, sometimes more
- active. Tea seems the strongest for some. Coffee seems more lasting
- for mental alertness and offers fewer jitters than the others.
-
- A search in CAS and produced these names and synonyms:
-
- RN 58-08-2 REGISTRY
- CN 1H-Purine-2,6-dione, 3,7-dihydro-1,3,7-trimethyl- (9CI) (CA INDEX NAME)
- OTHER CA INDEX NAMES:
- CN Caffeine (8CI)
- OTHER NAMES:
- CN 1,3,7-Trimethyl-2,6-dioxopurine
- CN 1,3,7-Trimethylxanthine
- CN 7-Methyltheophylline
- CN Alert-Pep
- CN Cafeina
- CN Caffein
- CN Cafipel
- CN Guaranine
- CN Koffein
- CN Mateina
- CN Methyltheobromine
- CN No-Doz
- CN Refresh'n
- CN Stim
- CN Thein
- CN Theine
- CN Tri-Aqua
-
- MF C8 H10 N4 O2
-
- The correct name is the first one,
- 1H-Purine-2,6-diione,3,7-dihydro-1,3,7-trimethyl- (This is the
- "inverted name") The "uninverted name" is
- 3,7-Dihydro-1,3,7-trimethyl-1H-purine-2,6-dione
-
- Merck Index excerpt...
-
- Caffeine: 3,7-dihydro- 1,3,7-trimethyl- 1H-purine-
- 2,6-dione; 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine; 1,3,7-trimethyl-
- 2,6-dioxopurine; coffeine; thein; guaranine;
- methyltheobromine; No-Doz.
-
- C8H10N4O2; mol wt 194.19. C 49.48%, H 5.19%, N 28.85%, O
- 16.48%.
-
- Occurs in tea, coffee, mate leaves; also in guarana paste
- and cola nuts: Shuman, U.S. pat. 2,508,545 (1950 to General
- Foods). Obtained as a by-product from the manuf of
- caffeine-free coffee: Barch, U.S. pat. 2,817,588 (1957 to
- Standard Brands); Nutting, U.S. pat. 2,802,739 (1957 to Hill
- Bros. Coffee); Adler, Earle, U.S. pat. 2,933,395 (1960 to
- General Foods).
-
- Crystal structure: Sutor, Acta Cryst. 11, 453, (1958).
- Synthesis: Fischer, Ach, Ber. 28, 2473, 3135 (1895); Gepner,
- Kreps, J. Gen. Chem. USSR 16, 179 (1946); Bredereck et al.,
- Ber. 83, 201 (1950); Crippa, Crippa, Farmaco Ed. Sci. 10,
- 616 (1955); Swidinsky, Baizer, U.S. pats. 2,785,162 and
- 2,785,163 (1957 to Quinine Chem. Works); Bredereck,
- Gotsmann, Ber. 95, 1902 (1962).
-
- Hexagonal prisms by sublimation, mp 238 C. Sublimes 178 C.
- Fast sublimation is obtained at 160-165 C under 1mm press.
- at 5 mm distance. d 1.23. Kb at 19 C: 0.7 x 10^(-14). Ka at
- 25 C: <1.0 x 10^(-14). pH of 1% soln 6.9. Aq solns of
- caffeine salts dissociate quickly. Absorption spectrum:
- Hartley, J. Chem. Soc. 87, 1802 (1905). One gram dissolves
- in 46 ml water, 5.5 ml water at 80 C, 1.5 ml boiling water,
- 66 ml alcohol, 22 ml alcohol at 60 C, 50 ml acetone, 5.5 ml
- chloroform, 530 ml ether, 100 ml benzene, 22 ml boiling
- benzene. Freely sol in pyrrole; in tetrahydrofuran contg
- about 4% water; also sol in ethyl acetate; slightly in petr
- ether. Soly in water is increased by alkali benzoates,
- cinnamates, citrates, or salicylates.
-
- Monohydrate, felted needles, contg 8.5% H2O. Efflorescent in
- air; complete dehydration takes place at 80 C. LD50 orally
- in rats: 200 mg/kg.
-
- Acetate, C8H10N4O2.(CH3COOH)2, granules or powder; acetic
- acid odor; acid reaction. Loses acetic acid on exposure to
- air. Soluble in water or alcohol with hydrolysis into
- caffeine and acetic acid. Keep well stoppered.
-
- Hydrochloride dihydrate, C8H10N4O2.HCl.2H2O, crystals, dec
- 80-100 C with loss of water and HCl. Sol in water and in
- alcohol with dec.
-
- Therap Cat: Central stimulant.
-
- Therap Cat (Vet): Has been used as a cardiac and respiratory
- stimulant and as a diuretic.
-
- 4. Is it true that tea has no caffeine/What is theine, theobromine, etc?
-
- From "Principles of biochemistry", Horton and al, 1993.
-
- Caffeine is sometimes called "theine" when it's in tea. This
- is probably due to an ancient misconception that the active
- constituent is different. Theophylline is present only in
- trace amounts. It is more diuretic, more toxic and less
- speedy.
-
- Caffeine
- 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine
- Theophylline
- 1,3-dimethylxanthine
- Theobromine
- 3,7-dimethylxanthine
-
- Coffee and tea contain caffeine and theophylline,
- respectively, which are methylated purine derivatives that
- inhibit cAMP phosphodiesterase. In the presence of these
- inhibitors, the effects of cAMP, and thus the stimulatory
- effects of the hormones that lead to its production, are
- prolonged and intensified.
-
- Theobromine and theophylline are two dimethylxanthines that have two
- rather than three methyl groups. Theobromine is considerably weaker
- than caffeine and theophylline, having about one tenth the stimulating
- effect of either.
-
- Theobromine is found in cocoa products, tea (only in very small
- amounts) and kola nuts, but is not found in coffee. In cocoa, its
- concentration is generally about 7 times as great as caffeine.
- Although, caffeine is relatively scarce in cocoa, its mainly because
- of theobromine that cocoa is "stimulating".
-
- Theophylline is found in very small amounts in tea, but has a stronger
- effect on the heart and breathing than caffeine. For this reason it is
- often the drug of choice in home remedies for treating asthma
- bronchitis and emphysema. The theophylline found in medicine is made
- from extracts from coffee or tea.
-
- 5. Where can I find a gif of the caffeine molecule?
-
- Caffeine = 1,3,7-Trimethylxanthine
-
- A different view of the caffeine molecule.
-
- The Department of Chemistry at Jamaica of the University of Western
- Indies has made available an avi and an mpeg of a rotation of the
- caffeine molecule, among other molecules and chemical processes. The
- index page contains more information and the links to the clips.
-
- CH3
- |
- N
- / \
- N----C C==O
- || || |
- || || |
- CH C N--CH3
- \ / \ /
- N C
- | ||
- CH3 O
-
- There is a gif picture at the wuarchive.wustl.edu ftp site or any of
- its mirror sites under
-
- multimedia/images/gif/c
-
- caffeine
-
- Theobromine is also a common component of coffee, tea, chocolate, and
- mate (particularly in these last two).
-
-
-
- Theobromine
-
- CH3
- |
- N
- / \
- N----C C==O
- || || |
- || || |
- CH C N--H
- \ / \ /
- N C
- | ||
- CH3 O
-
- Theophylline was once thought to be a major component of tea. This is
- not correct. Tea contains significantly more amounts of caffeine than
- of theophylline.
-
- Theophylline
-
- CH3
- |
- N
- / \
- N----C C==O
- || || |
- || || |
- CH C N--CH3
- \ / \ /
- N C
- | ||
- H O
-
- 6. Is it true that espresso has less caffeine than regular coffee?
-
- Yes and no. An espresso cup has about as much caffeine as a cup of
- dark brew. But servings for espresso are much smaller. Which means
- that the content of caffeine per millilitre are much higher than with
- a regular brew. Moreover, caffeine is more quickly assimilated when
- taken in concentrated dosages, such as an espresso cup.
-
- The myth of lower caffeine espresso comes comes from the fact that the
- darker roast beans used for espresso do have less caffeine than
- regularly roasted beans as roasting is supposed to break up or
- sublimate the caffeine in the beans (I have read this quote on
- research articles, but found no scientific studies supporting it.
- Anybody out there?). But espresso is prepared using pressurized water
- through significantly more ground (twice as much?) than regular drip
- coffee, resulting in a higher percentage of caffeine per millilitre.
-
- Here's the caffeine content of Drip/Espresso/Brewed Coffee:
-
- Drip 115-175
- Espresso 100 1 serving (1.5-2oz)
- Brewed 80-135
-
- 7. How does caffeine taste?
-
- Caffeine is very bitter. Barq's Root Beer contains caffeine and the
- company says that it has "12.78mg per 6oz" and that they "add it as a
- flavouring agent for the sharp bitterness"
-
- 8. How much theobromine/theophylline there is in ...?
-
- Sources: Physicians Desk Reference and Institute of Food Technologies
- from Pafai and Jankiewicz (1991) DRUGS AND HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
-
- cocoa 250mg theobromine
- bittersweet choc. bar 130mg theobromine
- 5 oz cup brewed coffee no theobromine
- tea 5oz cup brewed 3min
- with teabag 3-4 mg theophylline
- Diet Coke no theobromine or theophylline
-
- * How to brew the ultimate caffeine drink?
-
- 1. What is the best temperature for drip coffee?
-
- According to chemical studies, the optimal water temperature for drip
- coffee is 95-98C. According to my notes, colder water doesn't extract
- enough caffeine/essential oils from the beans, and above such
- temperature the acidity increases wildly.
-
- 2. Quality of coffee
-
- The quality of a brew depend on the following factors (in no
- particular order):
-
- 1. Time since grinding the beans.
- 2. Time since roasting.
- 3. Cleanliness with brewing equipment.
- 4. Bean quality (what crop etc).
- 5. Water quality.
-
- Fact: Unless you are buying some major debris, bean quality is not
- very important, as compared to 1-3 and 5.
-
- Fact: A coffee can in the supermarket often contains major debris, so
- be careful when you choose. (See note below).
-
- Fact: Once you have freshly roasted and ground coffee, filtered water
- and equipment free of oil residues from the last brew, quality of
- beans makes a huge difference.
-
- NOTE: A coffee can in the supermarket often contains a blend of
- Arabica and robusta beans while most coffee houses sell only arabica
- beans. Arabica beans are usually flavour rich, while robusta beans
- have more caffeine, less flavour and are cheaper to produce.
-
- When you buy coffee, whether in a coffee house or in a supermarket,
- you want to get 100% arabica, except for espresso blends, which are a
- combination of both.
-
- For freshness, in a coffee house it is better to buy popular blends
- that move fast, while in a supermarket vacuum packaged containers with
- expiry date are your best bet.
-
- 3. Why you should never use percolators.
-
- Percolators violate most of the natural laws about brewing coffee.
-
- o Don't overextract the oils and flavour. Percolators work by
- taking coffee and reheating it and throwing it over the grounds
- over and over and over again.
- o Never reheat/boil coffee. This destroys the flavour. For best
- flavour, boil the water, pass it over the grounds and retain the
- heat. Don't reheat it.
-
- Violating these rules may not sound like much, but these are about the
- only rules there are. The effect of a percolator is to keep passing
- boiling water/coffee over the grounds until there is no flavour left
- and the flavour in the coffee is so dead that it's a worthless waste.
-
- * Peripherals and Secondary Storage
-
- 1. Proper care of coffee makers...
-
- It is very important that you wash your coffee maker pot and filter
- container thoroughly at least once a week. Bitter oils stick to the
- glass container and plastic filter holder.
-
- I used to wash the plastic filter container and rinse the glass pot.
- Coffee started to taste bad. When I was told to wash both thoroughly
- with plenty of soap the flavour improved instantly. Note: To the naked
- eye rinsed and soap washed pots look the same (clean that is).
-
- Some drip coffee makers require periodic cleansing with a solution of
- water and vinegar.
-
- If you have a coffee/teapot, the inside of which is stained with oily
- brown residues - also plastic/metal coffee filters, tea strainers, and
- stainless steel sinks in caffeine-o-phile houses - they can be
- restored to a shining, brand-spanking-new state by washing in hot
- washing powder (detergent).
-
- Get a large plastic jug, add 2..3 heaped tablespoons of Daz Automatic
- or Bold or whatever, and about a pint of hot water - just off the boil
- is the best.
-
- Swill the jug around until the detergent is dissolved, and then pour
- into tea/coffeepot, and let it stand for 5 minutes, swilling the pot
- around occasionally, just to keep the detergent moving. Put the lid on
- and shake it a few times (care: slippery + hot)
-
- Repeat as necessary. Keep it hot with a little boiling water if
- needed. If you have a cafetiere, dissemble it, and soak the parts in
- the mixture for a few minutes, agitating occasionally.
-
- In both cases, the residue just falls off with almost no scrubbing. It
- does great things with over-used filter machine filters, too.
-
- Important: Rinse off all detergent afterwards, use lots of fresh
- water.
-
- 2. How to store coffee?
-
- One should always store coffee beans in a glass, air tight container.
- Air is coffee's principle enemy. Glass is best because it doesn't
- retain the odors of the beans or the oils, which could contaminate
- future beans stored in the same container. However, if you use glass,
- make sure the container is not exposed to light, as sunlight is
- believed to reduce freshness.
-
- For consumption within:
-
- 1 week
- room temperature is fine
- 2 weeks to a month
- refrigerate
- freeze them
-
- This prevents the chemical reactions that produce stale beans and
- lifeless coffee.
-
- 3. Equipment reviews?
-
- 4. What is a French Press/Cafetiere/Bodum
-
- French presses are usually glass containers with a wire mesh attached
- to a plunger. To make coffee, you first boil water, then pour water
- into the container which should contain one or two spoons of coffee
- per cup. You let it rest for 2-3 minutes and then plunge the wire
- mesh. This filters the coffee.
-
- * Caffeine and your Health
-
- Important: This information was excerpted from several sources, no claims
- are made to its accuracy. The FAQ mantainer is not a medical doctor and
- cannot vouch for the accuracy of this information.
-
- 1. Caffeine Withdrawal: Procedures and Symptoms.
-
- How to cut caffeine intake?
-
- Most people report a very good success ratio by cutting down caffeine
- intake at the rate of 1/2 cup of coffee a day. This is known as
- Caffeine Fading. Alternatively you might try reducing coffee intake in
- discrete steps of two-five cups of coffee less per week (depending on
- how high is your initial intake). If you are drinking more than 10
- cups of coffee a day, you should seriously consider cutting down.
-
- The best way to proceed is to consume caffeine regularly for a week,
- while keeping a precise log of the times and amounts of caffeine
- intake (remember that chocolate, tea, soda beverages and many headache
- pills contain caffeine as well as coffee). At the end of the week
- proceed to reduce your coffee intake at the rate recommended above.
- Remember to have substitutes available for drinking: if you are not
- going to have a hot cup of coffee at your 10 minute break, you might
- consider having hot chocolate or herbal tea, but NOT decaff, since
- decaff has also been shown to be addictive. This should take you
- through the works without much problem.
-
- Some other people quit cold turkey. Withdrawal symptoms are quite
- nasty this way (see section below) but they can usually be countered
- with lots of sleep and exercise. Many people report being able to stop
- drinking caffeine almost cold-turkey while on holidays on the beach.
- If quitting cold turkey is proving too hard even in the beach,
- drinking a coke might help.
-
- What are the symptoms of caffeine withdrawal?
-
- Regular caffeine consumption reduces sensitivity to caffeine. When
- caffeine intake is reduced, the body becomes oversensitive to
- adenosine. In response to this oversensitiveness, blood pressure drops
- dramatically, causing an excess of blood in the head (though not
- necessarily on the brain), leading to a headache.
-
- This headache, well known among coffee drinkers, usually lasts from
- one to five days, and can be alleviated with analgesics such as
- aspirin. It is also alleviated with caffeine intake (in fact several
- analgesics contain caffeine dosages).
-
- Often, people who are reducing caffeine intake report being irritable,
- unable to work, nervous, restless, and feeling sleepy, as well as
- having a headache. In extreme cases, nausea and vomiting has also been
- reported.
-
- References.
-
- Caffeine and Health. J. E. James, Academic Press, 1991. Progress in
- Clinical and Biological Research Volume 158. G. A. Spiller, Ed. Alan
- R. Liss Inc, 1984.
-
- 2. What happens when you overdose?
-
- From Desk Reference to the Diagnostic Criteria from DSM-3-R (American
- Psychiatric Association, 1987):
-
- Caffeine-Induced Organic Mental Disorder 305.90 Caffeine
- Intoxication
-
- 1. Recent consumption of caffeine, usually in excess of
- 250 mg.
- 2. At least five of the following signs:
- 1. restlessness
- 2. nervousness
- 3. excitement
- 4. insomnia
- 5. flushed face
- 6. diuresis
- 7. gastrointestinal disturbance
- 8. muscle twitching
- 9. rambling flow of thought and speech
- 10. tachycardia or cardiac arrhythmia
- 11. periods of inexhaustibility
- 12. psychomotor agitation
- 3. Not due to any physical or other mental disorder, such
- as an Anxiety Disorder.
-
- Basically, overdosing on caffeine will probably be very very
- unpleasant but not kill or deliver permanent damage. However, People
- do die from it.
-
- Toxic dose
-
- The LD_50 of caffeine (that is the lethal dosage reported to kill
- 50% of the population) is estimated at 10 grams for oral
- administration. As it is usually the case, lethal dosage varies
- from individual to individual according to weight. Ingestion of
- 150mg/kg of caffeine seems to be the LD_50 for all people. That
- is, people weighting 50 kilos have an LD_50 of approx. 7.5 grams,
- people weighting 80 kilos have an LD_50 of about 12 grams.
-
- In cups of coffee the LD_50 varies from 50 to 200 cups of coffee
- or about 50 vivarins (200mg each).
-
- One exceptional case documents survival after ingesting 24 grams.
- The minimum lethal dose ever reported was 3.2 grams
- intravenously, this does not represent the oral MLD (minimum
- lethal dose).
-
- In small children ingestion of 35 mg/kg can lead to moderate
- toxicity. The amount of caffeine in an average cup of coffee is
- 50 - 200 mg. Infants metabolize caffeine very slowly.
-
- Symptoms
- + Acute caffeine poisoning gives early symptoms of anorexia,
- tremor, and restlessness. Followed by nausea, vomiting,
- tachycardia, and confusion. Serious intoxication may cause
- delirium, seizures, supraventricular and ventricular
- tachyarrhythmias, hypokalemia, and hyperglycemia.
- + Chronic high-dose caffeine intake can lead to nervousness,
- irritability, anxiety, tremulousness, muscle twitching,
- insomnia, palpitations and hyperreflexia. For blood testing,
- cross-reaction with theophylline assays will detect toxic
- amounts. (Method IA) Blood concentration of 1-10 mg/L is
- normal in coffee drinkers, while 80 mg/L has been associated
- with death.
- Treatment
- + Emergency Measures
- + Maintain the airway and assist ventilation. (See
- Appendix A)
- + Treat seizures & hypotension if they occur.
- + Hypokalemia usually goes away by itself.
- + Monitor Vital Signs.
- +
- + Specific drugs & antidotes. Beta blockers effectively
- reverse cardiotoxic effects mediated by excessive
- beta-adrenergic stimulation. Treat hypotension or
- tachyarrhythmias with intravenous propanolol, .01 - .02
- mg/kg. , or esmolol, .05 mg/kg , carefully titrated with low
- doses. Esmolol is preferred because of its short half life
- and low cardioselectivity.
- + Decontamination
- + Induce vomiting or perform gastric lavage.
- + Administer activated charcoal and cathartic.
- + Gut emptying is probably not needed if 1 2 are
- performed promptly.
- Appendix A
- Performing airway assistance.
- 1. If no neck injury is suspected, place in the "Sniffing"
- position by tilting the head back and extending the front of
- the neck.
- 2. Apply the "Jaw Thrust" to move the tongue out of the way
- without flexing the neck: Place thumb fingers from both
- hands under the back of the jaw and thrust the jaw forward
- so that the chin sticks out. This should also hurt the
- patient, allowing you to judge depth of coma. :)
- 3. Tilt the head to the side to allow vomit and snot to drain
- out.
- From conversations on alt.drugs.caffeine:
-
- The toxic dose is going to vary from person to person, depending
- primarily on built-up tolerance. A couple people report swallowing 10
- to 13 vivarin and ending up in the hospital with their stomaches
- pumped, while a few say they've taken that many and barely stayed
- awake.
-
- A symptom lacking in the clinical manual but reported by at least two
- people on the net is a loss of motor ability: inability to move,
- speak, or even blink. The experience is consistently described as very
- unpleasant and not fun at all, even by those very familiar with
- caffeine nausea and headaches.
-
- 3. Effects of caffeine on pregnant women.
-
- Caffeine has long been suspect of causing mal-formations in fetus, and
- that it may reduce fertility rates.
-
- These reports have proved controversial. What is known is that
- caffeine does causes malformations in rats, when ingested at rates
- comparable to 70 cups a day for humans. Many other species respond
- equally to such large amounts of caffeine.
-
- Data is scant, as experimentation on humans is not feasible. In any
- case moderation in caffeine ingestion seems to be a prudent course for
- pregnant women. Recent references are Pastore and Savitz, Case-control
- study of caffeinated beverages and preterm delivery. American Journal
- of Epidemiology, Jan 1995.
-
- On men, it has been shown that caffeine reduces rates of sperm
- motility which may account for some findings of reduced fertility.
-
- 4. Caffeine and Osteoporosis (Calcium loss)
-
- From the Journal of AMA: (JAMA, 26 Jan. 1994, p. 280-3.)
-
- "There was a significant association between (drinking more)
- caffeinated coffee and decreasing bone mineral density at both the hip
- and the spine, independent of age, obesity, years since menopause, and
- the use of tobacco, estrogen, alcohol, thiazides, and calcium
- supplements [in women]."
-
- Except when:
-
- "Bone density did not vary [...] in women who reported drinking at
- least one glass of milk per day during most of their adult lives."
-
- That is, if you drink a glass of milk a day, there is no need to worry
- about the caffeine related loss of calcium.
-
- 5. Studies on the side-effects of caffeine.
-
- OAKLAND, California (UPI) -- Coffee may be good for life. A major
- study has found fewer suicides among coffee drinkers than those who
- abstained from the hot black brew.
-
- The study of nearly 130,000 Northern California residents and the
- records of 4,500 who have died looked at the effects of coffee and tea
- on mortality.
-
- Cardiologist Arthur Klatsky said of the surprising results, ``This is
- not a fluke finding because our study was very large, involved a
- multiracial population, men, women, and examined closely numerous
- factors related to mortality such as alcohol consumption and
- smoking.''
-
- The unique survey also found no link between coffee consumption and
- death risk. And it confirmed a ``weak'' connection of coffee or tea to
- heart attack risk -- but not to other cardiovascular conditions such
- as stroke.
-
- The study was conducted by the health maintenance organization Kaiser
- Permanente and was reported Wednesday in the Annals of Epidemiology.
-
- 6. Caffeine and depression.
-
- 7. Caffeine and your metabolism.
-
- Caffeine increases the level of circulating fatty acids. This has been
- shown to increase the oxidation of these fuels, hence enhancing fat
- oxidation. Caffeine has been used for years by runners and endurance
- people to enhance fatty acid metabolism. It's particularly effective
- in those who are not habitual users.
-
- Caffeine is not an appetite suppressant. It does affect metabolism,
- though it is a good question whether its use truly makes any
- difference during a diet. The questionable rationale for its original
- inclusion in diet pills was to make a poor man's amphetamine-like
- preparation from the non-stimulant sympathomimetic phenylpropanolamine
- and the stimulant caffeine. (That you end up with something very
- non-amphetamine like is neither here nor there.) The combination drugs
- were called "Dexatrim" or Dexa-whosis (as in Dexedrine) for a reason,
- namely, to assert its similarity in the minds of prospective buyers.
- However, caffeine has not been in OTC diet pills for many years per
- order of the FDA, which stated that there was no evidence of efficacy
- for such a combination.
-
- From Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics:
-
- Caffeine in combination with an analgesic, such as aspirin,
- is widely used in the treatment of ordinary types of
- headache. There are few data to substantiate its efficacy
- for this purpose. Caffeine is also used in combination with
- an ergot alkaloid in the treatment of migrane (Chapter 39).
-
- Ergotamine is usually administered orally (in combination
- with caffeine) or sublingually [...] If a patient cannot
- tolerate ergotamine orally, rectal administration of a
- mixture of caffeine and ergotamine tartarate may be
- attempted.
-
- The bioavailability [of ergotamine] after sublingual
- administration is also poor and is often inadequate for
- therapeutic purposes [...] the concurrent administration of
- caffeine (50-100 mg per mg of ergotamine) improves both the
- rate and extent of absorption [...] However, there is little
- correspondence between the concentration of ergotamine in
- plasma and the intensity or duration of therapeutic or toxic
- effects.
-
- Caffeine enhances the action of the ergot alkaloids in the
- treatment of migrane, a discovery that must be credited to
- the sufferers from the disease who observed that strong
- coffee gave symptomatic relief, especially when combined
- with the ergot alkaloids. As mentioned, caffeine increases
- the oral and rectal absorption of ergotamine, and it is
- widely believed that this accounts for its enhancement of
- therapeutic effects.
-
- Nowadays most of researchers believe that the stimulatory actions are
- attributable to the antagonism of the adenosine. Agonists at the
- adenosine receptors produce sedation while antagonists at these sites,
- like caffeine and theophylline induce stimulation, and what is even
- more important, the latter substance also reverse agonists-induced
- symptoms of sedation, thus indicating that this effects go through
- these receptors.
-
- Another possibility, however, is that methylxanthines enhance release
- of excitatory aminoacids, like glutamate and aspartate, which are the
- main stimulatory neurotransmitters in the brain.
-
- As to the side effects: methylxanthines inhibit protective activity of
- common antiepileptic drugs in exptl. animals in doses comparable to
- those used in humans when correction to the surface area is made. It
- should be underlined, that although tolerance develop to the
- stimulatory effects of theo or caffeine when administered on a chronic
- base, we found no tolerance to the above effects . This hazardous
- influence was even enhanced over time. Therefore, it should be
- emphasized that individuals suffering from epilepsy should avoid, or
- at least reduce consumption of coffee and other caffeine-containing
- beverages.
-
- * Miscellaneous
-
- 1. How do you pronounce mate?
-
- MAH-teh. MAH like in malt, and -teh like in Gral. Patten.
-
- 2. How do you spell Colombia/Colombian?
-
- 3. How do you spell Espresso?
-
- By far, the most common spelling used throughout the world today is
- "espresso". This is a shortened form of the original Italian name for
- the drink "caffe espresso" (accent marks omitted). This spelling is
- considered to be the correct spelling by the vast majority of of
- coffee consumers, vendors, retailers, and producers.
-
- Some English language dictionaries also list "expresso" as a variant
- spelling. However, this does not mean the spelling is 'equally valid'.
- (see the post by Jesse Sheidlower included below)
-
- It was pointed out during the great "espresso vs. expresso" debate
- (spring 94) that the Italian alphabet does not even contain the letter
- "X", which is incorrect.
-
- Further, it was discovered that at least three dictionaries contained
- incorrect definitions of the word "espresso". The American Heritage
- Dictionary gave the following definition:
-
- "A strong coffee brewed by forcing steam under pressure
- through darkly roasted, powdered coffee beans."
-
- The Oxford English Dictionary said:
-
- "Coffee brewed by forcing steam through powdered coffee
- beans"
-
- The Webster New World Dictionary gives:
-
- "coffee prepared in a special machine from finely ground
- coffee beans, through which steam under high pressure is
- forced."
-
- All three of these are wrong. In fact, espresso is a strong coffee
- brewed by quickly forcing hot water through darkly roasted, finely
- ground coffee beans.
-
- (Some espresso makers do use steam, but only to force the hot water
- through the ground coffee. The steam NEVER touches the coffee. Many
- espresso makers use no steam at all. Instead, they use either a pump
- or a piston to quickly force hot water through the ground coffee.)
-
- Once these errors and the origins of the word "espresso" had been
- pointed out, the argument "but expresso is in the dictionary" quickly
- began to crumble. The final death blow to this position came in a post
- by dictionary editor Jesse Sheidlower. This post is reproduced in its
- entirety below:
-
- Jesse Sheidlower writes
-
- I find this thread fascinating. I regret that it
- demonstrates an unfamiliarity with dictionaries and how to
- use them, but no matter. I believe that I am the only
- dictionary editor to participate in this discussion, so let
- me waste a bit more bandwidth addressing some of the points
- made so far, and introducing a few others:
-
- o The OED, Second Edition, does include _espresso_ and
- _expresso_, the latter being a variant of the former.
- It correctly derives it from Italian _caffe espresso_.
- [Accents left off here.] Whoever claimed it derives the
- term from a would-be Italian _caffe expresso_ was in
- error.
- o There _is_ an "x" in Latin and Italian.
-
- Mike Oliver points out that there are two italian
- alphabets, one (il tradizionale) with no w, x or y, and
- the other one with all the letters in the english
- alphabet. The latter seems to be the one currently in
- use. (Reference: Il grande dizionario Garzanti della
- lingua italiana, Garzanti Editore s.p.a, 1987).
- o There are four major American dictionaries (published
- by Merriam Webster, Webster's New World, Random House,
- and American Heritage). The most recent edition of each
- gives _espresso_ as the main form, and _expresso_ as a
- variant only. The fact that _expresso_ is listed in the
- dictionary does not mean that it is equally common: the
- front matter for each dictionary explains this. The
- person who claimed that three dictionaries including
- OED give _expresso_ as "equally valid" was in error.
- o Dictionaries, in general, do not dictate usage: they
- reflect the usage that exists in the language. If a
- dictionary says that _espresso_ is the main spelling,
- it means that in the experience of its editors (based
- on an examination of the language), _espresso_ is
- notably more common. It does not mean that the editors
- have a vendetta against _expresso_.
- o To the linguist who rejects the authority of
- dictionaries: I agree that language is constantly
- changing; I'm sure that every dictionary editor in the
- country does as well. Dictionaries are outdated before
- they go to press. But I think they remain accurate to a
- large extent. Also, if you are going to disagree with
- the conclusions of a dictionary, you should be prepared
- to back yourself up. I can defend, with extensive
- written evidence, our decision to give _espresso_ as
- the preferred form.
- o The spelling _espresso_ is the form used by the copy
- desks of the _New York Times,_ _Gourmet,_ _Bon
- Appetit,_ The _Wine Spectator,_ the _Wall St. Journal,_
- the _L.A. Times,_ _Time,_ _Newsweek,_ and to my
- knowledge every other major or minor newspaper or
- magazine, general or food-related, in the
- English-speaking world. The fact that a handwritten
- menu on an Italian restaurant door spells it "expresso"
- is trivial by comparison.
- o In sum: though both _espresso_ and _expresso_ are
- found, the former is by far the more common. It is also
- to be favored on immediate etymological evidence, since
- the Italian word from which it is directly borrowed is
- spelled _espresso_. The form _espresso_ is clearly
- preferred by all mainstream sources.
-
- 4. Where did the term "cup of joe" come from?
-
- Legend has it that the origin is a follows
-
- The U.S. Navy used to serve alcoholic beverages on board ships.
- However, when Admiral Josephus "Joe" Daniels became Chief of Naval
- Operations, he outlawed alcohol onboard ships, except for very special
- occasions. Coffee then became the beverage of choice, hence the term
- "Cup of Joe."
-
- * Coffee Recipes and other beverages.
-
- 1. Espresso
-
- After living in Italy (Rome) for two years and living off espresso,
- Mr. X have found American espresso doesn't cut it. Heres how to do it.
-
- o Get good dark roasted espresso beans, imported Italian brand if
- you can find it.
- o Pack your strainer real full. Pack it hard. your instructions
- will say NOT to pack it, but don't listen.
- o Don't use too much water. Espresso in Italy is as thick as syrup.
- Very thick.
- o Add two spoons of sugar, it's a sweet, thick liquid in Italy.
-
- Drink fast.
-
- Enjoy.
-
- If using a stove top espresso machine, clean after each use, paying
- attention to the seal and strainer.
-
- 1. For best results, get arabica beans that have been roasted dark
- ("Italian Roast" is darkest) and are oily-looking. Other roasts
- are for other types of brewing: espresso machines won't draw the
- earthy flavour of Sumatran out, for example. A small amount of
- other beans might add a nice note to the flavour, though (I've
- had surprising success adding a few of Thanksgiving Coffee's
- "High-Caffeine Pony Express" beans, which are actually robusta
- beans from Thailand).
- 2. Grind those beans until they're very fine, but not quite a
- powder. Put them into the appropriate piece of your machine and
- tamp it down (but don't pack all the grounds in tight).
- 3. Watch the espresso as it drips down. Does a nice layer of foam
- form on the top? If it does, all is well; that foam is made from
- the flavourful oils, and it is called crema. If not, go to the
- coffee roaster and demand quadruple your money back.
- 4. Never make more than 2oz at a time. If you're making two cups of
- espresso, make two separate shots. This is important. The idea is
- that the water rushes through and draws out only the most
- flavourful part of the grounds. More than 2oz and you're drawing
- out less flavourful stuff and diluting your espresso. If you're
- really hardcore, make only 1oz at a time; this is called caffe
- ristretto.
-
- 2. Chocolate covered espresso beans
-
- You won't get single, glossy beans, but the taste is there!
-
- 1. Put dark roast coffee beans on a waxpaper-covered baking sheet.
- 2. Melt some chocolate by puting a container with the chocolate in a
- pan of boiling water, stir the chocolate when it is getting hot.
- Some experimentation regarding what chocolate to use is in place.
- I used chocolate chips of from Girardelli. One should probably
- aim for dark and not too sweet chocolate.
- 3. Pour the chocolate over the beans and smear it so that each bean
- is covered - you should have a single layer of covered beans not
- too far apart.
- 4. When the beans have cooled off a little bit, put the sheet in the
- fridge/freezer.
- 5. When solid, break off a piece and enjoy.
-
- 3. Cappuccino
-
- Disclaimer: People prepare cappuccino in many different ways, and in
- their very own way each one of them is correct. The following recipe,
- which is commonly used in Latin countries, has been tasted by several
- of my North-American friends and they unanimously agreed that
- cappuccino prepared using this recipe tastes much better than the
- standard fare in USA/Canada.
-
- Start with cold milk (it doesn't really need to be ice-cold), use homo
- milk or carnation. 2% or skim is just not thick enough (admittedly, it
- is easier to produce foam with skim milk).
-
- Place the milk on a special cappuccino glass with a cappuccino basket.
- (Cappuccino glasses have a thinner bottom).
-
- Aerate the milk near the top, within 2cm (1 in) of the top. Move the
- glass down as the milk aerates. It is a good idea to have an
- oscillating motion while aerating the milk.
-
- Aerating the milk in another container, then pouring in a glass and
- adding the foam with a spoon is sacrilege.
-
- Anybody who has done so should make a pilgrimage to San Francisco's
- Girardelli's. Otherwise entry to heaven will be denied (god, is after
- all, Italian. At least the catholic one).
-
- If you need to aerate the milk on a separate container, aerate exactly
- the amount of milk required for one cup, so no need to add foam with a
- spoon.
-
- Once the milk has been aerated, promptly clean the aerator with a wet
- rag. Failure to do so will quickly result in rotten milk flavour
- coming from the aerator.
-
- Another warning on similar lines applies to restaurant type coffee
- machines: leave the aerator valve open when powering the machine up
- and down. When the machine is off a partial vacuum is formed in the
- boiler that will suck milk residue into the boiler. This then coats
- the inside of the boiler and can cause bad smelling steam until the
- boiler is flushed. Some machines have a vacuum bleed valve to prevent
- this problem but many don't.
-
- Wait for the steam pressure to build up again (for some cappuccino
- makers wait time is near zero, for others it maybe as long as 60
- secs).
-
- Prepare the espresso coffee, you may add it directly on to the glass
- if possible or use a cup and then pour it from the cup on the milk.
-
- According to Jym Dyer: In Italy, the milk is added TO the espresso,
- not the other way around, that way the milk is floating; on top, where
- you then add the sugar, and stir it up.
-
- Cappuccino tastes better when is really hot, and has two teaspoons of
- sugar. (small teaspoons, like the ones in expensive silverware).
-
- Then accompany said cappuccino with a warm tea bisquet or english
- muffin with marmalade, or alternatively with a baguette sandwich or
- panini.
-
- 4. Frappe
-
- Frappe coffee is widely consumed in parts of Europe and LatinAmerica
- especially in summer. Originally was made with cold espresso. Nowadays
- is prepared in most places by shaking into a shaker 1-2 teaspoons of
- instant coffee with sugar, water and ice-cubes and it is served in a
- long glass with ice, milk to taste and a straw. The important thing is
- the thick froth on top of the glass.
-
- 5. How to make your own chocolate
-
- Here's the recipe for making a real chocolate beverage. Important
- steps are in boldface.
-
- Ingredients
-
- o 1-2kg (2-4pounds) of cocoa beans.
- o A manually operated grinder.
-
- Instructions
-
- o Sift through the beans removing any impurities (pieces of grass,
- leaves, etc).
- o Place the beans in a pan (no teflon) and roast them. Stir
- frequently. As the beans roast they start making "pop" sounds
- like popcorn. Beans are ready when you estimate that approx
- 50-75% of the beans have popped. Do not let the beans burn,
- though a bit of black on each bean is ok.
- o Peel the beans. Peeling roasted cocoa beans is like peeling baked
- potatoes: The hotter they are the easier it is to peel the darn
- things, at the expense of third degree burns on your fingers.
- (Tip: Use kitchen mittens and brush the beans in your hands). If
- the beans are too hard to peel roast them a bit longer.
- o Grind the beans into a pan. They produce a dark oily paste called
- "cocoa paste".
- o The oil in the cocoa has a bitter taste that you have to get used
- to. I like it this way, but not all people do. Here are the
- alternatives:
-
- With oil, which gives you a richer flavour:
-
- Spread aluminum foil on a table and make small pies of chocolate,
- about 1/4 of an inch high, and 6 inches in diameter. Let them
- rest overnight. The morning after they are hard tablets. Remove
- them from the aluminum foil and rap them in it. Store in the
- freezer.
-
- Without oil, some flavour is gone, less bitter, weaker (whimper)
- chocolate:
-
- Put the paste inside a thin cloth (like linen), close the cloth
- and squeeze until the oil comes out. If you manage to get most of
- the oil out, what is left is high quality cocoa powder, like
- Droste's.
-
- What is left now is either bitter tablets or bitter cocoa powder.
-
- You can now make a nice beverage as follows:
-
- o Boil a liter of milk (or water, like in ancient Mexican style.
- Like water for chocolate, "Como agua para chocolate": you know).
- o When the milk is warm (not hot) add a chocolate pie in pieces.
- Stir with a blender (but be careful! the blender's electric cord
- should NOT touch the pot or any other hot thing around it).
- o When the chocolate has dissolved add 1/2-3/4 cups of sugar
- (depending how sweet you like your chocolate) and blend in fast.
- Make sure the sugar is completely dissolved in the chocolate
- otherwise it would be bitter no matter how much sugar you may add
- afterwards.
- o Add a teaspoon of cinnamon or natural vanilla flavour (artificial
- vanilla flavour with chocolate results in an awful medicine like
- flavour) if you like, and blend again.
- o Let the mixture boil, when it starts to get bubbly quickly remove
- the pan from the stove top, and rest the bottom against a soaked
- cloth. Put again on stove top, it should get bubbly almost
- immediately, remove once again and repeat one last time. This
- aerates the chocolate which enhances flavour.
- o In a mug, put about 1/2-3/4 of the chocolate mixture, and add
- cold milk, until the temperature and/or the concentration of the
- flavour is right for your tastes. Accompany with French Pastries.
- Yum Yum!!
-
- Enjoy!
-
- 6. How to make the best cup of coffee?
-
- The best coffee I ever tasted was while in the coffee growing regions
- of Mexico, in the state of Veracruz, in the town of Coatepec. The
- quality of the coffee was mostly due to the method of preparation than
- to the quality of the grains (which is at about the same level as an
- average colombian coffee). Here's how to make it:
-
- o Grind the coffee grains from coarse to very coarse.
- o Boil in a pan a litre of water (four cups).
- o When the water is boiling, turn off the stove and add 8-12 table
- spoons of coffee (2-3 spoons per each cup).
- o Add two-three teaspoons of sugar per cup (for a total of 8-12
- spoons of sugar).
- o Stir very slowly (the water is so hot that the sugar dissolves
- mostly on its own).
- o Let the coffee rest for about 5 minutes.
- o Strain the coffee using a metal strainer! Like the ones used for
- cooking. The strainer should be like the ones used by granny for
- making tea. The diameter is a bit smaller that a cup, with a
- semi-sphere shape.
- o This coffee has grit in the bottom, even after being strained.
- Therefore do not stir the pot or the cup. If the coffee is
- shaked, let it rest for about five minutes. Needless to say, do
- not drink the last sip of coffee from the cup: it's all grit. If
- you want to add milk, add carnation.
-
- Warning: This coffee may fool you 'cause it has a very smooth taste
- but is extremely strong. Caffeine content per millilitre is right
- there with espresso, but you can't tell!
-
- Note: For some strange reason, when preparing this coffee I tend to
- have a success ratio of about one out of two attempts. I still don't
- know what I'm doing wrong, since, as far as I can tell, always repeat
- the same steps. Perhaps sometimes I don't let the coffee rest long
- enough.
-
- This type of coffee is similar in nature to the French press. And in
- principle, you could possibly add sugar to the ground coffee, then
- pour water, and lastly press with the strainer.
-
- 7. Turkish Coffee
-
- Turkish coffee is prepared using a little copper pot called raqwa.
-
- Use a heaping teaspoon of very finely ground coffee and, optionally,
- one heaping teaspoon of sugar (to taste). Use about 3oz of coffee.
- [Add the sugar only just before boiling point.] Turkish coffee without
- sugar is called sade, with a little sugar is "orta s,ekerli" and with
- lots of sugar is "c,ok s,ekerli".
-
- The trick of it is to heat it until it froths pour the froth into the
- coffee dup and heat it a second time. When it froths again, pour the
- rest into the cup.
-
- The grounds will settle to the bottom of the cup as you drink the
- coffee and towards the end, it'll start to taste bitter and the
- texture will be more like wet coffee grounds than a drink. As soon as
- this happens stop or your next sip will taste really, really bitter.
- Instead, turn your cup upside down on the saucer, and let someone read
- your fortune!
-
- 8. Irish Coffee
-
- Ingredients
- o Sturdy wine glass or glass with stem
- o 1 teaspoon sugar
- o 1 or 2 tablespoon Irish whiskey
- o black coffee
- o cream, lightly whipped
- Instructions
- 1. Place spoon in glass. Heat glass by pouring in warm water. When
- glass is warm, pour out the water. Leave spoon in glass.
- 2. Put sugar, whiskey and coffee in glass. Stir to dissolve sugar.
- Still leave spoon in glass.
- 3. Now for the tricky bit: Put dollop of cream on top, allow the
- cream to slide down the back of spoon (the spoon which was in the
- coffee), the tip of the spoon should remain in the coffee.
- Be careful not to stir after the cream has been added. The cream
- should form a foamy layer about 1 cm (or half an inch) thick on top of
- the black coffee.
-
- 9. Thai Iced Coffee
-
- Make very strong coffee (50-100% more coffee to water than usual), use
- something like Cafe Du Monde which has chicory in it. Pour 6-8 oz into
- cup and add about 1 Tbs sweetened condensed milk. Stir, then pour over
- ice.
-
- You'll have to experiment with the strength and milk so you get lots
- of taste after the ice/water dilutes it.
-
- Alternatively, this version which comes from a newspaper article of
- many years ago simply calls for grinding two or three fresh cardamom
- pods and putting them in with the coffee grounds. Make a strong coffee
- with a fresh dark roast, chill it, sweeten and add half-and-half to
- taste.
-
- Lastly, we have the following recipe:
-
- Makes 1 8-cup pot of coffee
-
- o 6 tablespoons whole rich coffee beans, ground fine
- o 1/4 teaspoon ground coriander powder
- o 4 or 5 whole green cardamom pods, ground
- o Place the coffee and spices in the filter cone of your coffee
- maker. Brew coffee as usual; let it cool.
- o In a tall glass, dissolve 1 or 2 teaspoons of sugar in an ounce
- of the coffee (it's easier to dissolve than if you put it right
- over ice). Add 5-6 ice cubes and pour coffee to within about 1"
- of the top of the glass.
- o Rest a spoon on top of the coffee and slowly pour whipping cream
- into the spoon. This will make the cream float on top of the
- coffee rather than dispersing into it right away.
- o To be totally cool, serve with Flexi-Straws and paper
- umbrellas...
-
- One other fun note: I got a fresh vanilla bean recently and put it to
- good use by sealing it in an airtight container with my sugar. The
- sugar gets the faintest vanilla aroma and is incredible in Real
- Chocolate Milk (TM) and iced coffee.
-
- One final note: this would probably be even better with iced espresso,
- because the espresso is so much more powerful and loses its taste less
- when it's cold.
-
- Another recipe:
- o Strong, black ground coffee
- o Sugar
- o Evaporated (not condensed) milk
- o Cardamom pods
-
- Prepare a pot of coffee at a good European strength (Miriam Nadel
- suggests 2 tablespoons per cup, which I'd say is about right). In the
- ground coffee, add 2 or 3 freshly ground cardamom pods. (I've used
- green ones, I imagine the brown ones would give a slightly different
- flavour.) Sweeten while hot, then cool quickly.
-
- Serve over ice, with unsweetened evaporated milk (or heavy cream if
- you're feeling extra indulgent). To get the layered effect, place a
- spoon atop the coffee and pour the milk carefully into the spoon so
- that it floats on the top of the coffee.
-
- The recipe I have calls for:
-
- o 1/4 cup strong French roasted coffee
- o 1/2 cup boiling water
- o 2 tsp sweetened condensed milk
- o Mix the above and pour over ice.
-
- I'd probably use less water and more coffee and milk.
-
- There is also a stronger version of Thai coffee called "Oleng" which
- is very strong to me and to a lot of coffee lovers.
-
- 6 to 8 tablespoons ground espresso or French roast coffee 4 to 6 green
- cardamom pods, crushed Sugar to taste Half-and-half or cream Ice cubes
-
- Put the cardamom pods and the ground dark-roast coffee into a coffee
- press, espresso maker, or the filter of a drip coffee maker (if using
- a drip-style coffee maker, use half the water). Brew coffee as for
- espresso, stir in sugar.
-
- Fill a large glass with ice and pour coffee over ice, leaving about
- 1/2 inch at the top. Place a spoon at the surface of the coffee and
- slowly pour half-and-half or cream into the spoon, so that it spreads
- across the top of the coffee rather than sinking in. (You'll stir it
- in yourself anyway, but this is a much prettier presentation and it's
- as used in most Thai restaurants.)
-
- As with Vietnamese coffee, the struggle here is to keep from downing
- this all in ten seconds.
-
- 10. Vietnamese Iced Coffee
-
- Same coffee as above. Sweetened condensed (not evaporated) milk Ice
-
- Make even stronger coffee, preferably in a Vietnamese coffee maker.
- (This is a metal cylinder with tiny holes in the bottom and a
- perforated disc that fits into it; you put coffee in the bottom of the
- cylinder, place the disc atop it, then fill with boiling water and a
- very rich infusion of coffee drips slowly from the bottom.)
-
- If you are using a Vietnamese coffee maker, put two tablespoons of
- sweetened condensed milk in the bottom of a cup and put the coffee
- maker on top of the cup. If you are making espresso or cafe filter
- (the infusion method where you press the plunger down through the
- grounds after several minutes of infusion), mix the sweetened
- condensed milk and the coffee any way you like.
-
- When the milk is dissolved in the coffee (yes, dissolved *is* the
- right word here!), pour the combination over ice and sip.
-
- Thai and Vietnamese coffees are very different.
-
- Ca phe sua da (Vietnamese style iced coffee)
-
- o 2 to 4 tablespoons finely ground dark roast coffee (preferably
- with chicory)
- o 2 to 4 tablespoons sweetened condensed milk (e.g., Borden Eagle
- Brand, not evaporated milk!)
- o Boiling water
- o Vietnamese coffee press [see notes]
- o Ice cubes
-
- Place ground coffee in Vietnamese coffee press and screw lid down on
- the grounds. Put the sweetened condensed milk in the bottom of a
- coffee cup and set the coffee maker on the rim. Pour boiling water
- over the screw lid of the press; adjust the tension on the screw lid
- just till bubbles appear through the water, and the coffee drips
- slowly out the bottom of the press.
-
- When all water has dripped through, stir the milk and coffee together.
- You can drink them like this, just warm, as ca phe sua neng, but I
- prefer it over ice, as ca phe sua da. To serve it that way, pour the
- milk-coffee mixture over ice, stir, and drink as slowly as you can
- manage. I always gulp mine too fast. :-)
-
- Notes
-
- A Vietnamese coffee press looks like a stainless steel top hat.
- There's a "brim" that rests on the coffee cup; in the middle of that
- is a cylinder with tiny perforations in the bottom. Above that rises a
- threaded rod, to which you screw the top of the press, which is a disc
- with similar tiny perforations. Water trickles through these, extracts
- flavour from the coffee, and then trickles through the bottom
- perforations. It is excruciatingly slow. Loosening the top disc speeds
- the process, but also weakens the resulting coffee and adds sediment
- to the brew.
-
- If you can't find a Vietnamese coffee press, regular-strength espresso
- is an adequate substitute, particularly if made with French-roast
- beans or with a dark coffee with chicory. I've seen the commonly
- available Medaglia d'Oro brand coffee cans in Vietnamese restaurants,
- and it works, though you'll lose some of the subtle bitterness that
- the chicory offers. I think Luzianne brand coffee comes with chicory
- and is usable in Vietnamese coffee, though at home I generally get
- French roast from my normal coffee provider.
-
- Of these two coffees, Vietnamese coffee should taste more or less like
- melted Haagen-Dasz coffee ice cream, while Thai iced coffee has a more
- fragrant and lighter flavour from the cardamom and half-and-half
- rather than the condensed milk. Both are exquisite, and not difficult
- to make once you've got the equipment.
-
- As a final tip, I often use my old-fashioned on-the-stove espresso
- maker (the one shaped like an hourglass, where you put water in the
- bottom, coffee in the middle, and as it boils the coffee comes out in
- the top) for Thai iced coffee. The simplest way is merely to put the
- cardamom and sugar right in with the coffee, so that what comes out
- the top is ready to pour over ice and add half and half. It makes a
- delicious and very passable version of restaurant-style Thai iced
- coffee.
-
- 11. Melya
-
- o Espresso
- o Honey
- o Unsweetened cocoa
-
- Brew espresso; for this purpose, a Bialetti-style stovetop will work.
- In a coffee mug, place 1 teaspoon of unsweetened powdered cocoa; then
- cover a teaspoon with honey and drizzle it into the cup. Stir while
- the coffee brews; this is the fun part. The cocoa seems to coat the
- honey without mixing, so you get a dusty, sticky mass that looks as
- though it will never mix. Then all at once, presto! It looks like dark
- chocolate sauce. Pour hot espresso over the honey, stirring to
- dissolve. Serve with cream (optional). I have never served this cold
- but I imagine it would be interesting; I use it as a great hot drink
- for cold days, though, so all my memories are of grey skies, heavy
- sweaters, damp feet and big smiles.
-
- * Electronic Resources
-
- * Rocket Cola.
-
- * Administrivia
-
- 1. List of Contributors
-
- This FAQ is a collective effort. Here's a list of most (all?) of the
- contributors. However, if you have any questions, ask in the appropriate
- newsgroups, not the contributors. If there is a concern that is
- specifically related to this FAQ, state the section number and
- paragraph and send to alopez-o@unb.ca
-
-
- o Oktay Ahiska (oktay@rga.com)
- o Marc Aurel (4-tea-2@bong.saar.de)
- o Scott Austin (scotta@cnt.com)
- o Tom Benjamin (tomb@panix.com)
- o Jennifer Beyer (jennifer@joltcola.com)
- o Steve Bliss (steveb@pcdocs.com)
- o David Alan Bozak (dab@moxie)
- o Rajiv (w94_bhatnaga@wums.wustl.edu)
- o Trevor P. Bugera (tbugera@spots.ab.ca)
- o Jack Carter (scjack@ausvm1.ibm.com)
- o Richard Drapeau (Richard.Drapeau@p1.f92.n282.z1.tdkt.kksys.com)
- o Jym Dyer (jym@remarque.berkeley.edu)
- o Steve Dyer (dyer@spdcc.com)
- o Stefan Engstrom (stefan@helios.UCSC.EDU)
- o Lemieux Francois (lemieuxf@ERE.UMontreal.CA)
- o Scott Fisher (sfisher@megatest.com)
- o Dave Huddle (jdh64@cas.org)
- o Matt Humphrey (matth@rocketcola.com)
- o Tom F Karlsson (tomk@mamba.csd.uu.se)
- o Bob Kummerfeld (bob@basser.cs.su.OZ.AU)
- o Dr. Robert Lancashire (rjlanc@uwimona.edu.JM)
- o John Levine (johnl@iecc.com)
- o Alex Lopez-Ortiz (alopez-o@unb.ca)
- o Steven Miale
- o Alec Muffett (alecm@uk.sun.com)
- o Dana Myers (myers@cypress.West.Sun.COM)
- o Tim Nemec (tim@netins.net)
- o Mike Oliver (oliver@math.ucla.edu)
- o
- o Jim Pailin (pailinje@ctrvx1.vanderbilt.edu)
- o Dave Palmer (arxt@quads.uchicago.edu)
- o Stuart Phillips (phillips@healthy.uwaterloo.ca)
- o Siobhan Purcell (PURCELLS@IRLEARN.UCD.IE)
- o Cary A. Sandvig (sandvig@rhea.cray.com)
- o Jesse T Sheidlower (jester@panix.com)
- o Stepahine da Silva (arielle@taronga.com)
- o Michael A Smith (mas@cyberspy.REMOVE_THIS.com)
- o Mari J. Stoddard (stoddard@gas.uug.arizona.edu)
- o Thom (thomd@atm.com)
- o Deanna K. Tobin T.E. (yakityak@dolphin.upenn.edu)
- o Nick Tsoukas (japetus@orfeas.chemeng.ntua.gr)
- o Adam Turoff (ziggy@panix.com)
- o Ganesh Uttam (g.uttam@ic.ac.uk)
- o David R. B. Walker (drbw@mail.che.utexas.edu)
- o Orion Wilson (moria@cats.ucsc.edu)
- o Piotr Wlaz (wlaz@ursus.ar.lublin.pl)
- o Ted Young (theodric@MIT.EDU)
- o Steven Zikopoulos (szikopou@superior.carleton.ca)
-
- 2. Copyright
-
- This FAQ is Copyright (C) 1994,1995 by Alex Lopez-Ortiz. This text, in
- whole or in part, may not be sold in any medium, including, but not
- limited to, electronic, CD-ROM, or published in print, without the
- explicit, written permission of Alex Lopez-Ortiz.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Copyright (C) 1994, Alex Lspez-Ortiz. alopez-o@unb.ca
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-
- Please send comments to Alex Lopez-Ortiz (alopez-o@unb.ca)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Alex Lopez-Ortiz alopez-o@unb.ca
- http://www.cs.unb.ca/~alopez-o Assistant Professor
- Faculty of Computer Science University of New Brunswick
- --
- Alex Lopez-Ortiz alopez-o@unb.ca
- http://www.cs.unb.ca/~alopez-o Assistant Professor
- Faculty of Computer Science University of New Brunswick
-