Wolfgang Puck Joining the K-cup Club

Wolfgang Puck Coffee is jumping on the k-cup bandwagon. In an agreement with Canadian coffee roaster Van Houtte Inc., who is already a manufacturer of their own line of k-cup coffee, Van Houtte will be the exclusive manufacturer of Wolfgang Puck K-Cups. The plan is to produce 12 coffee blends in k-cups for the Keurig Single Cup Coffee brewer.

The Keurig Single Cup Coffee brewer uses a precisely packed K-cup to brew coffee. The K-cup is a small sealed cup that contains a coffee filter and fresh ground coffee. Coffee is brewed by puncturing the k-cup and forcing hot pressurized water through the vessel to extract the coffee.

The Keurig k-cup technology is owned by Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, who grants licenses to other roasters to manufacture k-cups. Among the brands are Timothy’s World Coffee, Caribou Coffee, Diedrich, Gloria Jean’s, Tully’s, Coffee People, Green Mountain Coffee

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Folgers Coffee Brands to be available in K-Cups

Keurig k-cup

Green Mountain Coffee announced today that they have reached an agreement with Smucker the owner of the Folgers and Millstone Coffee brands to manufacture these coffee brands in the k-cup for use in the popular Keurig Single Cup Coffee Brewer. Under the agreement Smucker will provide the roasted coffee and Green Mountain will manufacture and package the product into k-cups. Smucker will market these products through grocery store, wholesale club, and drug store chains and Keurig will sell them on their own retail website.

Green Mountain Coffee owns the Keurig K-Cup brand and grants licenses for others to produce them. Among the licensees are Timothy’s World Coffee, Diedrich, Gloria Jean’s, Caribou Coffee, Tully’s, and Van Houtte.

The Keurig Single Cup Coffee System has grown rapidly in popularity in both the home consumer and office coffee markets due to the simplicity of use and the choice of hundreds of varieties of coffee, tea and cocoa.

Look for the new k-cups to be available sometime this Fall.

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A brief history of coffee

Over 1,000 years ago, an Ethiopian tribe began using coffee beans mixed with animal fat to make energy boosting snacks. Soon after, Arab traders began to export these small, red Ethiopian beans back to their homelands. The drink was soon boiled, creating a bitter beverage which it was said could “prevent sleepiness.”

By the 15th century, coffee began to be viewed as a necessity. Turkish law stated that a woman could divorce her husband for the sole reason that he did not provide her with enough coffee. A corrupt government official attempted to ban coffee in order to assert his power, and was later killed for the act. People all over the known world were becoming coffee crazy.

By the 1600’s, coffee reached Italy, where it became a smashing success. Over the next 50 years, coffee grew in popularity among Western nations, spreading to England, America and France.

Coffee became the unofficial drink of America in 1773, following the Boston Tea Party and the patriotic duty to avoid imported tea (the only kind available in the colonies at the time). One hundred years later, Maxwell House becomes the first available commercial blend of coffee.

At the turn of the last century, instant coffee became available and made coffee a drink for not only those sitting in coffee houses, but for those eating breakfast at home, working late at night or anywhere else hot water was available. When the prohibition went into effect in 1920, coffee sales hit a historic peak. It was a drink everyone could enjoy, even when most other enjoyable drinks were off the market.

In 1971, Starbucks opened their first store in Seattle. Coffee had become an American tradition. As technology changed and consumers were looking for a more richly blended alternative to instant coffee powders, single serving coffee emerged as a new innovation.

Today, single serving coffee, such as the Keurig K-Cup Brewer, is increasingly becoming the choice coffee brewing system for home and office. It makes freshly brewed coffee available with just the push of a button.

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Tassimo puts the cap in Cappuccino

The Tassimo single cup hot beverage machine not only makes a great cup of coffee but also can brew up an authentic Cappuccino, Latte, Hot Chocolate, or Espresso. The brewer’s “Smart Technology” includes the ability to know what product you are brewing and how to do it best. This is accomplished by the bar-coded lids on the top of each product or “T Disc“. The Tassimo’s built in scanner reads the coded T Disc and sets the brew temperature, time, and amount of water for the best quality drink. Now, in the case of a Cappuccino or Latte you will use two T Discs. One contains the coffee and the other liquid milk which will give you the frothy top. The Tassimo can even give you a little extra in the morning when you need it most with Gevalia’s Morning Roast Coffee, you get a larger cup (12 ounces) of fresh brewed coffee.

bosch-tassimo

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Single Serve A Top Method to Avoid Coffee Fights at the Office

The Boston Globe’s October 5 “Monday Question” revealed that a single-serve coffee maker and coffee pods or K-cups is becoming a popular choice for keeping office politics at cool levels – at least where coffee is concerned.

The Monday Question was posed as follows:

Does your office provide coffee at no cost to the employees? What form does your office coffee maker take (e.g. a pod machine, a vending machine, a pot that someone is responsible for making)? How important do you consider the availability of coffee to be in your workplace?

By close of business Monday October 5, there were 77 responses to the question. Of those responses, 30 said they used some type of single serve coffee system – coffee pods or k-cups. The second most popular answer? No free coffee at all, due to budget cuts.

Based on many of the comments, those offices who utilize traditional “pot of coffee” systems have a harder time keeping all of their employees happy, with many employees choosing to leave the office to buy coffee elsewhere. Other offices utilize a coffee delivery service or simply provide a “pay for your own” cafeteria.

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