Top 100 Coffee Recipes: A Cookbook for Coffee Lovers
By Mary Vard
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Top 100 Coffee Recipes - Mary Vard
butter.
Introduction
This book is a celebration of the flavor of coffee. It joyously explores hundreds of possibilities for hot and cold coffee drinks, simple and complex, sweet and sophisticated. The author’s expertise in blending flavors and aromas into delicious combinations inspires confident experimentation by the reader as well.
as beverages go, coffee is pretty new stuff. Coffee, in the form we know it, has been drunk for only a little under six centuries. Tea, by contrast, goes back a few thousand years, and wine may well be close to five-thousand years old. Once discovered though, coffee spread quickly, and today it is just beginning to challenge tea as the most popular beverage in several far-cast nations.
It makes sense then that people are still exploring the taste of coffee and how it gets along with other flavors. There may be rules about which wine to drink with which food but, so far, there are no rules about what to do with coffee. In fact, the tradition of flavoring coffee, or sweetening it, or mixing it with other beverages goes back to the first time coffee was drunk in the Middle East and Europe.
To this day, throughout much of the Middle East, coffee is served flavored with cardamom. In Vienna, coffee’s first stop in Europe, shopkeepers served complex coffee drinks which included steamed milk, whipped cream, cinnamon, vanilla, and chocolate.
Probably the one thing most responsible for coffee’s popularity is its gregarious nature: its boisterous flavor and aroma. There aren’t a lot of flavors that coffee doesn’t get along with. The recipe for Icy Java Mint, for example, is a surprising combination and a delicious drink.
Today, in the United States, coffee is undergoing a renaissance; Americans are rediscovering what a really good cup of coffee is and learning the importance of freshly roasted quality beans and proper storage and brewing. So intense is this resurgence that it has been predicted that by 1994, over one-third of the dollars spent on coffee in the U.S. will be on specialty coffee bought in the whole bean form. Of these sales, it has been predicted that over half will be flavored coffees, such as almon and chocolate raspberry.
among coffee experts, there are purists who would argue that coffee should be drunk hot, black and unsweetened. Mary Ward, though, loves coffee too much to let it lead such a grim existence. Through her many years of experience in teaching consumers and retailers how to brew the best cup of coffee possible, she has learned that coffee can blend successfully with hundreds of flavors and surprising ingredients. A surprise to me was Cafe au Vin, a recipe which dares to blend a port wine with strong French Roast coffee. It reminded me that the original Arabic word for coffee was, in fact, the same word for wine: Qahwah. Cafe au Vin brings out the fruity complexity of the coffee, and the coffee adds a fullbodied yet silken texture to this amazing taste experience.
mary Ward also understands that everyone is not a coffee connoisseur. Her style is down-to-earth, and she presents things in a clear, easy-to-read tone that belies her enthusiasm for the subject matter. So, while the recipes are new and even sometimes surprising, they are also easy-to-prepare, with readily obtainable ingredients.
Before getting into the recipes, however, Ms. Ward takes the reader through the basics of coffee. Her second chapter is indispensable to anyone who to sharing a few of her favorites. She even shows you how to roast your own coffee.
One feature completely unique to this coffee book is a nutritional analysis at the end of each recipe, which allows diet-conscious readers to choose drinks to suite their own particular regimen. Not only calories are counted, but carbohydrates, fat, percentage of calories from fat, cholesterol, sodium, potassium, caffeine, and calories from alcohol if alcohol is used.
ms. Ward also points out that all of the ingredients listed above, one of the most suspect, caffeine, is in moderation, probably the least harmful.
This book can be an important first step for any reader who has yet to discover the pleasures of a truly extraordinary cup of coffee. It will show you how to enjoy coffee much more and how to share it with your friends and family in new and scrumptious ways. But even if you’ve been reading everything written on coffee, I guarantee you’ll find at least a few surprises, and some enjoyable ones at that.
Timothy J. Castle
President, Castle & Company
Former President, Specialty Coffee
Association of America
Author: THE PERFECT CUP
Coffee Blends
Blending and grinding different varieties and roasts of coffee is a great idea. It is discussed in several sections of this book.
PHOTO CREDITS
Turn of the century coffee grinder from Antiques in the Bank; enamel coffee cup courtesy of Roberta Hardacre; cutting boards from Barney Taxel’s Prop Room and Ed nano; burlap coffee bag courtesy of Mike Caruso of Bernardi’s Coffee Roasting; coffee shovel from Barney Taxel’s Prop Room.
RECIPE CREDITS
Coffee Blending, pages 26
Coffee Blends, pages 91
…AND THEN THERE WAS COFFEE
no wonder coffee is so important; it’s the first thing you drink in the morning!
Coffee…America’s breakfast beverage! And it’s no wonder because coffee is not only a tasty refresher; it is also a safe but powerful stimulant. Yet, when you sip a cup of hot coffee, you’re taking part in a tradition believed to be only a few centuries old: 1425 A.D.
Prior to this time, coffee cherries were eaten in various forms. A fermented drink, made from a sweetened tea of brewed leaves and fruit of the coffee tree, was popular as an intoxicant and stimulant. This was also drunk freshly brewed and unfermented.
as coffee houses became popular in Arabia in the mid-fifteenth century, the idea of these particular social gathering places moved into Europe. Viennese and Italian coffee houses were popular by the 16th century, and by the 17th century, coffee houses were being introduced into the new world, particularly into North America.
Coffee has since become America’s favorite breakfast beverage, as Americans drink one-third of all coffee consumed. The peak years for coffee consumption were the early 1960s, when 75 percent of all adults drank at least one cup a day. Throughout the ’70s and ’80s, consumption leveled off, but we are now seeing growth in the area of gourmet coffees, specialty coffees, and decaffeinated coffees. Currently, 100 million people in the United States are coffee drinkers.
The taste of the ‘90s? Although Americans drink less coffee, they are drinking better coffee. The specialty and gourmet coffee industry is growing at the rate of 13 percent per year in this billion dollar industry. Specialty and gourmet coffees use the most select of coffee beans which have been grown in exotic parts of the world. They are roasted in small batches and sold through specialty and gourmet stores. Generally, specialty and gourmet coffees are 50 percent to 125 per cent more expensive than canned coffees and according to coffee aficionados, worth every penny.
Good coffee starts with good coffee beans. Here’s a brief description of the growth process:
FROM BUSH TO BEAN
The coffee tree looks a little like a camellia…with broad, dark, and shiny leaves. The leaves are camellia-shaped and two to five inches long, lining up in pairs on either side of the central stem. The jasmine-type flower is small, white, star shaped, and placed in clusters at the base of the leaves. The coffee tree or bush is generally planted from a seedling, which has been cultivated from selected coffee cherries. In three years, the pruned and tended coffee tree will start to produce coffee cherries on a yearly cycle. A mature coffee tree can produce up to a pound and a half of coffee per year, depending on soil, climate, and general weather conditions.
There are hundreds of varieties of coffee trees, but 92 percent of these belong to either the Arabica or Robusta categories. Arabica beans are the select bean, lower in caffeine, flatter on the side, and generally more dense. Robusta beans are generally used for supermarket coffee blends, for internal consumption in countries where they are grown, and for instant coffee.
Coffee trees love the warm soil and balmy rainfall of countries located between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. There, in the high altitudes, coffee thrives. Variations in soil, sunlight, and altitude