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  • Website Food Inspiration

Food Inspiration Magazine

Food Inspiration Magazine is the online magazine for foodservice professionals in search of inspiration and innovation.

The free subscription digital magazine is published eight times per year and is an abundant source of inspiration for professionals in the world of food and hospitality. Our first readers can be found in the U.S., Northern Europe and parts of Asia.

Foodies that have a more than average interest in food & drinks relate strongly to the content and style of the online publication as well. With the magazine we collect, enrich and spread inspiration.

INT22 Smart cooking & kitchens

INT22 Smart cooking & kitchens

  • INT21 No waste

    INT21 No waste

  • INT20 Plant centric

    INT20 Plant centric

  • INT19 Food and healthcare

    INT19 Food and healthcare

  • INT18 Reach of the chef

    INT18 Reach of the chef

  • INT17 Vote food

    INT17 Vote food

  • INT16 Menus of change

    INT16 Menus of change

  • INT15 Reconnect

    INT15 Reconnect

  • INT14 Casualization

    INT14 Casualization

  • INT13 Future cooking

    INT13 Future cooking

  • INT12 Understanding the millennials

    INT12 Understanding the millennials

  • INT11 Ownership to Usership

    INT11 Ownership to Usership

  • INT10 Plant Based

    INT10 Plant Based

  • INT09 Psychology

    INT09 Psychology

  • INT08 Reinventing Traditions

    INT08 Reinventing Traditions

  • INT07 Foodtopia

    INT07 Foodtopia

  • INT06 Seduction

    INT06 Seduction

  • INT05 Shift Happens

    INT05 Shift Happens

  • INT04 Food & Responsibility

    INT04 Food & Responsibility

  • INT03 Food & Trends

    INT03 Food & Trends

  • INT02 Food & Farming

    INT02 Food & Farming

  • INT01 Food & Tech

    INT01 Food & Tech

The farm-to-table philosophy, which originated in San Francisco, has played a large role in the inception of third wave coffee, coffee that focuses on craftsmanship by using new methods and emphasizing the relationship between farmer and roaster. The direct consequences: better quality coffee, nicer roastings making purer coffees, the highlight of which is cold brew coffee.

Cold brew offers a new flavour sensation with fresher nuance, something impossible to achieve with other techniques. Food Inspiration visited the ‘coolest coffee brand in the world’: Stumptown in Portland, Oregon.

 

Stumptown is pioneering cold brew coffee and they told us the demand for cold brew has exploded over the last year. Director Diana Alysworth says: ‘Since the second quarter of this year the demand has risen enormously. Frapuccino is on the shelves everywhere. We hope to put cold brew next to it as premium alternative.’

 

Roasting with direction

Brewing coffee at Stumptown can take up to twelve or even sixteen hours, after which it is filtered. Nowhere in the process is it heated. Stumptown is wary of mechanisation. All coffees are weighed by hand; the roasting is not automated and is instead directed by several master roasters.

 

Coffee on tap

The Stumptown coffeebar next to the Ace hotel in Portland serves cold coffee on tap. They have three variants: original, single estate, and nitro. The single estate is from Guatemala. The nitro is a cold coffee made with nitrogen, resulting in an almost Guinness-like consistency. They are experimenting with CO2 taps, but so far it has not resulted in a winning combination.

 

Stubbies

Brown bottles with a stubbed neck called stubbies and retro typography have become the iconic attractors of cold brew coffee. Stumptown is the market leader in the new category of cold brew. The demand has exploded with the introduction of a milk carton packaging containing cold brew coffee with milk and sugar. They have also made a fantastic wintry variant using cinnamon.

The experienced entrepreneurs of Ritual Coffee Roasters are inspiring a new generation of coffee entrepreneurs in San Francisco. Front could very well be the next big thing that everyone will look up to in the future. This relative newcomer has it all beautiful space, a captivating story and, most importantly, sensational coffee.

 

Every morning Front’s garage door rolls up to reveal the entire space. It used to be an industrial loading dock, but now it has been transformed into a micro roaster offering cold brew, homemade almond milk and affogato.

 

Along with roaster Ian McCarthy, Randall Stowell and Jeff Linnell started their own microbrewery here. McCarthy’s first roasting experience started in a small Chicago apartment, courtesy of a manually operated popcorn popper. He thinks these small DIY home roasters are ahead of the competition because they can guarantee freshness.

 

As soon as coffee beans are roasted, it is only a matter of days before they start to lose flavour. These DIY roasters usually roast small amounts once or twice a week to avoid the beans going stale. McCarthy applies this philosophy to Front by roasting small, two kilogram batches at a time.

The coffee beans are packaged in test tubes. Not really a new thing, every roaster uses test tubes for testing. Front just decided it would be a fun idea to package their coffee per serving, so customers can go home and make the perfect brew, without having to weigh it first.

California’s rich agricultural lands and high quality products have paved the way for the farm-to-table trend before the rest of America thought it was cool. Local coffee roasters are embracing this philosophy.

 

This way of entrepreneurship is a result of post-war mass production. A culinary revolution was required and that is exactly what Alice Waters started when she opened restaurant Chez Panisse in Berkeley in 1971. Here they cooked and still cook with fresh, local and seasonal products. Famous chefs, restaurant owners, winemakers, authors, media and other foodies have been greatly influenced by this philosophy. Its effects are noticeable in the entire Bay Area and far beyond.

 

Ritual Coffee Roasters opened in 2005, is a fantastic example of this trend. They are all about mastering every stage of the coffee production. They improve the planting, harvesting, and processing of beans as well as strengthen relations between farmers and roasters. They do all this in an attempt to make the perfect cup of coffee.

Text: Hans Steenbergen & Thierry Bronchart | Music: Booker T & the M G 's - Green Onions

The farm-to-table philosophy, which originated in San Francisco, has played a large role in the inception of third wave coffee, coffee that focuses on craftsmanship by using new methods and emphasizing the relationship between farmer and roaster. The direct consequences: better quality coffee, nicer roastings making purer coffees, the highlight of which is cold brew coffee.

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INT22 Smart cooking & kitchens

INT21 No waste

INT20 Plant centric

INT19 Food and healthcare

INT18 Reach of the chef

INT17 Vote food

INT16 Menus of change

INT15 Reconnect

INT14 Casualization

INT13 Future cooking

INT12 Understanding the millennials

INT11 Ownership to Usership

INT10 Plant Based

INT09 Psychology

INT08 Reinventing Traditions

INT07 Foodtopia

INT06 Seduction

INT05 Shift Happens

INT04 Food & Responsibility

INT03 Food & Trends

INT02 Food & Farming

INT01 Food & Tech