ironpeddler
Ye Old Newbie
My coffee and cigar experimentation is mostly confined to the mornings. My usual morning bean is an Ethiopian Yirgacheffe, but over the past year or so I have been trying multiple varieties of peaberry beans. My current favorite is Tanzania Nyamtimbo Peaberry roasted to a medium dark roast (City+). Peaberry coffee beans are by trait a bit citrusy, floral, and bright in taste...in cigar (and coffee) terms, of medium intensity....not that Starbucks in your face heavy dark roast taste. My more intense bean this time of year is an Kenya Fair Trade Peaberry, Kiawamururu region...a little stronger, sweeter, and more robust when roasted to a dark (Full City) than a medium (City+) roast.
My favorite cigars coupled withy these type coffees over this time have been, my all time morning smoke, a Hoyo de Monterrey Excalibur Epicure but lately that has been replaced by the Trinidad Coloniales...medium, creamy tasting cigars with a medium, bright tasting black coffee.
At night....it's hard to beat a great dark roast espresso with a lemon rind coupled with a nice aged Bolivar Beli Finos....pure heaven.
Very impressive experimentations there mate. Australia hasn't got too much in the way of premium coffee. I usually stick with either Lavazza or Rio Fairtrade Coffee.
Good to see you playing around with pairing your coffees with cigars. I have found that to be a very rewarding path to follow, and the Espresso with the lemon rind is something I really have to try!!
I totally disagree mate.
We have a huge range of bean suppliers in Sydney.
Fresh roasted and damn good. I am sure Melbourne would have many coffee suppliers to choose from.
We buy from the Italian quarter in Sydney, unbelievably good coffee beans. Our favorite is the Ethiopian dharjma coffee.
MC...As anvil says, I agree...to the point that you can access these type beans from any country. I buy green (unroasted) coffee and roast it myself. This is very accessible through the Internet. Do some research and see if it's for you. It's not very hard at all. Green beans can keep for over 2 years and all you have to do is roast as you go. The advantage is that you can try a huge variety of coffee that is not available locally and roasted to someone's else's liking. You can take the same coffee bean and change it's taste by how long you roast it....every coffee has a specific range that it has to be roasted to, but with small changes in the roasting time (1 minute or so) you can craft a coffee to your liking. Very cool stuff! I have been home roasting for about 5-6 years and have sampled coffees from every country that grows it. I buy about 4 times a year based on when certain coffee beans are available that I like....about 60-70lbs a year. It may sound like a lot of coffee but it comes to a little over a pound a week, not much if you brew a pot a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year. Some of that is espresso that I don't make every day and some specialty coffees that I only roast and brew when we have friends over...Kona, Blue Mountain, etc.
My favorite coffee from last year that I haven't been able to find (have to wait for the next crop) was an Australian Mountain Top Peaberry! I only bought 2lbs and after trying it...I should have bought 20 lbs! That was my Numero Uno for 2007. All coffee is seasonal...so if you buy a pound or 2 to try it, it may not be available until the following crop to sample again....but that's the great thing about this....it's just like cigars....you keep a log book and write down what you tried, how you liked it at the time, and if you want to try it again.
For an small initial cash outlay for the roaster and a burr grinder, you can start roasting your own...plus, the unroasted (green) coffee is a fraction of the price of an already roasted coffee.....try HERE to start. Some American companies will ship to Australia as well. This is where I BUY. Maria is a very sweet young lady and her husband Tom is the buyer. Their website is like a Bible to the home roaster...everything you would need to know is written there in terms that a normal person can relate to...because they are really cool people.
Let me know if you take the jump into Home Roasting....you'll be glad you did. If you have any questions as you think about it...PM me and I will walk you through the process.
Gary
PS, just to let you know, I'm not a coffee freak, I usually just make a pot in the morning, sometimes 2 on the weekends, and an espresso at night (once in a while)...it's just that the 'hands on' factor is awesome and very rewarding...especially when you serve it to your guests!