Smoked Coffee Barbecue Sauce

Thursday, July 23rd, 2015 by

BBQBlog

If you haven’t tried smoked coffee yet, here’s another reason: it’s fun to cook with. Available during the warmer months of the year, our smoked coffee is wood-smoked in an actual smokehouse and tastes exactly like campfire coffee tastes in your dreams (minus the overcooked bitterness and mouthful of grounds). Coffee is a great way to add complexity to recipes, and the smokiness  complements more robust flavors, perfect for meats as a rub or marinade, or as an addition to chili.

This recipe uses our standard Smoked Coffee blend, although we also offer French Roast Smoked Coffee if you prefer the flavor of a dark roast, as well as Maple Bacon and Vanilla Bourbon Smoked Coffee. The result is sweet, tangy, smoky, with a subtle spiciness from the ginger. If you like heat, kick it up a notch with some cayenne or finely chopped chili peppers.

What you will need

1 cup ketchup

1/2 cup brewed smoked coffee (strong)

1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce

1 tablespoon molasses

1 teaspoon grated ginger 

1/2 ounce dark (70%) chocolate

1/4 teaspoon smoked paprika

Salt and pepper to taste

Directions

In a medium saucepan, combine ketchup, coffee, Worcestershire sauce, molasses, and ginger and bring to a low simmer, stirring occasionally, over medium heat. Lower the heat and stir in the chocolate and smoked paprika until chocolate is melted, then let simmer over very low heat, stirring occasionally, until flavors have mellowed and melded, 5-10 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.

Recipe adapted from Serious Eats.

Cold Steeped Almond Tea

Friday, July 17th, 2015 by

Blog Cold Steeped Almond Milk

Most of the recipes we try  in our kitchen/laboratory here are a combination of ideas and flavors we love. Flavored almond milk, cold-steeped iced tea, and spiced tea lattes are things that make the world better, and we decided to bring them together to form a super-beverage: almond milk flavored with loose leaf tea, cold-steeped overnight.

We’ve tried this with flavored black and green teas. Our personal favorite for this treat is Earl Grey. Cold-steeped overnight (12 hours), the flavor is perfect. Serve right away, or strain into a second container to store. Enjoy it over ice, or steam it and drink it latte-style.

What you’ll need

Iced tea jug and strainer (we used a 34 oz Mist Iced Tea Jug which has a strainer built in for loose leaf tea)

4 tablespoons loose leaf tea

34 ounces almond milk (unsweetened or sweetened, depending on your preference)

Instructions

Add the almond milk to your jug, followed by the tea, give it a stir and refrigerate, covered, for 12 hours or overnight. Serve immediately or strain and store refrigerated.

Experiment with this recipe! Try it with rice milk, coconut milk, hemp milk — whatever you like. Experiment with honey, agave nectar, or other sweeteners. Let us know what works!

Get to Know Green Coffee

Monday, September 9th, 2013 by

There’s something new and exciting happening here at Coffee Bean Direct: a new sister site, greencoffees.com. Perhaps you’ve noticed the new tab at the top of our home-page, or the link on the menu. Or our newsletter announcement and Facebook posts. Or perhaps you’re ignoring all that because what is green coffee anyway? Who is it for? Why would I bother with roasting at home? There are many reasons to give roasting a try and many, very accessible, ways to do it — see our DIY Guide for more on that. But first, we know there’s some confusion out there about green coffee, so let’s clear up a few misperceptions:

Green coffee is unripe coffee

Green can mean a lot of things, but in this context “green” refers to the color of the raw bean before roasting. Unlike a banana, green coffee is not unripe, just uncooked and bursting with potential. Raw coffee is greenish gray, yellow, or brown, and is covered with papery “chaff,” or skin. This burns off during the roasting process, as moisture is lost and sugars caramelize, producing the coffee color we know and love.

Varieties

Clockwise from top left: Decaf Colombian, Sulawesi Kalossi, Indian Monsooned Malabar, and Sumatra Mandheling.

Green coffee is like green tea, with a delicious flavor all its own

We sell green coffee for roasting, not for consumption as-is. Unroasted beans are hard as a rock. Literally. If you’re familiar with the Moh’s scale of mineral hardness, it’s about a 5, somewhere between Apatite and Feldspar (we did the test, because you asked). Pulverization might be possible, but your home grinder is not up to that task, and neither is ours. Even if you were somehow able to brew it, it would probably taste horrendously bitter. Roasting lowers acidity, releases aromatic compounds responsible for deliciousness, and is an all-around wonderful thing.

Home roasting requires something like this in my basement

Coffee_Roaster

Like coffee brewing, coffee roasting equipment ranges from simple to high-tech. Fancy gadgets don’t necessarily produce a better end result — every method has its fans. Coffee beans have been roasted in a skillet, baking sheet, Dutch oven, popcorn popper, on a grill, etc. Heat and agitation are the main requirements. Chances are you already have what you need in your kitchen to give it a try.

Roasting is for coffee snobs

Roasting is for people who like fresh coffee. It’s easy to be a coffee lover without knowing much about what you’re drinking — many blends have names that reveal little about their ingredients (Breakfast Blend, Evening Fantasy, etc.). Home roasting is a great way to start exploring and discovering what you like. Flavor is partly the product of geography, and experimenting with single-origin coffees is a great place to begin. Starting with unroasted coffee allows you to experience how flavor develops as the roast progresses. You’ll gain an understanding of how each variable affects flavor, and how to produce the cup you want.

I don’t drink enough coffee to roast at home

If you can’t accommodate 50-lb burlap sacks in your kitchen, you should know that we also sell green coffee in 1-lb, 5-lb, and 25-lb bags. Unroasted coffee is less expensive per pound than roasted, and it has a shelf life of more than a year, as opposed to roasted coffee which, stored well, loses flavor after a few months. If you have the space for a larger bag, you can take advantage of bulk savings without worrying about your stockpile going to waste. Roast only what you need. Chances are, your home set-up will only be able to accommodate small batches anyway.

Coffee Bean Direct offers an abundance of affordable, fresh-roasted, coffee. The hard work of discovering the best blends and roast levels for each bean has already been done. I can’t improve upon perfection.

Perhaps once you’ve failed miserably at home roasting, you will forever appreciate just how amazing our roasted coffee is. But that’s not our objective. When it comes to roasting and blending, we know that what we offer is just the beginning. Like Liz, who keeps our office tremblingly productive with countless pots of coffee each day, you can get as creative as you want with blends like Yenya Rican (Yemen, Kenya, and Costa Rican) or Papua Guatzil (Papua New Guinea, Guatemalan, and Brazil). Some are hits, some are misses, but our palates are never bored and we’re wide awake.

New to roasting? Send us your questions or success stories!

With great coffee comes great responsibility, the origin of Coffee Bean Direct

Tuesday, April 23rd, 2013 by

We’re not afraid to be ourselves at CBD, and that often means being nerds.  Tea guy Anthony is one of our biggest nerds and the blog entry below is proof.  It’s Anthony’s version of the origin of Coffee Bean Direct… told as if CBD was a superhero story.  Think Spiderman or the Avengers, but our super powers are roasting great coffee and our archenemies are high prices instead of super villains.  Like all epic superhero stories it contains a little embellishing – and is just flat out silly at times – but it is actually a great way to learn the history of CBD.

Flashback to 1998: One Andrew Esserman decides he is tired of marketing other people’s companies. He quits it all to start his own gourmet coffee and tea business despite having a wife and kids to provide for (okay, so his family supported him but it sounds more daring this way). Fed up with watching evil coffee villains trick cafes into leasing equipment only to be enslaved, forced to forever buy their overpriced, stale coffee, Esserman sought to change the coffee world for the better. Selling coffee and tea from his basement and renting time on other people’s roasters, Andrew built a business based on the principles of giving everyone a fair price while maintaining quality and freshness. No contracts, no minimums, and no dirty tricks.

Flash forward to 2004: Every Batman needs a Robin and Andrew finds his in Gregg Shefler. Now with his own coffee roaster and warehouse space in Jackson, NJ, Andrew hires young Gregg. Self-described as “THE WORST BEAN PACKER OF ALL TIME,” Gregg was apparently so bad working in the warehouse that Andrew had to find something else for him to do. A true genius at recognizing the potential in even the strangest of individuals, Andrew continued to work with Gregg and together they came up with the idea of selling coffee on the internet.

And Thus Coffee Bean Direct was born. The goal was to keep the same standards of quality and fairness but build a site that made ordering quick and easy, allowing anyone—home drinkers, cafes or large businesses—to buy gourmet coffee at wholesale prices. Andrew and Gregg had to teach themselves how to build a website, market online, charge credit cards electronically, and fulfill online orders. Like all superhero stories, the journey was long and arduous but worth it in the end.

Back to the present, a.k.a., 2012: Now with a not-so-secret secret warehouse in beautiful Hunterdon County, NJ, Andrew and Gregg have assembled a team of over 30 heroes to battle against stale, over-priced coffee and tea. We offer more than 100 varieties of coffee, the vast majority of which are roasted within 24 hours of being shipped out to you. Continuing the pattern of innovation, we have developed products never-before-seen like smoked coffee, maple bacon flavored coffee, and green tea spiked with Mombasa pepper.

Using mostly their gloved hands, superb might, and unrivaled willpower, these heroes are able to fulfill orders big and small—from 1-lb to thousands, from tiny boxes to trucks full of pallets.

We made a mock trailer for CBD The Movie based on this origin story.  Check it out here:

Happy Birthday Angie!

Wednesday, November 14th, 2012 by

Angie Anderson, Vice President, Canine Relations 

A little about Angie…

Age: 9

Preferred snacks: red bell peppers and dog cookies.

Favorite past-times: walks, enjoying the great outdoors, fetching anything, vocalizing.

Virtues: loyalty and patience with her little sister Hayley, who likes to use her as a pillow.

Namesake: Angie Harmon, for her brunette beauty.

What she loves about CBD: the fantastic company and the crumbs on the office floor.