Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Love your coffee? Follow your brew from the moment it’s roasted at Blue Tokai

blue tokai ians 2 “A lot of roasters work in secrecy and are afraid to share information. Our roasterie strives to do just the opposite by getting our customers to engage with their coffee from the moment it’s roasted,” said Blue Tokai co-founder Matt Chitharanjan. (Source: IANS Photo)

Instant coffee to wake you up and plastic cups after cups of machine coffee is the best you can manage on a busy day? Do you long to sip your coffee comfortably and exploit every coffee bean that goes into your cup? Do you live in Delhi? Then head to Blue Tokai, a roasterie-cum-cafe here. It aims to change the coffee roasterie culture in the country and give customers a chance to see the roasting process.

The customers can see the roasting and packaging process as well as get an opportunity to participate in brewing and roasting workshops.

“A lot of roasters work in secrecy and are afraid to share information. Our roasterie strives to do just the opposite by getting our customers to engage with their coffee from the moment it’s roasted,” said Blue Tokai co-founder Matt Chitharanjan.

With its name referring to the old Malabari term for the tail of a peacock, Blue Tokai sources its coffee from estates in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

Stating the difference between instant coffee and roasted coffee, Chitharanjan said: “Instant coffee is just dried-up brewed coffee crystals which get dissolved in hot water. The process of drying brewed coffee into instant coffee and then back to drinkable coffee results in the loss of true coffee flavours and aromas.” “Instant coffee manufacturers try to make up for this loss by infusing aroma gases into dried crystals, but while the resulting cup smells a bit like real coffee, it never tastes as good as brewed coffee,” he explained.

The packaging of the coffee features different sketches by artists, reflecting life at coffee farms. “If you take a look at the artwork behind our bags, you see that each piece of art highlights either the bio-diversity or the daily nuance of life in a coffee estate,” said Blue Tokai co-founder Namrata Asthana, who also happens to be Chitharanjan’s wife, said.

Blue Tokai opened its roasterie in south Delhi just last month, and they also have a 3-year old outlet in the capital’s suburb of Gurgaon.

“While Delhi is our home, Mumbai and Bengaluru also have a large population of people eager for a better coffee experience. We ship our coffee all around the country and most of our customers, after Delhi, are based in these two cities,” Chitharanjan said.



from The Indian Express » Section » Food http://bit.ly/1Jbmwdu via
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