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    « Caffè Umbria | Main | Seen Around PDX »
    Monday
    Oct042010

    Nor'West Coffee

    My quest to find good coffee took me outside the city limits the other day. I traveled up the I-5 corridor from a city who’s catchphrase is “Keep Portland weird!” to a city that likes to say “Keep Vancouver normal.” While the cultures of the two cities are very different, one thing they share (besides the rain) is good coffee. Before any Portlanders reading this get upset, I want to make it clear that I’m not implying the two are coffee equals. So far, Portland has a clear lead. In fact, until the other day I didn’t even know that Vancouver was competitive.

    However, yesterday a friend of mine from Vancouver, Tim Downing, introduced me to Nor’West Coffee and I found that there are a few coffee experts in the state to our north as well. Nor’West is a café that has been around for nearly three years. After roasting his own coffee for about seven years, Mike McGinness, the owner, began roasting commercially three years ago under the name Compass Coffee. The company has three retail outlets—one in downtown Vancouver (Compass Coffee), one in North Vancouver (Nor’West) and one in Beaverton (Java Nation) that it acquired three months ago.

    Nor'West Coffee

    The North Vancouver store, where we went, has been the company’s roasting headquarters for two years, and has been a retail outlet for nine months. They call it the Tasting Lab/Education Center, so it’s a good place to go if you want to learn about coffee. With a large roll-up door, the building looks like it should be an auto shop. Step inside, however, and you will find Mike, Bryan and Ryan, your guides to (in Mike’s words) your “coffee Nirvana.”

    Tim and I showed up on a Friday afternoon, and they were roasting coffee when we arrived. We started talking to the guys, and I mentioned that I was writing about my quest to become a coffee expert. They seemed excited to hear that, then they warned us about the batch they were roasting.

    “This one is almost ready, and when we open it up, you’d better look out,” said Mike, pointing at the roaster. “It’s a dark one.”

    So?

    “Look outside, you’ll see what I mean.” He pointed towards the street. I looked out the window and saw a thick white cloud of smoke billowing out of the building towards traffic.

    Oh. Wow! Was the coffee on fire? Mike opened the door on his roaster to dump the coffee into the cooling bin, and more white smoke poured out into the café. I could see why the roll-up door was open, and I wondered: doesn’t a roast this dark kill all of the subtle flavors in the coffee? Don’t all of the volatile compounds that make the coffee unique literally go up in smoke? Doesn’t that go against everything a coffee lover believes in?

    “This is a coffee roasted especially for our customers in Beaverton,” Mike explained. “We just bought the Java Nation Coffeehouse, and they have a super dark, high caffeine blend called King Cobra that they’ve been serving there for fifteen years. It’s not our most interesting coffee, but we want to keep our customers happy.”

    That’s certainly understandable. I can imagine what I might do if I were accustomed to drinking the (very) smoky King Cobra every day, then suddenly one day someone served me something that tasted more like fruit juice. I’d probably look to get my fix somewhere else.

    After the smoke cleared, I asked what espressos they had. There were three available (a sign that the café cared about coffee): a house blend called Delirium, an Ethiopian coffee and one from Kenya. The Kenya was described as having “incredible balance for a Kenyan coffee. Clean with sweet, juicy fruit flavors,” so I chose the Kenya. Tim ordered the Delirium.

    Inside the tasting lab

    As he handed it to me, Ryan (the barista), said the shots had pulled a little tight. I wasn’t exactly sure what he meant, but when I tried it, instead of the sweetness I was expecting, the coffee tasted much like a plum that was weeks from being ripe. It was sour, and when I told him that, he made me another one. The second one was better. It was slightly sweet, and the fruitiness did come through.

    Tim and I went over to sit down at a table and solve the world’s problems (if you ask me, we nearly succeeded). While we were there, Ryan offered to let us try some brewed coffee (a pour-over, of course), but as I already had six shots in me for the day, I held off. I probably should have accepted—all three guys were very knowledgeable and excited about coffee—because I imagine they would have brewed something very good.

    The seating area

    Instead of drinking more coffee, we discussed the Portland area coffee scene with them. Is the Portland coffee the best in the country? I wanted to hear their opinion. Of course, they assured me. Even better than Seattle’s? Ryan weighed in that Seattle is good, but they seem to have lost their edge up there. “They’re content to just have good coffee in Seattle. No one’s pushing the envelope like they are down here.” Interesting. I had heard that from other people in the Portland area too, and I wonder what people from Seattle would say about that. Might be time for a road trip. . .

    After three hours at the café, including one long conversation with one of the regulars about life, it was time to go. I was glad that Tim took me to Nor’West. Each time I go to a place, I seem to learn something new about coffee, and the guys at Nor’West were very willing to help me with my coffee education. Just look out when they’re roasting the King Cobra.

     

    Vitals

    Address: 8013 St. Johns Road Suite P, Vancouver, Washington 98665 (map)

    Phone: 360.989.6658

    Hours: Monday-Friday 7am-5pm

                Saturdays 9am-5pm

    Coffee: Compass (their own retail brand)

    Free Wi-Fi? Yes

    Recommend it? Yes, when you want to learn about coffee

    Website: http://www.compasscoffeeroasting.com/blog/

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    Reader Comments (3)

    Question for the coffee expert. I learned in Costa Rica at a coffee plantation that darker roasts have LESS caffeine and lighter roasts have MORE because the longer the roasting process the more caffeine is "cooked" out of them or something to that effect.... but now you are saying this King Cobra burnt to a crisp (my paraphrasing) coffee is a highly caffeinated roast. So was I misinformed in costa rica? Or is there something else that made this blend so high in caffeine?

    October 5, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterJulia

    You know, Julia, that's a good question. I had heard the same thing about lighter roasts having more caffeine. I don't know if King Cobra is extra-high in caffeine or if that is just how it's marketed. I'll pass your question along to them and see what I can find out.

    October 5, 2010 | Registered CommenterWill Hutchens

    Julia, here's the response I got from them:

    "Basically yes the same bean roasted lighter versus darker will have a bit less caffeine. However, if you brew by weight dark roasts are lighter so you’ll use a bit more effectively cancelling out the slightly less caffeine from roasting.

    Note I said “same bean”. King Cobra is a blend with a high Robusta content roasted dark. Robusta has about twice as much caffeine as Arabica so even though roasted dark it still has a much higher caffeine content than a lighter roasted Arabica. All our coffees are 100% Arabica except KC."

    Now we both know.

    October 11, 2010 | Registered CommenterWill Hutchens

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