A Better Cup of Coffee On My Watch
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One event of the day holds special
significance when I’m on a boat.
Having a great cup of coffee in the
morning makes all the difference
between luxurious cruising and a
primal camping experience. I’ve been on big,
expensive boats where the owners didn’t seem to
know or care about this daily ritual, with instant
coffee in the galley or that rancid bilge water that
comes from many supermarket coffees. I’m not
alone, as I know many owners who can’t wait to
find a Starbucks at the next port and schedule their
morning routine around a stroll over to enjoy a
Grande Americano or latté.
Well, this story began when Starbucks sent me
notice that the company was discontinuing its home delivery program, a service I’ve used for the last
couple of decades since I moved east from Seattle in
the ’80s. Wherever I moved in the years since, four
pounds of premium coffee eventually showed up on
my doorstep every five weeks or so.
Distraught with the realization that I was now on
my own, I sought counsel from Bob Lane, our West
Coast editor. Bob and his wife Polly live in
Anacortes, Washington, in the center of Coffee
Central. The Pacific Northwest has a legendary
affection for coffee and is the national center for
American coffee aficionados.
When I told Bob of my plight, he unhesitatingly
told me to contact his favorite coffee company,
Fidalgo Bay Coffee. Located in Burlington,
Washington, the company focuses entirely on specialty coffee and related products. And so began
my quest for a replacement coffee so that I would
not lapse into a coma of monotonous ingestion of
lackluster coffee, both on Growler and at home.
I spoke with Susan Nash at Fidalgo Bay Coffee
that same day. In just a few minutes of discussion, I
was struck by the fact
that while I enjoy a
good cup of coffee, I
really didn’t know
much about the
subject or how best to
maximize my coffee
pleasure. In fact, I
realized that I rely
way too much on
finding a nearby
Starbucks rather than
being able to produce
a good cup of coffee
on my own. And this
lack of self-reliance is
especially noteworthy
as I am often on my
own when anchored
in a quiet cove.
So I took up the
challenge to empower
myself with coffee
wisdom.
It didn’t hurt that
some employees at
Fidalgo Bay Coffee
are PMM readers, and
that Gary Sawyer,
Fidalgo Bay Coffee’s
founder and owner,
lived aboard a 64-foot
Malahide trawler for
six years while
attempting to enjoy
retirement. It didn’t
last, though, as his
passion for specialty
coffee brought him
back into business.
When I got an opportunity to speak with him, his
infectious enthusiasm prompted me to schedule a
visit out West.
My quest for coffee knowledge had begun, as
straight and true as a Tomahawk missile on a bad guy.
BEAN TALK
According to the Specialty Coffee Association of
America, there are five grades of coffee beans.
Specialty grade is the top category, followed by
premium grade, exchange grade, below standard
grade and off grade. All coffee beans fall into one of
these categories, and
it has a lot to do with
the content of a given
measure of coffee
beans. During the
sorting process, one
finds all sorts of
contaminants among
the whole beans:
chaff, fungus-riddled
and other microbially
damaged beans, small
sticks, immature and
unripe beans, insectdamaged
beans, and
broken pieces of
beans.
As coffee is sold
by weight, many
companies fold back
some quantity of
these contaminated
bean products into
the coffee that we
buy. As a result we
get coffee that is less
than perfect. So
specialty grade is
what one should
look for when
buying whole bean
coffee. It is pure and
the best available,
and it costs only a
little extra.
Coffee comes from
many sources,
primarily from South
America, Africa and
Indonesia. All beans
have their own unique characteristics, a factor of
altitude, acidity of the soil and the temperature in
which they grow. These unique flavors are then
taken by the coffee roaster and mixed into its own
signature blends.
There are three basic roasts of coffee: Northern
European (the standard roast), Vienna roast (a 10
percent darker roast) and the French roast (a bolder
roast that is 20 percent darker than the standard
roast). All coffee beans are roasted more or
less along these standards, and blends
come from combinations of various
roasts and unique bean flavors.
Northern European coffee can be
enjoyed throughout the day, while
the darker French roast is best
enjoyed after a full-flavored meal or
dessert, its smoky after tone and taste a
perfect complement to a rich meal. (As
Gary also pointed out, Americans make
the mistake of having coffee before or
during a meal, rather than at the end
of the meal. The acidity in the coffee
tends to overpower the taste of food
during a meal.)
In many ways coffee is like a spice,
and as we don’t eat the same thing over
and over, so should we think about
bringing along several types of coffee
when we go cruising.
STORING COFFEE
The best way to keep coffee on
your boat (or at home, for that
matter) is in the freezer or in the fridge.
Coffee stores best in whole bean form
(there is less surface area). Oxygen is the
no. 1 destroyer of coffee, so an airtight
container is a must for storing beans.
Besides the harmful effects of oxygen,
coffee beans absorb aromas such as
cigarette smoke and cooking odors.
So it is essential to keep the beans
isolated. (Avoid the local supermarket
coffee bins like the plague for just this
reason. There, beans are left exposed to sunlight,
heat, oxygen, and food and chemical odors; new
beans are added over old; and the bins are not
cleaned regularly. Stay away!)
Actually, the foil bag most specialty coffee is sold
in really is the best container in which to store
whole beans. As you take coffee out of the bag, cut
it down to size and squeeze out any air before you
close the bag and return it to the freezer. Coffee will
stay fresh for a year or more in a freezer without
losing any of its quality. If the same bag is stored in a cool place, rather than in a freezer, it will last
three or four months before you notice degradation.
So keep coffee in its original foil bag and store it
in the freezer, being careful to squeeze out any air.
That is the secret to storing coffee on your
boat.
THE ALL-IMPORTANT GRINDER
OK, so I learned I’ve been doing it
wrong for all these years. Like
everyone I know, we have one of
those little coffee grinders with a
spinning blade to grind whole beans.
Gary explained that blade grinders, while
commonplace, cut and chip the beans
into very inconsistent particles. A
much better tool is a burr grinder
that actually grinds the beans into
consistent, controllable particles.
Also, the better burr grinders are
adjustable, allowing one to regulate the
coarseness of grind. This is important, as
the different methods of brewing coffee
require different grinds of coffee. I didn’t
know that.
Another error and popular
misconception is that the finer you
grind the coffee the better. Wrong!
Again, whole bean coffee must be
ground to match the chosen brewing
method.
COFFEE BREWING PECKING ORDER
I’ve had a long-running debate with
my mother-in-law about which is a
better method of brewing coffee. I’ve
used a Melitta on our boat for years,
while Mommy K insists that her
ancient Corning percolator makes a
better cup of coffee. Turns out we are
both wrong.
The best method of brewing good coffee is with a
French press. Also known as a manual press or press
pot, the French press maximizes the flavor of the
coffee and creates a consistently wonderful pot of
coffee. The glass container of most presses is
admittedly vulnerable on a boat, but it is still the
best. Nissan makes a nice stainless steel French press
that is also an insulated thermos. (Always season
stainless steel before use by brewing a pot of coffee
and letting it stand overnight; then rinse it out. And be aware that stainless steel can taint the flavor of
most flavored coffees.)
The French press method of brewing coffee is
simple. Start with fresh, cool, filtered water and
bring to just under a boil, ideally 198 to 204 degrees.
Grind the whole coffee beans to a coarse grind (like
coarse sand) and put it into the bottom of the press.
When the water is hot, pour it into the press,
making sure to cover the coffee completely, then let
it stand four or five minutes. Then slowly push
down the mesh screen and enjoy the coffee.
If the coffee is not going to be consumed right
away, it is best to transfer the coffee to a preheated,
insulated thermos or airpot. Regardless of brewing
method, if left on a stove burner, coffee will turn
bitter after just 20 minutes. When Gary lived aboard
his Malahide, he did not like to run the ship’s
generator just to make coffee in the morning, so
would make it the night before and store the coffee
in an airpot, which kept the coffee hot and fresh for
the morning watch.
It turns out the other methods of brewing coffee
leave much to be desired. The Melitta and Mr. Coffee-style drip systems tend to underextract flavor
from the coffee, a result of inconsistent flow of water
over the ground coffee. Water passes over the coffee
once, and it is a hit-or-miss form of brewing coffee. In
some automatic units you’ll notice that some grounds
are not even wet when the filter basket is removed
afterwards. As a result these systems do not generally
have the fullness of flavor of the French press.
The percolator types, either electric or Mommy
K’s stovetop unit, do just the opposite, with water
repeatedly boiled over the ground coffee. This
tends to overextract the oils in the ground coffee,
producing a higher level of sourness, disguised as
more flavor. Many people have had to give up
coffee because of this higher presence of acidity
and sourness.
A DARNED GOOD IDEA
Now here’s something I never heard about that
might be an answer for those who have had to give
up coffee because of acidity. Called a cold coffee
process, it is a method of brewing coffee with cold
water. As I learned from the nice folks at Fidalgo Bay Coffee, brewing coffee with cold water does not pull
out the acids as hot water does, and it’s great for those
who have problems with acid and their stomachs.
Now everyone can enjoy coffee at its fullest.
Sold under various brands, the cold process
product is simplicity itself. (Fidalgo Bay sells the
Toddy Maker brand of cold coffee processor.) A
pound of coffee is ground very coarsely—another
good case for an adjustable burr grinder—and cold
water is gradually added to fill the container. It is
important to not stir the mixture. The Toddy Maker
is then covered and left on the galley counter for 14
to 18 hours. Refrigeration is not necessary during
this step.
The resulting brew concentrate has 85 percent
less acid than coffee brewed with hot water. The
cold brew concentrate will store for five to six weeks
in the refrigerator and can be used to make hot or
cold coffee drinks as you wish. The brew is four times more concentrated than regular brewed
coffee, so a small amount of the concentrate can be
added to hot water to make a hot cup of fresh
coffee. The taste of this cold processed coffee is
outstandingly smooth, and if you have a blender
aboard capable of grinding ice cubes, your cold
coffee drinks will make you famous in the
anchorage, especially if you add German chocolate,
Jamaican rum, French vanilla or other available
flavors. Who needs to tailor a cruise around the
availability of Starbucks if you can do it all yourself?
And the cold coffee concentrate can be frozen
as ice cubes, to be used in hot water or cold drink
as desired.
GREAT DECAF DOES EXIST
I am not partial to decaffeinated coffee, but I guess
it is simply because I have not had a good experience with it. Caffeine is an odorless bitter
alkaloid that is a stimulant to the central nervous
system. Caffeine can be removed from coffee beans
before they are roasted, but 97 percent of all of the
caffeine must be removed before it can be sold as
decaffeinated coffee in the U.S.
Gary Sawyer explained that there are four natural
methods of decaffeinating coffee that in his
experience produce rich flavorful coffee that is
indistinguishable from caffeinated coffee. The
method used in all Fidalgo Bay Coffee decaf blends
involves an environmentally friendly process done at
the coffee grower’s location before the beans are
shipped to the coffee roaster.
In what is called the “natural process,” oils are
extracted from green (unroasted) coffee beans using
ethyl acetate, which removes the caffeine, then the
oils are blended back into the beans. Any residual traces of caffeine are burned off during the
subsequent roasting at Fidalgo Bay Coffee’s
Washington facility.
Sawyer assured me that delightful blends of
French roast, Sumatra and many blends of both
Vienna and Northern European roasts are available
in decaf. Decaf Roastmaster is his personal favorite.
EMPOWERMENT IS GREAT
So there you have it: You are now equipped to
enjoy good coffee on your boat, even if you are
miles from the nearest gourmet coffee shop. It is all
about having the right tools, buying the right coffee
and learning the craft of brewing quality coffee.
Perhaps it’s time to get out of your regular coffee
routine and try doing it yourself.
The correct amount of coffee to use is personal,
but you’ll have more satisfaction from fuller taste.
Start making your coffee a little stronger, as you
can always add water, but you can’t add flavor.
Brew it stronger and you’ll also drink less but be
more satisfied.
And stay away from grinding coffee beans too
fine. Keep it coarse and you’ll have a better coffee
experience.
Equip your trawler with the proper tools: a
French press, burr grinder, steam kettle, Toddy
Maker, blender and a variety of whole coffee
beans, properly stored in your ship’s freezer.
I really want to thank Gary Sawyer, Susan Nash
and the rest of the folks at Fidalgo Bay Coffee for sharing their expertise and knowledge of coffee and
its many facets. They are as passionate about their
coffee and proud of their products as we are about
trawlers and PMM. And my hat’s off to Bob and
Polly Lane for steering me in a direction that really
pique my curiosity.
Next time our paths cross, stop by Growler and
I’ll brew you a cup of the best coffee around, as I
continue to hone my skills as an empowered
coffee connoisseur. Or perhaps I’ll make you a
yummy cold coffee drink, spiced with a little
French vanilla.
This is truly living at a higher level.
Reprinted with permission. Copyright 2003 © Dominion Enterprises (888.487.2953) www.passagemaker.com
You are reading the text-only copy of this article. To access the article as it appeared in PassageMaker Magazine, please log in to purchase and download the PDF version of this article.