廳長說...

在花蓮 ,一定要來這裡與氣味約會.
與在地生活來個親密的連結.
住地球的我們.住火星的老闆.
好好喝的一切
都在"客廳".

2008/5/19

2008 咖啡的贏家 (2)...Clover 來了

幸運草咖啡機來了
星巴克也開始採用
接下來那就有得瞧囉

首先我們要展開雙手擁抱星巴克加入精品咖啡的行列
然後告訴所有想開咖啡館的朋友們有福了
擁有CLOVER 幸運草咖啡機你就搞定
因為操作很簡單..................... 我想老美很喜歡這樣
07 咖啡展 有當過解說員啦所以有體驗過
關於 Clover 之後會有介紹

現象1:機器取代人力?
哇 會不會有人失業呢?我想這種機率不大
也許會需要更多人力
之前也許煮到手軟對於人氣店而言
現在卻要講的嘴酸口渴....要不停的解說
除了介紹機器操作與帶來的便利還要說明咖啡豆的香氣與特徵
專業知識要具備
那麼豆子的品質與特色 烘焙的技術 就要注重了
精品級的豆子要期待喔

現象2:差異性與獨特性?
咖啡館的分類就進入分級制

  • 外帶飲料店
  • 咖啡簡餐
  • 自家烘焙 商業用豆+精選豆
  • 自家烘焙 精品豆+認證咖啡
我想這樣的時代快要來臨 至於台灣 看看星巴克的決定與改變吧

Starbucks to buy privately-held Coffee Equipment Co.
By Sue Chang
Last update: 2:48 p.m. EDT March 19, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Starbucks Coffee Co. (SBUX:
Starbucks Corp
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Last: 17.05+0.98+6.08%
4:00pm 05/16/2008
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SBUX 17.05, +0.98, +6.1%) Wednesday said it will buy privately-held Coffee Equipment Co. based in Seattle, Wash. Coffee Equipment Co. developed the Clover system, which allows a barista to quickly deliver one freshly brewed cup of coffee at a time, according to Starbucks. The coffee retailer plans to accelerate the roll out of the Clover machines to select domestic and international markets. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Clover coffee machines catch Starbucks' fancy
By Melissa Allison

Seattle Times business reporter
ander Nosler's first scent memory is of Peet's Coffee in the Bay Area, where he grew up.

"It was so disappointing that coffee never tasted as good as it smelled," said Nosler, who set out to improve the flavor with two other engineers and a few hundred thousand dollars from investors.

Four years later, their machine — the Clover — has become part of Starbucks' strategy for a revolution in brewed coffee and a turnaround in its stock price.

Starbucks last month announced plans to buy Coffee Equipment Co., the 11-employee company that makes Clovers in an old trolley shed in Ballard. Nosler is thrilled.

"It's always nice to get asked to go steady, and I love not having to go ask for more investor money," he said of the deal, whose price and other terms, including a possible closing date, have been kept secret.

The machine that struck Starbucks' fancy is a single-cup brewer that costs coffee shops $11,000, about the same price as many commercial espresso machines and at least $9,000 above most high-end commercial drip-coffee machines.

In two years, Coffee Equipment has delivered fewer than 250 Clover machines to coffee shops around the world.

Clover fans are smitten with the flavor.

"I woke up thinking about it," said Starbucks customer Steve Fernbacher while drinking a cup at a Queen Anne store that has tested the machine for the past few months.

"It's definitely worth it," he said of the $2.50 price for a 12-ounce cup. Starbucks charges $1.55 for a 12-ounce drip coffee at that store, or $3.30 for a French press of about 16 ounces.

Some coffee shops charge more for their Clover brew. In Manhattan, Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz paid $7 for his first cup of coffee from a Clover.

"How do you do that?" Schultz jokingly asked Nosler in front of shareholders at Starbucks' annual meeting last month.

Nosler designed the Clover with two fellow engineering alumni from Stanford University, Randy Hulett and Jorah Wyer.

Only Nosler drank coffee, and the idea for a new machine sprang mostly from his passion for engineering. At age 12, he had what he considers an epiphany, "that someone designed even milk crates."

As a teenager, Nosler noticed that not all things are designed equally. He was irked by the turn-signal stalk of his father's Cutlass Ciera and thought a Honda Civic stalk "felt silky, substantial, like someone cared about how it felt."

By his early 30s, Nosler was a full-fledged design perfectionist with a business idea — to make a coffee machine that could brew French press-quality coffee that was not as slow and messy as an actual French press.

"I'd done work on coffee machines and I was struck by how the hardware manufacturers didn't seem very responsive to roasters' needs," he said. "The espresso folks got it, but the brewed-coffee world seemed so driven by costs and utilitarian."

In 2004, the three engineers launched their project, spending the first month brewing coffee every way possible — drip, espresso, vending machines, vacuum pots — to learn how it was done.

Employees came and went, including Wyer, who left in 2005. By early 2006, the first Clover was delivered to Caffé Artigiano in Vancouver, B.C.

The machine is basically a semiautomatic French press that allows baristas to set the temperature and brew time for individual cups of coffee. The idea is to grind the coffee fresh and to calibrate the brewer so that its settings extract the ideal flavor from different types of beans.

Some Clover owners are not pleased with the Starbucks buyout.

Portland-based Stumptown Coffee Roasters sold five of its six machines to Chicago-based Intelligentsia Coffee because "we'd have to buy the parts and services from Starbucks, and we've never done that before and we're not going start now," said Matt Lounsbury, Stumptown's director of operations.

He's keeping one Clover in a coffee-cupping lab but isn't sure what he'll do with it.

For Stumptown customers, it's back to French press or, at its Annex tasting room in Portland, an old-fashioned manual Melitta drip system. Clover doesn't have competition, Lounsbury said, but its flavor profile falls between a French press and the manual Melitta system.

Jeff Babcock, of Zoka Coffee Roaster & Tea, was the first Seattle coffee-shop owner to buy a Clover. He doesn't know what the Starbucks deal will mean for his six Clover machines but says he's "too old to get upset about it."

Babcock likes the ease of making good coffee with the Clover and figures "we'll have a lot better coffees coming out of our Clovers than Starbucks will. We're the ones that go after the really, really special coffees."

Nosler targeted independent coffee shops because investors — family, friends and a couple of angel investors — would not give money if the company was counting on a windfall from Starbucks to be profitable.

"We consciously trained ourselves that Starbucks would never do business with us, much less buy us," he said.

Starbucks' interest in the Clovers makes sense, he thinks, because "they're unique in their size and resources. They can control every aspect of their value chain."

The companies are still "trying to figure out what it all means" and have not decided whether they will ramp up Clover production, or how many Starbucks stores will get the machine. Starbucks does not often buy other companies.

While they decide, Clovers continue to be made on a 50-foot assembly line in Ballard. Nosler is scheduled to make a machine soon, after a few months off the line.

"I'm looking forward to it. It will be a nice break," he said.

Now that the Clover has pioneered a brewing alternative, Nosler, 36, said he wouldn't be surprised if others follow.

"But I don't know. We've been out there more than two years and haven't heard a peep," he said. "It's expensive and it's really hard. I've aged 10 years."

待續

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