Free
Good Beer Hunting

EP-222 Colin Whitcomb of Canary Coffee Bar

Listen in app
Every year, hundreds of baristas come together for the United States Coffee
Championships. The competitions are heavily anticipated, with folks
preparing for months to present their routines to judges and figure out who
is the best coffee brewer, roaster, or taster in the nation.

The heart of the entire competition is the barista championships. You might
be thinking, what could a barista competition even be? Is it who can make
the best coffee? Is it who has the best beans? Is it who can make the
prettiest latte art? All these things make up a portion of the competition,
but it’s fundamentally a test of skill, expertise, and perhaps a little bit
of luck and circumstance.

Competitors have 15 minutes to present four espressos, four milk drinks,
and four signature drinks to a panel of sensory judges, all the while
having two technical judges hovering around you, scoring your technique and
technical abilities. The winner goes on to represent the United States at
the World Barista Championships, which happens to be in Boston this year.

The competitions are the breeding ground for new ideas in coffee. You might
see competitors freeze their coffee beans or talk about new processing
methods. Techniques and concepts that we accept as commonplace in the
coffee industry usually come from coffee competitions, and their influence
on the future of specialty coffee can’t be measured.

Every year, my colleague, Colin Whitcomb, and I sit on the sidelines and
provide live commentary for folks watching at home. The competitions are
livestreamed by the Specialty Coffee Association, who hires a professional
AV team to run sound and shoot live video, and Colin and I meticulously
re-read the rulebook and watch past competitions to see what’s new, what
trends have carried on from years past, and provide context for the
decisions that competitors make.

This is a task that Colin loves. He’s a long time barista competitor,
Executive Council member for the Barista Guild, and is currently building
out his new café, Canary Coffee Bar, in Milwalkee, Wisconsin. Colin has
been part of the specialty coffee community for over a decade, and competed
in his first barista competition in 2008. In this interview, which we
recorded on the eve of the United States Barista Championships, Colin talks
about the history and ever-changing format of the competition, what trends
and ideas came out of the competition sphere, and we make some spur of the
moment bets on who we think will win (spoiler alert—we’re 100% wrong).

This is Colin Whitcomb of Canary Coffee Bar. Listen in.
1:16:40
Publication year
2019
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
👍👎
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)