Packard
Member
The local Starbucks got rid of their urns of coffee. They replaced them with industrial-strength Keurig one-cup-at-a-time instant coffee machines.
Apparently, if you drink your coffee with cream and sugar, the taste is identical to the brewed coffee.
But if you have drunk black coffee with no sugar your entire life, not so much. At the back of my tongue, there is a chalky=bitterness that I don’t get from brewed coffee.
So I brought it back to the counter and asked them to exchange if for a pour over coffee. That tastes fine.
But one day I will come in while they are busy and ask for a pour over and they will resent it. My relationship with Starbucks is about to take a deep plunge.
I read, that back in the 1940s, all coffee sold in America was high quality Arabica. But at some point the price of coffee had gone up and the big roasters mixed in 10% cheaper robusta and no one notice.
So a few years later, they repeated that ploy and again, no one noticed.
At some point some of the coffee was pure robusta, and some were 50% or more robusta. Still no one noticed.
But a funny thing happened. Americans started drinking far less coffee. The explanation: “I don’t know. I just don’t enjoy as much as I used to.”
I predict that Starbucks will lead the charge to that new/old place where “I just don’t enjoy it as much as I used to.”
I read recently that 75% of Starbucks’ sales are cold drinks. So, at some point selling hot coffee will be a nuisance for them. Too much equipment, too much space, too much cleaning up.
So right now, coffee is a drain on their time. At some point they won’t be able to justify selling hot coffee.
On the other side of the coin, McDonalds has upgraded their coffee, and it is quite good. Better than the Keurig version that Starbucks sells. And cheaper too. So if push comes to shove, I will go to McDonalds (or Barnes & Noble).
Apparently, if you drink your coffee with cream and sugar, the taste is identical to the brewed coffee.
But if you have drunk black coffee with no sugar your entire life, not so much. At the back of my tongue, there is a chalky=bitterness that I don’t get from brewed coffee.
So I brought it back to the counter and asked them to exchange if for a pour over coffee. That tastes fine.
But one day I will come in while they are busy and ask for a pour over and they will resent it. My relationship with Starbucks is about to take a deep plunge.
I read, that back in the 1940s, all coffee sold in America was high quality Arabica. But at some point the price of coffee had gone up and the big roasters mixed in 10% cheaper robusta and no one notice.
So a few years later, they repeated that ploy and again, no one noticed.
At some point some of the coffee was pure robusta, and some were 50% or more robusta. Still no one noticed.
But a funny thing happened. Americans started drinking far less coffee. The explanation: “I don’t know. I just don’t enjoy as much as I used to.”
I predict that Starbucks will lead the charge to that new/old place where “I just don’t enjoy it as much as I used to.”
I read recently that 75% of Starbucks’ sales are cold drinks. So, at some point selling hot coffee will be a nuisance for them. Too much equipment, too much space, too much cleaning up.
So right now, coffee is a drain on their time. At some point they won’t be able to justify selling hot coffee.
On the other side of the coin, McDonalds has upgraded their coffee, and it is quite good. Better than the Keurig version that Starbucks sells. And cheaper too. So if push comes to shove, I will go to McDonalds (or Barnes & Noble).