A month or two ago, Adam Curry was promoting Folgers coffee on his show The Daily Source Code. At the time, I went to their website and signed up for a free sample (I’d link to it, but I believe they took it down.) I then proceeded to completely forget about the whole thing until it arrived over the weekend. Because we were out of coffee and I was too lazy to go out and buy another bag, I not-so-secretly replaced our usual morning blend with Folgers Lively Columbian. I have two problems with the coffee:
- It came pre-ground, so much of the freshness was lost before it arrived, even though it was in a sealed foil pouch. This was also a minor annoyance factor, as I had to figure out how to simultaneously enable the timer and disable the grinder in our grind-n-brew coffee maker.
- It tasted like ass. In this case “ass” is defined as the roasted-till-nearly-burnt flavor that Starbuck’s makes popular.
For the foreseeable future, we will continue to stick with our usual brands of locally-roasted fair-trade coffee. It is much more fresh, tastes great, keeps our dollars in the local economy — for production costs, at least, with the remainder (the materials costs) going where it deserves.
Product Placement Please – locally-roasted fair-trade coffee name being…?
Stumptown! Or failing that, Columbia River… or failing that, Peet’s (which, uhhhh, isn’t exactly roasted locally, I believe, but is not too shabby and is sometimes easier to obtain than the others, depending on where I’m shopping at the time.)
Dude.
It’s so simple:
Sweet Maria’s has been my bean source for a few years now. It’s right up your geeky alley!