Five Senses' Blog

Origin Trips

The Precision Shot Brewer

By richard.muhl @ Friday, February 3rd, 2012
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I’ve been spending quite few hours testing and evaluating various burrs and baskets recently and I have come to realise that a purpose built, highly stable shot brewer would be a useful tool. It may be my metrology background but I am always looking for ways to remove uncertainties and subjectivity from my test procedures so a Precision Shot Brewer is now top of my wish list.

The machine will be, in essence an espresso machine without any facility for producing steam or hot water. It will of course need to be very stable in terms of brew water temperature and water pressure and it must also have the ability to replicate the pressure profile of the Synesso Hydra as found in many of our clients cafes. I think I should also have the ability to collect and digitise temperature, pressure and flow rate data for analysis and lastly but very importantly, it must look cool …

For a base to build it all on I am chopping up a chassis from a new three group Synesso Cyncra that had been dropped from the back of a truck and written off. My stainless steel welding skills are best described as ‘amateur hobbyist’ but with enough tries and plenty of grinding I manage to get something to hold together. The overall plan is to have everything from the hydraulic system to the electronic circuit boards fully out in the open or behind perspex guards so we can be mesmerised by the blinking LEDs while we wait for our espresso shot.

If you want to see ALL the pics, check them out at our Five Senses Flickr Site …

Precision Shot Brewer - where's it's up to now

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COE winners are grinners … off to Sul de Minas Gerais

The Brazilian COE has only just come to an end, it was a busy week and most certainly a very intense last couple of days. It’s exciting, draining and lots and lots of work for everyone involved, but most importantly, an invaluable experience and program for producers, buyers and consumers the world over. I’ve always had a soft spot for Brazilian coffees and it’s probably the reason why I originally chose Brazil as a jury I wanted to be on. I’m not sure if it’s because I find them often misunderstood as I often hear “I really don’t like Brazilian coffees” from speciality coffee buyers, drinkers etc. Being here, learning and tasting super fresh Brazilian coffees has proven to me once again, that Brazil has a lot to offer the speciality world, especially (but not exclusively) the espresso market. Caramel, juicy, fruity, clean, sweet, spicey, chocolately, malty, citric … need I go on.

Jules (Juliana Nobre) and I have packed our bags once again and are now in Sul de Minas Gerais (South of the state of Minas) … a very well known coffee growing region in Brazil. We are surrounded by rolling hills of coffee and spending the next couple of days of the Santo Antonio Estates, where for the first time this year, our fresh crop Brazils are coming from. In fact, they are due to land in Australia just around the corner in early December. We are also spending time on some of the estates we get our micro lots from, Samambaia, Villa Boa, Pinhal as well as some new ones. The air is fresh, the coffee is sweet and those warm cheesy buns straight out of the oven are absolute heaven!!

We saw two Toucan’s yesterday … I couldn’t believe my eyes!!

The final days in Brazil

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Zee best of zee best!

We’ve spent the last two days further narrowing down the original 60 coffees … things are starting to get really tight and it’s like comparing lots of great apples with apples but we’re still trying to pick out the best apples in the process! Today is the finale, a nice reward for a week of hard / fun work … I’m about to run down to the lab to taste our top ten picks, some 90+ coffees (in my opinion) so this is going to be a real treat.

More news soon …

Check out this vid for some thrilling cupping action:

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Brazil COE — Dia numero Dois (that’s doi-ce to you!)

By jen.murray @ Wednesday, November 16th, 2011
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Official sipping, slurping and spitting is in full swing and the first real day of the competition is under our belts. We cupped 30 coffees today, and as you would expect, the standard was pretty high with a handful of “ exquisite” coffees showing up that you can almost guarantee will make it into the top ten. Lots of personalities in the room, most notably Andreas “the Gatekeeper” Hertzberg from Norway, who’s doing his best to make sure only COE auction worthy coffees make it through to the next round. His philosophy is that to give a coffee a score of 84+ (a pass to the auction) it must be a coffee you’d be willing to bid on, can’t argue with that. It means international buyers can trust the winning lots and also the Brazilian farmers get a clear indication of what we, the speciality buyers, feel is a example of an exemplary coffee. We did a mini field trip this arvo and visited a large well organised farm, Fazenda Palmeiras in Santa Marina, a couple hours from the city of Londrina. A well oiled machine, literally, and an example of a large Brazilian farm that has been in the same family for three generations, originally from Switzerland. Another long day and time to hit the hay … another 30 coffees to go tomorrow.

Seedlings at Fazenda Palmeiras in Santa Marina

Juliana cupping

The crew in Brazil

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Brazil COE — Day 1

We’ve all arrived safe and sound in the city of Londrina in the state of Parana. It’s nice to see so many familiar faces from all over the world … US, Poland, Japan, Korea, Hamburg, Norway, Australia (Ross Quail and Juliana Nobre) UK, Guatemala as well as a whole bunch of new ones. We had a massive day today starting with the standard calibration rounds; first with solutions representing different acids, combination acids and sugars, body, astringency etc .. an exercise that’s light and easy as well as a great way to draw focus to the fundamentals of cupping and the character (good and bad). The next three rounds are the same eight coffees three times over, a chance to evaluate your own consistency as well as how calibrated we are as group. By the end, I think we zoned into a good rhythm and there was a clear direction with scores. Lots of food, talks, welcomes and ceremonies to kick things off … we’ve all wet our whistles with a couple of standout coffees today and I think most of us are keen to put our serious cupping hats on tomorrow morning and do our best to select the top lots of the competition. Interesting fact we learned today was that Londrina used to be considered the coffee centre of Brazil until a major frost hit in 1975 and decimated the trees in this region, many of which were never replanted.

Brazil COE day 1

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Q Graders at ABA

By tom.beaumont @ Saturday, November 12th, 2011
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The Q grading course came to a close today with 15 out of 21 people becoming Australia’s newest Q graders! Although there are a disappointed few, there is still an opportunity for these folks to retake their section/s at another grading. More importantly everyone agreed it was a great week of learning and every participant can now speak a common language among the specialty coffee world. The scoring part of the Q grading, where participants needed to rate coffees out of 100 proved to be the strongest area. Everyone passed this with very high scores which reflects their cupping ability. Once again the sweet, sour, salt tests proved to be the toughest part as did some of the olfactory (nasal senses) tests.

I am not sure how many cupping bowls were used this week, but it’s fair to say it was hundreds and hundreds and hundreds, and perhaps a few more hundred. Big thanks go out to Andy Easthope and Chei Wei for all the hard work cleaning, entering scores and tidying up back of house. Craig and Chris from Atlas again ran an incredibly motivating and educational course and were just great guys to have around! If you asked the participants one of the best parts of the Q grading, they would tell you it was listening to Craig’s coffee knowledge and stories from around the globe.

Being able to watch some of the Q grading this time and not stress out with all the tests I could see just how much work goes into this. There was a huge range of specialty coffees shipped to ABA and each sample had been meticulously roasted. Every cup was weighed and ground. There were 21 people that needed to be focused (and fed) for an entire week and every day had to run smoothly. Jen Murray was the orgainser of this event and the feedback from the Atlas guys are that it was the smoothest course they have ever run. Props to you Jen!

The week was also filled with lots of fun. There was singing and guitar playing, fun runs after hours, drinks and plenty of laughs. Goodbye to Craig and Chris and have fun in PNG!

Action on the last day of Q Graders

Green bean grading

The smell test

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The kids are alright!!

By shaughan @ Thursday, November 10th, 2011
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After trading emails for the last couple of years the planets finally aligned and I managed to be in Bali at the same time as Jeff Neilsen. Jeff is a lecturer and academic at University of NSW and specialises in markets and supply chains in rural areas with a special interest in Indonesian coffee production. Jeff is definitely one of the good guys, a fluent Indonesian speaker and passionate humanitarian and it was great to finally show him our projects in Bali.

I also had contacted a Balinese based photographer Tommy Schultz. Tommy was raised in Virginia in the US, completed a degree in environmental science and spent some time working on aid projects with the Peace Corps in the Philippines. Tommy is one of those rare individuals who has a creative and humanitarian heart and one of the sharpest business minds I’ve come across.

We all shared the common trait of offering our opinions freely and with conviction which made for a very entertaining and stimulating day as we criss-crossed the high country of Bali!

Once we all piled into the car, accompanied by “our man on the ground’, the newly married Komang Sukarsana and Bali’s best driver, Made Mertiasa we started the journey to Git Git to check in on the progress of our nursery at the Tri Karya Subak Abian. It was super exciting to see that our tiny seedlings had now been transplanted from the beds into poly bags and stood proudly in long, neat rows. The plants looked healthy and strong and we now have to wait until February when the mammoth task of getting them into the ground begins. Each plant require a hole 60 cm deep and 30 cms in diameter. With some 7,500 plants to go into the ground, that’s going to take some digging!!!

There was a very tangible air of excitement at Tri Karya about getting stuck into this coffee project. The plan is to plant out around 25 hectares of coffee (somewhere around 40,000 trees!!) over the next couple of years. It’s fair to say this is a very ambitious project and has the potential to have a profound effect on the security and wellbeing of this area. Tri Karya are currently very dependent on clove production for their livelihood and any dip in prices or production would see them in some trouble.

We then moved on to meet our old friends at Kerta Waringin and Ulian Murni, the car was alive with “vigorous” and informed debate. Tommy managed to come up with an online business strategy for anything and everything we discussed whilst Jeff rightly pointed out some of the “holes” in our relationship with the coffee farmers of Bali. Time to revise our game plan a little and start to share the risk a little bit. It’s very much a trust model with FSC exposed to most of the risk!!

One of the highlights of the day for me was when Made Sukerta, the always smiling and hospitable head of Ulian Murni, proudly told us how he declined the offers from some “Aussies”, who tracked them down through our blogs and stories and tried to buy the coffee he has stockpiled to be shipped to us in Australia. Maybe our trust model is not so bad after all!!

Coffee Seedlings

Rows of Seedlings

Jeff at the nursery

Coffee flowering

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Project Nanhi Kali

By jen.murray @ Friday, November 4th, 2011
Five Senses News, General Coffee News, Origin TripsNo Comments - Add Your Comment

With Poddy currently in India visiting the Araku Valley, we thought it might be time to present a fantastic opportunity for anyone that wants to support a worthy cause.

“In many parts of India, the arrival of a baby girl calls for mourning rather than celebration. Abandoning them at birth or marrying them off as children is common practice. Looked upon as huge economic burdens, it is hardly surprising that many Indian families don’t see the point of investing in their education.” ~ Nanndi Foundation.

We have visited these schools and seen firsthand the impact the Nanhi Kali project has on the young girls of tribal coffee farmers of the Araku Valley.

Nanhi Kali is a girl child education program aimed at educating the under privileged girl child from socially and economically marginalised families living in urban, rural and tribal parts of India. This is a national sponsorship program which provides academic and material support to disadvantaged girls so that they can complete 10 years of quality education with dignity. It is currently reaching out to over 70,000 Nanhi Kalis and has a presence in many states.

The Sponsorship cost is Rs.2400 per annum (approx. AUD$50) for a Nanhi Kali (studying in Std.1 to Std.5) and Rs. 3600 per annum (approx. AUD$75) for a Nanhi Kali (studying in Std.6 to Std.10)

Donations can be made through the Online Payment Gateway on: donor.nanhikali.org/DonorRegister.aspx

The period of sponsorship is for one year, however you can decide to sponsor the education of many Nanhi Kali or for a number of years instead of just one. As a sponsor you will receive the following during your sponsorship period: a postcard size photograph of your Nanhi Kali and a profile of your Nanhi Kali, which gives you details of her family and her living environment (approx. 60 days of receipt of your contribution). First progress reports informing you how well your Nanhi Kali is doing in school (approx. 6 months of receipt of your contribution) and a second progress report (approx. 1 year of receipt of your contribution) towards the end of your sponsorship period. You may also receive correspondence in the form of cards and drawings from your Nanhi Kali, along with the progress reports. The progress report can also be checked on-line at nanhikali.orq with your donor ID and password that they will provide in the acknowledgement/receipt letter.

In addition, the money you invest in supporting the girl child is exempt under Section 80G of the Income Tax Act and you will be sent a copy of the tax exemption certificate along with your receipt once you make your donation.

Indian girls

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From Attikan to Araku

By Caleb Podhaczky @ Monday, October 31st, 2011
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After heading back to Bangalore and spending a few hours wandering around the streets, we jumped on a plane and headed for the Araku Valley on the east coast of India. We landed in Vishakhapatnam, about three hours from Araku. I have never seen so many cars, bikes, trucks, buses and people in my life. This place was out of control … and I loved it! We hit Araku at about midnight, excited for what was to come the next day.

After our usual breakfast of dosa (fermented crepes made from rice batter and black lentils), idly (savoury ‘cakes’ of fermented lentils and rice), samba and coffee, we jumped in the jeep and headed for the first farm. There are close to 12,000 farmers here, all with about an acre on which to grow their coffee. These farmers come from about 600 different villages, which are broken down into 73 branches and looked after by 24 board members. The board members and branch officers are elected each year by the farmers themselves, ensuring that the needs of the farmers are met and that they are getting well looked after. Naandi, the non-Government organisation (NGO) who oversees this project, have been helping to build and develop an ethical and rewarding system for each and every farmer here. This came after money lenders had these communities by the throat and were holding them in constant debt, a cycle which has now been broken. Naandi specialises in four areas within the communities here — education, livelihood, nutritional security and health, particularly maternal health.

Both men and women are seen as equals in the eyes of the Naandi foundation which has had positive benefits. Over time the women, who only used to come out of their houses to work in the plantations (and work hard they do!), are now happy to meet with total strangers, inviting us into their village, smiling, and more than keen to get into a few photos. This gender equality then flows on to the children which is great. Naandi fund all of the farmers’ daughters’ schooling in a programme called Nanhikali which means ‘blossoming bud’ and includes their books, lunch and uniform. This programme continues right through until the end of high school. They push hard for each and every girl to be educated, which in the past was unheard of. We were also lucky enough to visit one of the villages’ Early Childhood Education Centres which prepares kids aged three-five for school. It was one of the highlights of the trip! Naandi makes this a full life-cycle project, running from pre-natal care, to early childhood, school and through to helping develop a livelihood.

Next we headed out the coffee processing unit or CPU as it is known here. This central CPU was built in 2006, because the farmers themselves could only manage poor quality processing previously. There is constant development happening at the CPU, with offices being built, and all kinds of organic and bio-dynamic practices going on. All the water is recycled, all the manure and fertiliser is fully organic and it is all prepared here at the CPU and distributed to the farmers. There has also been a development in mobile phone technology here — every Indian seems to have at least one mobile. Each of the farmers have a phone and each phone is equipped with a programme which allows them to fill out details such as how much coffee they picked, when, what village they are from, who they are etc. A truck then appears by the end of the day to pick up the coffee and take it to the CPU. But it doesn’t stop there — the programme also allows the farmers to be paid within 24-48 hours. Amazing!

There are also plans to grow and plant six million different fruit trees by 2013 amongst the coffee, not only to offer shade but to help provide a secondary income for the farmers. All in all, I’m looking forward to tasting the next crop, and seeing the constant development that is happening here in Araku.

But for now I’m going to enjoy Diwali, India’s biggest festival, the Festival of Lights — a huge public holiday. We’ve stockpiled a small arsenal of fireworks and rockets, and look forward to joining in with the festivities and, of course, blowing some stuff up!

Women of Araku

Indian women collecting water from the river

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Rosslyn Street Gets a Makeover

By tom.beaumont @ Sunday, October 30th, 2011
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The west side wall of the Australian Barista Academy in Victoria is now undergoing a full makeover, with artist Fintan Magee from Brisbane hard at work over the weekend. Cheers to our friends and clients Rtist Gallery for hooking this up.

On Day 1

Fintan outlined his beginnings with his ‘Boxed head’ figures on the lower left side. What do these mean? My take is that the world is blind to good coffee and those who want to know the answers should come inside. Or maybe they’re just really bored? I’ll leave it to the critics.

Day 2

Fintan has managed to get that scissor lift to the top for some balloon action.

What will follow is a surreal mix of coffee cherries and branches moving through the balloons across to the right. Early next week we should see a giant espresso handle on the right side of the building dripping espresso and the Australian Barista Academy logo along side it.

Rosslyn Makeover Day 1

Rosslyn Makeover Day 2

Rosslyn Makeover Afternoon of Day 2

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