
I’ve talked about Importin’ Joe’s Coffee around here at least a couple of times– they are a local small business that is somehow also an Ethiopian coffee company. They first came across my radar when they delivered a bunch of coffee to my school a few years ago, and every so often they send me an email at exactly the right time and I order some more coffee.
This happened last week, and I didn’t realize until after the coffee had been delivered that I’d inadvertently ordered whole bean coffee rather than pre-ground. And since the only way I solve problems nowadays is by throwing money at them, rather than tossing the unusable $15 bag of imported Ethiopian coffee or, God forbid, attempting to return it, I spent $80 on a coffee grinder.
A secret about me, or maybe I just think it’s a secret and it’s been completely obvious to everyone who has ever known me: I would like to be a snob about something. Something. I don’t care what. I want there to be something where my tastes are refined and classy and shit, and I turn my nose up at the lesser versions of, I dunno, whatever that thing might be.
I don’t drink alcohol, so that leaves out whiskey and wine. I don’t smoke, which eliminates cigars. I cannot convince myself that clothes are important enough to start dressing like a fancy person. And I’ve got to admit that part of the attraction about buying a coffee grinder– and not some cheapass $20 coffee grinder, no, it’s mid-range or nothing for this guy– was that fresh-ground coffee beans are supposed to be a lot better than pre-ground. And, like, I thought that was supposed to be an obvious difference? I already know to avoid instant coffee like the plague, but I think everyone kind of knows that already, and the simple fact is that since I became a coffee drinker in 2015 or so, if instant is all the coffee that’s available, fuck it, I’m drinking instant. My tenure at the furniture store proved that. Shit, I already drink my coffee black, and that’s pretentious enough, right? Let’s go to the next level!
Y’all, I absolutely cannot tell the fucking difference between fresh-ground coffee and pre-ground coffee. I can barely tell the difference between the different coffees we have in the house. I mean, I can; the Meijer house brand’s “Michigan Cherry” flavor smells strongly of cherries and I suppose kinda tastes like them, too? I like chicory? But the particular Importin’ Joe’s coffee I ordered claims to have “tasting notes” of fudge, toasted caramel, and cherry “on the back end,” and I literally do not know what the fuck any of that means. It tastes like coffee. It doesn’t taste burned like Starbucks coffee does, which registers in my head as “good coffee.” I ground the beans for the Michigan Cherry for the last couple of mornings and I can’t taste any difference. I happened to be at the grocery tonight and picked up some Colombian coffee, because Colombia. But my wife is going to do a blind taste test on me this weekend, and I’m gonna lose it, and I’m gonna lose it so, so badly.
Is there a way to train yourself for this shit? I don’t smoke, again, which would make me think I’d be able to identify basic flavors, but I’ve got nothing over here, and I wanna be a damn coffee snob. Somebody help me. Surely if I can train myself to like black coffee I can figure out how to identify a “note” of “toasted caramel,” right?
Discover more from Welcome to infinitefreetime dot com
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
I find this so hilarious because I am the same way! And I roast my own coffee beans! (I buy them from Theta Ridge Coffee in South Bend, BTW, if you want to check them out. They sell roasted beans too and the prices are AMAZING and you can just pick them up to save shipping.)
People assume because I roast my own beans, that I’m a coffee snob. No. I will add water and Nescafe instant coffee to fill out a half-full cup of coffee rather than making a new pot. I use the microwave to warm my coffee ALL the time.
I’m a little snobbish in that I only use a vacuum pot to brew my coffee – I really can taste a difference and I prefer it to other methods. But look, I buy the green beans based on their descriptions of chocolate notes, a hint of fruit, low acidity, blah blah, and I can never taste that stuff!
I have never smoked so I would imagine my palate is pretty intact even at my advanced age 🙂 but yeah, it’s just coffee and I like it. You are not alone!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m going to look into vacuum pots, and I have a serious aversion to microwaving my coffee. My wife asked me what the deal was once and I couldn’t explain. I still can’t. It’s just Wrong, because … reasons, or something.
LikeLike
… wait, you’re not actually buying coffee in 75lb bags, are you???
LikeLike
Ha! No, I think the biggest I ever bought was when they had a deal on Honduran coffee at $2/pound – I got 10 pounds for 20 bucks. 🙂 Usually I go for the 3 pound bags with a few one pound ones here and there so I can try new stuff.
You know what? I just looked at their site and I only see the green coffee beans. Maybe they don’t sell it already roasted? I might be mixing them up with Sweet Maria’s out of California – I’m so sorry!
LikeLiked by 1 person
LOL. That explains it; I didn’t spend a lot of time looking, but I couldn’t find anything under 25 pounds, and that’s … a lot of coffee.
LikeLike