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- Re: Coffee !
Coffee !
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Coffee !
I've been all over these forums & can't find the 'right forum', so mybe i'll find an answer on the front porch ?
I have 2 cans of 'cheapie' coffee ; tried mixing them so they would be more flavorful, but not-so-much did it work. Might buy a more spendy brand & mix them, but in meantime, anyone have any ideas on how to make these cheap brands taste better ?
Thanks !
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Where is your coffee sourced from?
Through our groundbreaking Community Aid Program, we strive to break the cycle of poverty that exists in coffee communities by spending upwards of $1 million annually. We improve the education, housing, health, and sanitary conditions for workers and their families on every farm where we do business whether it's a huge plantation, a small farm or a coop of small farmers.
![Coffee plant saplings](https://www.gourmet-coffee.com/media/wysiwyg/library/coffee-plant-sapling-small.jpg)
We also provide agricultural assistance to all the farmers we work with to improve crop quality and convert farms to shade and organic farms to ensure the beans are sustainable, delicious and worth the higher prices we pay. Not only does this make coffee taste delicious, but it also improves the environment including the water supply for the people, flora, and fauna among the coffee communities from Mexico to Rwanda.
![Boys from Central American farm giving thumbs up](https://www.gourmet-coffee.com/media/wysiwyg/library/community-kids-thumbs-up.jpg)
Coffee farming communities need help in so many ways other than just a slightly higher price. Our Community Aid Program with direct investments to break the cycle of poverty as well as consulting to improve agricultural quality in all our partner farming communities is doing just that. We are proud to say that 100% of our coffee is fairly, directly and ethically traded. Because we have our boots on the ground at every farm where we buy coffee, we know that every dollar that goes to our partner coffee farms is making a real difference to lift farmers, workers, and their families out of poverty.
Pete Rogers, our green coffee buyer, reflected on the customers' invaluable role:
![Portrait of Pete Rogers](https://www.gourmet-coffee.com/media/wysiwyg/library/portrait-pete.jpg)
"The reality is that without you, our customers, we could never accomplish any of this. You are making the decision to buy this coffee, and through that you are supporting these programs and breaking the cycle of poverty. You need to understand the success and help us celebrate since without you the 'we' has no power, no success and few changes. So on behalf of the thousands of people in coffee communities world wide...Thank You!"
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Dave, you asked, "Does a high end coffee maker really make a better cup of coffee?"
In short, I say it does not. I make a pretty darn good cup of cup using Folgers Decaf instant coffee. And after a few heaping spoonfuls of creamer and artificial sweetener (stirred not shaken), I'm good to go! Ummmmm, good!
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The woman who started a coffee empire with her son's book
![](https://www.oddee.com/wp-content/uploads/_media/imgs/articles2/a99204_MelittaHugoBentz.jpg)
Before 1908, when you brewed coffee, filters were made of cloth. Sometimes coffee was filtered through socks if you were in a pinch. Yummy!
After getting fed up with her coffee's bitter taste caused by cloth filters, German homemaker Melitta Bentz literally took a page from her son's schoolbook and filtered her coffee through it. She quickly patented her contraption and became a coffee filter mogul.
The paper filters went on to win awards at the Leipzig Trade Fair and her company still exists to this day.
Thank you Melitta Bentz for bringing the sock brew to extinction!
Taken from an article entitled: 10 Crazy Coffee Stories by Marcus Blake
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