Jump to content

Recommended Posts

No, it's just fortuitous.


But.


If you had been asked by god to design hell, with a special section that was particularly tortuous and awful to be reserved for producers of terrible music, and then by way of celebration at finishing hell by god's required deadline he/she threw you a party, and if at that party you put on the first record to kick off the dancing, and it was so awful god sent you straight to hell, well, that would be ironic.

Waitrose, like Fairtrade are the masters of doing just enough to corner the "I do really care, but not enough to use independent purveyors" Why Waitrose shoppers feel the need to blab on all holier than thou about their commitment to provenance and ethical production is beyond me. That extra 50p pays for marketing while flicking a few pennies at the hedgerows.


Coffee bean costs are frankly irrelevant, milk less so, but it's staff wages and rent etc that really dictate prices.


Why cafes should buy the best coffee available and advertise the fact

Cost of s*** beans ?8 per 1kg

Cost of awesome beans ?19 per kg

Working on 7gram per shot you get 142 shots per kilo


Cost of s*** beans in cup = 6p

Cost of awesome bean =13p

Relate these costs to gross profit and you may wonder why any independent cafe cheaps out on the burnt beans.


To the OP- You think BM is expensive? Surely only relating to your organic, fairtrade made at home garbage from Waitrose, rather than coffee street prices?

RosieH Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> katie1997 Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> (does

> > organic mean the cow has been raised outside or

> > simply been fed organic feed in one of these

> > intensive milking farms....I don't know).

>

> Exact detail will I think depend on the

> certification scheme, but the main accreditation

> in the UK is Soil Association, which will mean

> that the animals involved are free range (and

> often required to have more space than standard

> free range) as well as avoiding antibiotics and

> certain drugs (relying on good animal husbandry

> instead) and GM is banned from feed.

>

> Iceland have a pretty good rep in the food

> production stakes - I've said it before and I'll

> say it again, just because it's frozen doesn't

> mean it's shit. However, I can't say the same for

> a chicken tikka lasagne - there's something

> terribly terribly wrong there.



thanks RosieH for that info - good to know, I hope you are right about the animals having more space under the UK accreditation! applespider, I totally agree with you, have no qualms about paying more if its going to the right place, thank you for the info.

I love Blue Mountain, so individual and refreshing. Where I used to live it was sad to see the local, independent cafes lose business to the (no less than 3) big coffee chains who moved in and took over the high street. I think ED is great for coffee! xx

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • A lot of this is down to why the high street came into being in the first place  consumer demand  And now times has changed and consumers behave differently.  And businesses adapt to that.  It’s a bottom up approach as opposed to something imposed upon us.   It’s not to my tastes. But what do people expect to happen.  Jazzer is on to something when he says boycott Amazon - but the reality is even many who boycott Amazon choose other or more ethical alternatives. But still online  going into town for “a shop” just isn’t what people do anymore  Yeah but that’s not a real comparison. And “for ill” glosses over a lot of wrong as well  but we live in 2025 now and any of us oldies who think when we were 20 was the best time ever, a time we should go back to are just pining for our youths  there is no country in the world that can turn back the clock.  So in 2025, where is the closest vision of somewhere you would like.  Because if you look globally you don’t just get capitalism.  You can choose dictatorships or communism too 
    • Kramer is great, met her a couple of times.  Told her the story of when she ran for Mayor and didn't attend a community event as she didn't want to spoil Ken (Livingstone)'s love in.  Amused me and her no doubt 
    • I remember when all this was fields. The United Kingdom between 1945 and 1979. For good and ill.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...