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    The Third Wave of Coffee


    In case you hadn't noticed, we are now smack in the middle of what is being called the "third wave" of coffee culture. You might say that the second wave was the Starbucks-driven era of the Frappuccino and the first, oh, let's say somewhere around 1946, which is the year, according to the International Coffee Organization, that coffee consumption peaked in the U.S.

    Related: 10 Coffee Orders to Step Up Your Game »

    The Brew
    The third wave is powered by coffee obsessives focused on bean origins and low-tech brewing techniques that preserve the integrity of those beans. Purists debate whether to drink "pour over" coffee, which involves pouring hot water through a cone filled with freshly ground beans, or French Press, in which you plunge the beans in a special device, to stove top espresso or cold brewing (usually used in iced coffee). These variations are a giant leap from the drip-drip-drip brew from the "Mr. Coffee" commercials of yore, not to mention the percolator that workers gather around during coffee breaks.

    The Beans
    Boutique coffee brands are sourcing beans and roasting them with an attention to detail that is more often found in wine production or craft beer making, and with an ethical commitment to sustainability and supporting farmers. It's led to cafés in hip urban neighborhoods where coffee drinkers can choose from sustainable blends or "single origin" beans - from one coffee plantation - or even try a coffee flight. At the new Forty Weight Coffee in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn, partners Andrew Ballard and Matthew Marks offer single-origin choices daily, with one each from Africa, Asia and Central America.

    Another new Brooklyn café is Toby's Estate Coffee, which is the U.S. bow of a 14-year-old company from Australia, where the third wave of coffee is well underway. In the shop, baristas offer flights of single-origin coffees and discuss the tasting notes with customers. Owner Toby Smith sums up the craze succinctly. "Coffee is becoming more like wine," he says.

    The Celeb Players
    Leonardo DiCaprio has teamed with one of the power coffee brands of this third wave, La Colombe, to create a new brand of sustainable coffee they're calling "Lyon." 100 percent of net proceeds will benefit organizations supported by the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation. Film director David Lynch is also in on the action, with a line called Signature Cup Organic Coffee. These are blends, not single bean, but he offers a light and medium roast, and even a decaf.

    From movie stars and directors to rock stars, coffee is having quite the celeb moment. James Murphy disbanded his popular band LCD Soundsystem with a string of farewell shows at NYC's Madison Square Garden late last year, Now he's hinted that his next move will be more caffeinated, less musical. He too, has an espresso brand in the works. He'll join fellow musician Bonnie "Prince" Billie, a cult indie singer-songwriter, who also recently launched his own brand.

    While the coffee makers themselves haven't become celebrities yet, some are starting to approach rock-star status, including La Colombe's Todd Carmichael, Duane Sorensen of Stumptown and Doug Zell of Intelligentsia.

    The Trickle-Down
    Starbucks isn't running scared from these newcomers in the third wave - yet. The company reported a 7% increase in revenues, to $3 billion in its 2011 fiscal year. But according to Andrew Ballard, owner and roastmaster for Forty Weight, Starbucks has taken notice of this new breed of roasters. He says that the coffee giant introduced its new blond roast recently to appeal to those who have been turned off by what they perceive as the burnt taste of Starbucks. "Quality-based specialty roasters have introduced to the public how beautiful non-burnt, fresh-roasted coffee can be, and people are choosing Starbucks less often," Ballard says. "If this wasn't true, Starbucks wouldn't be taking steps to imitate these roasters."

    For now, the upstarts are hoping to get coffee consumers to drink smarter, which may make anyone in the business of selling coffee have to watch their level of detail. Besides the ethical commitment to sustainable beans, third wave leaders are educating about how to make coffee at home, including using a grinder (or for true obsessives a burr grinder, which features two metal discs, or burrs, that grind the beans at a distance from one another). "In the past 20 years, while overall coffee consumption has increased and, generally, people have drastically improved their coffee brewing at home, there still persists some questionable practices," says Peter Giuliano, director of coffee and co-owner of Counter Culture, a Durham, North Carolina coffee company specializing in single-origin beans and home brewing education.

    Forty Weight's owners advise that grinding beans releases carbon dioxide almost immediately, so the flavor begins to deteriorate rapidly. The Specialty Coffee Association of America also counsels to use enough coffee: about a scoop and a third per six ounces of water. "We want to educate and inspire people," says Smith of Toby's Estate Coffee. "There may be people who aren't drinking coffee because they've had bad coffee. When you have good coffee it's, like, 'wow.'"

    Any way you pour it, this third wave of coffee means better beans are more widely available. It's just that you may need a glossary to order that 21st century cuppa joe now.

    More from Food Republic
    3 Ways To Make Coffee: A Visual Guide
    Why Does Coffee Get Stale
    Stumptown Coffee: Coffee and the seismic shift of cool
    Food Republic Coffee Power Rankings
    10 Coffee Orders to Step Up Your Game

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    38 comments

    • Shubop  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
      I have to smirk at the "educated" disdain for percolated coffee. I have a 60, maybe 70 year old Revere Ware (stainless steel, copper bottomed) smallish stovetop percolator. Incredibly well designed and made. I use it with an 80, 90? year old hand grinder set just coarse enough. 9 minutes perkin' hard... fantastic coffee.
      • Angus Scrimm 3 months ago
        Shubop: Your smirk is well received here. The 'disdain' is a result from lack of hardship. In fact, a sprinkle of some hard times would fairly well wipe the deck of this foo-foo nonsense.
      • JamesH 3 months ago
        We grew tired of replacing our automatic drip coffeemakers every few years, and switched to an electric Farberware percolator. It brews a cup a minute. Nothing beats the smell and taste of percolated coffee, in my opinion.
    • Alicia  •  3 months ago
      I'm all for fair-trade and sustainiblitiy, but coffee snobs really irritate me. I'll have a half-calf, no whip, double foam, extra hot, 4 pump...blah, blah, blah. Order your overrated, over-priced coffee milkshake and get out of my way!!
      • compassion 3 months ago
        Isn't that exactly what they do? They order it and move out of your way. Or do they stand there blocking your way to getting your over-priced coffee? Because it's all pretty #$%$ over-priced. If they are willing to pay extra for the "over" rating stuff, then why are you so irritated?
      • JeffC 3 months ago
        If it needs "doctored up" that much to drink it is not worth drinking.
      • Alicia 3 months ago
        Compassion (yeah, right), I said the type of drink was overrated, not the coffee itself. I'm not irritated that they are buying it, I'm irritated that they take half an hour to order a cup of coffee.
    • Tink  •  3 months ago
      I'll take my grocery store variety, brewed in a clean pot and enjoyed with the news in a quiet house and keep my $4 or more, thank you.
    • Toni  •  3 months ago
      I like strong coffee but I have to agree that Starbucks has a very strong taste but there is something it that always has left a bitter aftertaste in my mouth that I dislike. There's a difference between strong and bitter. I am a big fan of Seattle's Best coffee which I used to buy from Borders Bookstore but the went out of business in my area. Now I buy it from the grocery store and grind and brew it at home and it is still the best. I believe Starbucks bought Seattle's Best but I have not tried it at one of their stores because of past experience with their bitter coffee.
      • JeffC 3 months ago
        You are right Starbuck's owns Seattle's Best
    • linda  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  3 months ago
      I find it interesting to see many non favorable comments on Starbucks but they are still racking it in and the small shops can't make it. I know as I tried for three years to make a go with a small coffeeshop in Kansas city. We use PT's coffee out of Topeka not air roasted crap we also always tried to use fairtrade beans. My son was a great barista who took his craft very seriously. We served it the way it is suppose to be done, 2 shots, 3 shots, and 4 shots not the Starbucks way of 1 shot across the board. We did serve a good product, we had a good customer base and all baked goods were made on site daily from stratch with the best ingredients. We loved what we did and loved our customers but I lost my #$%$ I now drink my at home as can't find a decent local shop. I prefer a frech press. And do look for fairtrade beans.
    • Tracey  •  Rosemount, Minnesota  •  3 months ago
      Starbucks to me is......nasty! I drink a ton of coffee and can hardly tolerate "Starsucks" anymore. Caribour or Dunn Bros.--even mcDonald's.
      • Red 3 months ago
        My sister just told me about Dunn Bros. coffee today...she likes it better than Caribou. I've never heard of it. Perhaps it's not in Chicago.
      • Red 3 months ago
        P.S. She lives near RedWing, MN...
    • GeorgeH  •  3 months ago
      Very trendy and super-chic, designed to seperate you from your $$$.
      There is no big deal to making good coffee. Use filtered water to get the chlorine out, use good dark roasted coffee beans(I like Colombian), grind fresh and brew. I have had good coffee brewed by drip, made in French press and even strained through a sock-like strainer in Brazil. Use enough coffee so you don't get dark water. It ain't tea. Kouric sux BTW.
    • Wood Y  •  3 months ago
      Starbucks blond is garbage. Tasted like the standard Starbucks burnt coffee, but watered down. Whenever I am somewhere, I first look for a local coffee shop, if not that then Dunkin Donuts, Caribou, or Peets, if not that, then McDonalds (Newman's Own Organic). Starbucks is not even on this list unless there literally is nothing else, and even then, only if I can stomach their crap coffee.
    • iCthruU  •  3 months ago
      What is your take on people who fill their personal cup while the coffee is still brewing and leave the rest of us with watered down coffee. I call them selfish scumbags, but hey that is just me?
      • NickD 3 months ago
        My take is the person who finds it bothersome should have the nads to say something or quit sniveling about it.
      • JeffC 3 months ago
        Yes, they are selfish.
        Yes, you need to speak up
    • Layla  •  3 months ago
      stopped going to starbucks as soon as I started going to coffee by design. Local shops are always better and have a larger selection of coffees. if your ever in portland maine CBD is the place to be, especially for those of us who like espresso but have no place for an espresso machine in thier home
    • Red  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      Finally, someone is publically admitting to the burnt taste of Starbucks...yuk! I've been saying this for YEARS.
      I drink most of my joe at home anyway...consistent and less expensive. NO sugar...Boston style...thank you very much.
      Caribou coffee is my choice when out and about.
    • Propaganda War Ensemble  •  Hicksville, New York  •  3 months ago
      I like it black.
    • joe  •  3 months ago
      and how do they come across these unique coffee beans?how are they cultivated?who does the picking of the beans?are these people given any of the profits that are accrued?or, are they third world people working for 70cents a day to pick these beans?
    • Whyzup  •  San Diego, California  •  3 months ago
      Dunkin Doughnut's coffee still rules.
    • Wood Y  •  3 months ago
      I go pick the beans off my own bushes and dry them out myself. kidding...
    • Cheryl  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 months ago
      Best coffee in the our area does NOT come from Starbucks... The Beantree Cafe in Waterloo,IL is THE best! The owners know their 'craft' inside & out and offer up some of the best coffee ever in the Historic Downtown Waterloo Courthouse square. Try it if you're in the area- you won't be disappointed. Local roasters who make Starbucks attempts look 'amateur' indeed...:)
    • Angus Beef  •  3 months ago
      This is no third wave. Coffee and tea trade have been going on for over 100 years. A third wave would involve reports of coffee on the evening news on stations around the world. It would be as big as the DotCom speculative bubble. I don't see any of that happening.
    • Arthur  •  3 months ago
      "Third Wave of Coffee"???? Gimme a break!!! C'mon, man!

      Small-batch roasting, single-origin coffees and different brewing methods are older than Starbucks! In fact, many of the small, local coffee shops targeted and overwhelmed by Starbucks expansion nationwide were small-batch roasters, generally selling single-origin coffees or letting you make your own blends. They carried a variety of brewing equipment, from 8-cup to 1-cup Melitta "pour-overs" to kaffeterias (stove-top expresso) and French presses, and coffee grinders--primarilly burr-type machines.

      This is not a new wave, rather a return to the old methods that highlighted freshly-roasted coffee, wholesaled as green coffee by the bag rather than by the shipload, roasted to perfection for each individual bean type rather than "one size fits all" roasting temperatures that result in some coffee underroasted and/or other coffee in the same batch burned. Time for people to realize the truth of Jim and Patty's original slogan in Portland..."Good coffee...no backtalk." Should now be changed to "Good coffee...no pretentiousness."
    • JeffC  •  3 months ago
      Coffee is like wine, what a laugh.
      Wine has about 450 flavor compounds
      Coffee has about 900 flavor compounds
      Wine snobs have nothing.
    • reda surca  •  3 months ago
      I-love-a-good-latte!!Gloria-Jeans-is-awesome,but-nowhere-nearby-anymore.Starbucks-is-great-for-lattes.But-coffee,I-grind-my-own.Five-scoops-of-beans=perfect-8cups.Don't-understand-why-they-always-say-one-and-a-half-per-SIXounces.not-even-a-cup!!-I-can't-afford-to-drink-that!!------yes-spacebar-is-broken,sorry:)