View Full Version : Bad news for Starbucks
Tell us something new. :lol: :roll:
There coffee sucks and tastes like something from the deepest ocean.
Best coffee on high street? Not Starbucks
Starbucks is peddling the worst coffee at the highest prices according to a survey of the big three coffee houses on Britain's high streets.
A report published today calculates that choosing the world’s largest coffee chain instead of an independent shop for your cappuccino three mornings a week will cost you £126 a year.
The Which? Magazine survey did not stop at lamenting the cost of a Starbucks, it also placed the global brand at the bottom of its taste test. It concluded that when it came to too much water in an Americano and a surfeit of froth on a cappuccino, “Starbucks was the worst offender”.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3245914.ece (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3245914.ece)
AVGWarhawk
01-24-08, 02:20 PM
No doubt the price is outlandish. I get one white chocolate mocha vente and two small triple chocolate drinks for my two kids and it is $15.00. Seems a bit much to me. Not only that, the white chocolate mocha is not consistent from shop to shop. No consistancy is bad business. If my wife gets me chocolate, coffee and whipped cream in the can I can get a crap load of white chocolate mochas in my kitchen and not spend a arm and leg for them.
danlisa
01-24-08, 02:31 PM
The quality of Starbucks ( & other 'Coffee Shops) was shown to me the first time I went into one of the stores....
"Hi, I'll have a Black Coffee please"
"Sorry we don't serve plain Coffee"
WTF!!!:damn: :damn: What kind of coffee shop doesn't sell old fashioned plain black coffee.
I don't like artsy fartsy, namby pamby girly 'coffee'.:stare:
AVGWarhawk
01-24-08, 02:33 PM
:rotfl:
Girly coffee.....:rotfl:
The quality of Starbucks ( & other 'Coffee Shops) was shown to me the first time I went into one of the stores....
"Hi, I'll have a Black Coffee please"
"Sorry we don't serve plain Coffee"
WTF!!!:damn: :damn: What kind of coffee shop doesn't sell old fashioned plain black coffee.
I don't like artsy fartsy, namby pamby girly 'coffee'.:stare:
Dan, did you make a sarcastic remark?
Tchocky
01-24-08, 02:42 PM
mmm, I like Starbucks' plain black, and the price (at least for that) isn't too steep.
I don't frequent it though, there's a tiny Italian cafe in Dublin that serves heaven in an Espresso cup
Skybird
01-24-08, 02:52 PM
Starbucks. Tried it twice. Both times did not get coffee, but who-knows-what. "Grauslige Plürre."
Want to have the real taste? Make espresso, in a manual machine, no automatic thing. According to the Italian's national institute for espresso culture (no joke, that thing really exists), an original espresso must have 25-30 ml espresso per cup, brewed with 2.6-3.0 mg Espresso powder per 10 ml finished liquid. Press it tightly until it almost is a tablet, there are special stamps for that. The machine must create steam pressure between 11 and 15 bar, temperature not below 93°C, the ready liquid in your cup must have passed through the powder in 12-15 seconds. You do not want a fully light (=underextracted) and no fully dark (=overextracted) cream, but a spotted cream - then it is done right. Use much sugar, drink while hot.
No coffee comes even close to that. :up: Believe me, my espressos are enjoying legendary reputation over here. :D
But Green Tea (Sencha) or Roibosch Tea isn't bad either. :lol:
Blacklight
01-24-08, 02:53 PM
The quality of Starbucks ( & other 'Coffee Shops) was shown to me the first time I went into one of the stores....
"Hi, I'll have a Black Coffee please"
"Sorry we don't serve plain Coffee"
WTF!!!:damn: :damn: What kind of coffee shop doesn't sell old fashioned plain black coffee.
They darn well serve plain coffee here and it's darn good !
The reason a lot of people don't like it is that their brew is a LOT stronger than your typical American cup of coffee. It's a lot more bitter so people who are accustomed to your typical American style cup of coffee will be overpowered by the bitterness a lot. It all depends on what you're accustomed to. I for one LOVE a good strong tasting cup of coffee. I have a really nice pump action espresso/cappuchino machine here that I use to make shots of espresso all the time (The stronger the flavor, the better).
My one guilty pleasure for the "Girly" coffee is Starbuck's Caramel Macciatto. I can't get enough of those.:D
Sea Demon
01-24-08, 03:13 PM
I gotta admit, I love the Starbucks Chai. Worth every penny.
AVGWarhawk
01-24-08, 03:15 PM
I find if I want espresso I just leave the regular coffee on the burner for two hours.:p
Jimbuna
01-24-08, 04:01 PM
I consider myself lucky....I seldom drink the stuff :nope:
SUBMAN1
01-24-08, 04:04 PM
No doubt the price is outlandish. I get one white chocolate mocha vente and two small triple chocolate drinks for my two kids and it is $15.00.Are you nuts? You can have yourself a Big Mac, French Fries, and a Drink for less calories. This is why people that drink Starbucks get fat!
-S
PS Here is some info (A quarter pounder from McD's is only 410 cal for comparrison):
Starbucks mocha clocked at 628 calories
Would you like that tall, grande or grosso?
By Lester Haines (http://forms.theregister.co.uk/mail_author/?story_url=/2008/01/24/coffee_survey/) → More by this author (http://search.theregister.co.uk/?author=Lester%20Haines)
Published Thursday 24th January 2008 10:41 GMT
Updated Those among you looking to control your calorie intake would do well to think twice before wrapping your laughing gear round some high street coffees. Consumer group Which? has found that one Starbucks mocha contained no less than 628 calories, or "nearly a third of the recommended daily amount for women and a quarter of that for men".
According to the Times, the diet-busting mocha in question is a large white chocolate with whip. Other hi-cal caffeine-based beverages identified were Caffe Nero's medium-sized mocha with whipped cream "made with semi-skimmed milk" at 326 calories, and Costa Coffee's medium mocha flake made with whole milk and cream at 297 calories.
Which? probed the UK's leading coffee chains and 18 independent cafés in its survey (http://www.which.co.uk/reports_and_campaigns/food_and_drink/reports/taste_tests/drink/Coffee%20shops/Coffee_shops_report_657_129696_3.jsp), and advises those wishing to lay off the calories to choose a skinny cappuccino or latte which "contain skimmed milk and have fewer calories and less fat".
Alternatively, you could always take your coffee black and without sugar, which of course delivers "practically zero calories and fat". ®
Update
Starbucks kindly got in touch this afternoon to offer the company's response to the Which? findings. The email says:
At Starbucks we are committed to serving great tasting coffee and food to provide the Starbucks Experience in our coffeehouses. We believe we offer the highest quality coffee, as we source the top 2% of Arabica beans available.
In October 2007, we converted milk in our handcrafted drinks from whole milk to semi-skimmed milk as standard. Should customers prefer a lower calorie drink, we can customise drinks to use skimmed milk as well as soy as an alternative to milk.
We are committed to offering a variety of food and beverage options to customers based on dietary and lifestyle choices. We offer a range of healthy products such as fresh fruit salads, leaf salads, lower fat 'skinny' muffins whilst also offering an indulgent range of food for those customers looking for a treat. We continually source tasty ingredients and do not add any unnecessary artificial ingredients
Starbucks is committed to making information on our products easily accessible so our customers can make informed choices. Nutritional information for both food and drinks is available online at www.starbucks.co.uk (http://www.starbucks.co.uk/) and on all packaged items as well in the nutritional leaflet in store.
We believe that we offer good value, by providing the highest quality coffee, great food and a relaxing, comfortable environment for customers to meet with friends and relax.
The email concludes by explaining that Starbucks "provides an uplifting experience that enriches people’s lives one moment, one human being, one extraordinary cup of coffee at a time".
Hmmmm. Looks like the Strategy Boutique had overdosed on large white mocha chocolate with whip when it thought that one up.
Blacklight
01-24-08, 04:26 PM
They use real chocolate shavings to make their hot chocolate... (And it's baker's chocolate so it's bitter), but then they also mix it with hot milk and sugar. Fantastic hot chocolate. VERY high calories though. Don't drink them all the time.
I only have a Caramel Macciato once a week. I'm a skinny stick and I intend to stay that way. :88)
I find if I want espresso I just leave the regular coffee on the burner for two hours.:p
You havn't tried the espresso I make. The secret to pulling a propper shot with a little frothy head is to 1. Have a pump action machine (The pressure machines are HORRID). 2. Put a little bit of heavy cream in the bottom of the espresso shot glass, just enough to coat the bottom. 3. Pull the espresso for about 12 secconds into the little espresso shot glass and you're all set with the perfect shot. You can also toss a little bit of Sambuca into it if you like it to have a little kick :D !
I think I only had one cup years ago and never had another. Conclusion, it must have been so bad and left it's mark on me.
Konovalov
01-24-08, 04:30 PM
Starbucks. Tried it twice. Both times did not get coffee, but who-knows-what. "Grauslige Plürre."
Want to have the real taste? Make espresso, in a manual machine, no automatic thing. According to the Italian's national institute for espresso culture (no joke, that thing really exists), an original espresso must have 25-30 ml espresso per cup, brewed with 2.6-3.0 mg Espresso powder per 10 ml finished liquid. Press it tightly until it almost is a tablet, there are special stamps for that. The machine must create steam pressure between 11 and 15 bar, temperature not below 93°C, the ready liquid in your cup must have passed through the powder in 12-15 seconds. You do not want a fully light (=underextracted) and no fully dark (=overextracted) cream, but a spotted cream - then it is done right. Use much sugar, drink while hot.
No coffee comes even close to that. :up: Believe me, my espressos are enjoying legendary reputation over here. :D
But Green Tea (Sencha) or Roibosch Tea isn't bad either. :lol:
A true lover of coffee. :up:
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
Jimbuna
01-24-08, 04:35 PM
Starbucks. Tried it twice. Both times did not get coffee, but who-knows-what. "Grauslige Plürre."
Want to have the real taste? Make espresso, in a manual machine, no automatic thing. According to the Italian's national institute for espresso culture (no joke, that thing really exists), an original espresso must have 25-30 ml espresso per cup, brewed with 2.6-3.0 mg Espresso powder per 10 ml finished liquid. Press it tightly until it almost is a tablet, there are special stamps for that. The machine must create steam pressure between 11 and 15 bar, temperature not below 93°C, the ready liquid in your cup must have passed through the powder in 12-15 seconds. You do not want a fully light (=underextracted) and no fully dark (=overextracted) cream, but a spotted cream - then it is done right. Use much sugar, drink while hot.
No coffee comes even close to that. :up: Believe me, my espressos are enjoying legendary reputation over here. :D
But Green Tea (Sencha) or Roibosch Tea isn't bad either. :lol:
A true lover of coffee. :up:
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
At times, in London.....yes :lol:
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
Just see Konovalov working for Starbucks. :eek:
You can take this fancy rubbish down off the walls and rip that up as well and your all fired for making something that I would not insult my toilet with by flushing it down the pan.
:lol:
Konovalov
01-24-08, 04:44 PM
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
Just see Konovalov working for Starbucks. :eek:
You can take this fancy rubbish down off the walls and rip that up as well and your all fired for making something that I would not insult my toilet with by flushing it down the pan.
:lol:
:lol: :lol: :lol: Feck. I just spilt my £10 quid tall size sweet chai latte all over the desk and parts of the keyboard. Bugger. :oops:
FIREWALL
01-24-08, 04:46 PM
Starbucks. Tried it twice. Both times did not get coffee, but who-knows-what. "Grauslige Plürre."
Want to have the real taste? Make espresso, in a manual machine, no automatic thing. According to the Italian's national institute for espresso culture (no joke, that thing really exists), an original espresso must have 25-30 ml espresso per cup, brewed with 2.6-3.0 mg Espresso powder per 10 ml finished liquid. Press it tightly until it almost is a tablet, there are special stamps for that. The machine must create steam pressure between 11 and 15 bar, temperature not below 93°C, the ready liquid in your cup must have passed through the powder in 12-15 seconds. You do not want a fully light (=underextracted) and no fully dark (=overextracted) cream, but a spotted cream - then it is done right. Use much sugar, drink while hot.
No coffee comes even close to that. :up: Believe me, my espressos are enjoying legendary reputation over here. :D
But Green Tea (Sencha) or Roibosch Tea isn't bad either. :lol:
A true lover of coffee. :up:
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
At times, in London.....yes :lol:
Over 12,000 posts Jim you like your coffee.:rotfl:
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
Just see Konovalov working for Starbucks. :eek:
You can take this fancy rubbish down off the walls and rip that up as well and your all fired for making something that I would not insult my toilet with by flushing it down the pan.
:lol:
:lol: :lol: :lol: Feck. I just spilt my £10 quid tall size sweet chai latte all over the desk and parts of the keyboard. Bugger. :oops:
I can safely say, we're all been there. :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:
Jimbuna
01-24-08, 05:07 PM
Your being a tad naughty again STEED :hmm:
Just got this from a Starbucks company director.....special delivery http://www.satellites.co.uk/satellite/images/smilies/a115[1].gif http://xylo.xy.ohost.de/images/smilies/36_5_8.gif
The Times reported what we all knew, Starbucks sucks. :p :rotfl: :p :rotfl: :p
Jimbuna
01-24-08, 05:32 PM
Starbucks. Tried it twice. Both times did not get coffee, but who-knows-what. "Grauslige Plürre."
Want to have the real taste? Make espresso, in a manual machine, no automatic thing. According to the Italian's national institute for espresso culture (no joke, that thing really exists), an original espresso must have 25-30 ml espresso per cup, brewed with 2.6-3.0 mg Espresso powder per 10 ml finished liquid. Press it tightly until it almost is a tablet, there are special stamps for that. The machine must create steam pressure between 11 and 15 bar, temperature not below 93°C, the ready liquid in your cup must have passed through the powder in 12-15 seconds. You do not want a fully light (=underextracted) and no fully dark (=overextracted) cream, but a spotted cream - then it is done right. Use much sugar, drink while hot.
No coffee comes even close to that. :up: Believe me, my espressos are enjoying legendary reputation over here. :D
But Green Tea (Sencha) or Roibosch Tea isn't bad either. :lol:
A true lover of coffee. :up:
Starbucks is just rubbish. I don't want nice atmosphere and a fancy looking shop with something they call ambiance. I just want bloody good coffee. Is that not too much to ask? :damn:
At times, in London.....yes :lol:
Over 12,000 posts Jim you like your coffee.:rotfl:
Nope, can't usually stand the stuff.....but I love my station desktop and Blackberry whilst out on the streets http://www.psionguild.org/forums/images/smilies/wolfsmilies/wolfcop.gif
;)
darius359au
01-24-08, 05:37 PM
Dont Know about Starbucks in Australia but we do have another chain thats like it called "Gloria Jeans" - if Starbucks is anything like them then I shudder , I bought 1 cup once when their first store opened near me , payed some over inflated price for a cup of I dont know what it was but it wasnt coffee:down:
Ive got my own esspresso machine and coffee that I pay $22au a kilo for:up:
Onkel Neal
01-24-08, 09:46 PM
One thing for sure, as long as Starbucks is prospering, it's a sign that a lot of people have plenty of $$$. $3.75 for coffee is steep.
On the horizon: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22804805/ (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22804805/)
This is my usual cup of coffee:
https://www.dunkindonuts.com/images/global/logo_main.gif
Kapitan_Phillips
01-25-08, 04:42 AM
The quality of Starbucks ( & other 'Coffee Shops) was shown to me the first time I went into one of the stores....
"Hi, I'll have a Black Coffee please"
"Sorry we don't serve plain Coffee"
WTF!!!:damn: :damn: What kind of coffee shop doesn't sell old fashioned plain black coffee.
I don't like artsy fartsy, namby pamby girly 'coffee'.:stare:
That reminds me of that DI from The Thin Blue Line:
"Hoity Toity, Snooty Tooty, Mamby Pamby...Fannying about!"
http://www.phill.co.uk/comedy/tbl/tbl19.jpg
Next time I'm in the town I will pin up the article in my Starbucks when no one is looking. :shifty:
Jimbuna
01-25-08, 10:15 AM
Next time I'm in the town I will pin up the article in my Starbucks when no one is looking. :shifty:
Look out for the craftily hidden securuity cameras.....people have been lifted for less, (if of course the company find it detrimental to their business) ;)
Biggles
01-25-08, 12:07 PM
You know what? Starbucks hasn't arrived to Sweden yet!:o
During my visit in New York earlier this month, I noticed this about the Starbuvks chain:
It's everywhere....until you look for it....then you'll never find it.
Next time I'm in the town I will pin up the article in my Starbucks when no one is looking. :shifty:
Look out for the craftily hidden securuity cameras.....people have been lifted for less, (if of course the company find it detrimental to their business) ;)
Plan B
P*ss in the coffee cup and complain, while there busy kissing my butt whamo up it goes. :D
Zayphod
01-25-08, 03:21 PM
Tell us something new. :lol: :roll:
There coffee sucks and tastes like something from the deepest ocean.
I've always felt that way about their coffee, like it was burned or something like that.
Personally, I never do anything but Dunkin' Donuts coffee. My day just doesn't start without it.
"It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion.
It is by the beans of java that the thoughts aquire speed,
the hands aquire shaking, the shaking become a warning.
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion."
Starbucks gets cheap Colombian coffee, which is about the lousiest coffee in the world. Then it over-roasts it to give it more flavor with the smallest quantity of coffee.
The best coffees come from: Peru, Tanzania, Burundi, Kenya, Ethiopia. My father used to get a sack of coffee from Peru and he would roast it at home. I had to do the grinding. Ah, the results were superb.
Later, my ex inlaws got coffee from what used to be their coffee farm in Tanzania. Hmmmm. Great stuff equaly as good as Peruvian stuff.
At the present, I buy Burundi coffee from Trader Joe's
Tchocky
01-25-08, 06:09 PM
At the present, I buy Burundi coffee from Trader Joe's
Oh how I miss Trader Joe's :)
silentrunner
01-27-08, 01:44 AM
I don't go to Starbucks that often. I seldom drink coffe. I'll take an steaming hot Earl Grey over it anyday. I tried Starbucks black tea once:down::nope:. I'll just brew my own tea at my house.
mrbeast
01-27-08, 06:47 AM
Tea drinker here too. :yep:
Jimbuna
01-27-08, 08:07 AM
I likes me rum :lol:
http://www.abfnet.com/forum/images/smilies/pirate_with_bottle_of_rum_lg_blk.gif
Penelope_Grey
01-27-08, 08:23 AM
More of an apple juice person
Kapitan_Phillips
01-27-08, 08:29 AM
More of an apple juice person
Awwwwww :lol:
I myself cant stand coffee. Especially not the snobby "double latte whipped cream shiz on a stick random french words" that comes in a tiny little cup that couldnt hydrate a newt
I like real coffee. No fancy stuff, just a coffee or espresso and usually black though the odd "café au lait" or "café renversé" in Geneva (don't ask me why) in winter is a nice change.
I do like on occasion the thick, powerful Ottoman Empire coffee (I mean Turkish, or Greek, or Lebanese) but that stuff is to be used with caution.
Never drink coffee after 5 o'clock or so unless I am planning a late night. Lately I have been drinking a lot of tea. Either green loose tea from China (Gunpowder brand) or the standard Earl Grey, Ceylon etc. Partly because the machine at work is kind of crappy though it is free.
SUBMAN1
01-27-08, 11:28 AM
I'm a tea drinker as well. I like harder to find tea's (imagine that!), but stick mainly with Black or Black Chai, and Green Tea. I like organic high quality Matcha too, but that runs about $400 a lb., so I don't drink it as much.
-S
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