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Great Organic Coffee Recipes

Did you know that organic coffee is good for more than just drinking? There are plenty of excellent recipes you can use it in, from drinks to dinners to desserts, that you may not be aware of. Organic coffee tastes great and is healthier for you too, making it the ideal choice when you want to cook with coffee. Let’s take a look at some of your options for using it.

Coffee lends an interesting, aromatic note to lots of different foods including some you wouldn’t associate with coffee at all. There are excellent recipes out there for using coffee in main dishes, sides, and all kinds of other foods. Savory dishes made with a judicious use of the brew will have a robust depth of flavor, a little acidity, and some delicious roasted undertones, all without tasting like a cup of joe. Desserts are more likely to promote the flavor of the coffee itself.

Use powerfully flavored foods when cooking with organic coffee, like game, pork, lamb and beef, as well as dark meat poultry like chicken thighs and duck. Tomato sauces perk up beautifully with coffee, and sweet spices do well with it, from ginger and anise to nutmeg, cloves and cinnamon. Fruits, like pears, oranges and apricots, are excellent companions to coffee cooking, and we all know that nuts are great with it. The plethora of hazelnut flavored coffees on the market tells us that much. Try pumpkin seeds, almonds and sesame, as well.

Flours to use in organic coffee recipes are among the most robust, such as buckwheat and whole wheat or rye. If you decide to use mushrooms, they should be meaty and strong like portabella and shitake, not delicate. Try sweet potatoes and Asian sauces like hoisin along with this type of cooking, too. The usual method is just to brew up a very strong cup, and use it in place of some of the liquid ingredients in one of your usual recipes. Coffee pot roast is nothing short of amazing. You can even use the ground organic coffee beans as part of a spice rub. Espresso is a popular choice in baked goods, offering a lot of flavor for a little liquid.

So just remember – use strong organic coffee with red meat and milder brews for fruit and poultry. Pick organic coffees that’ll go well with your other ingredients – not all of them are the same, after all. Check out online recipe sites or specialty cookbooks for specific organic coffee recipes while you’re getting started, then branch out into creating your own. A little experimentation can convert a regular recipe into a great organic coffee dish!

Coffee Braised Lamb

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How Is Organic Coffee Decaffeinated?

Decaffeination is the process of taking caffeine out of coffee, for those times when you want that coffee flavor, but don’t want the jitters that come with it. There are a lot of processes that have been used, but most conventional decaffeination processes involve the use of a chemical solvent. These can cause health problems, due to residues left in the bean.

The Roselius process, an old fashioned method using benzene, is no longer in use, but chemicals such as methylene chloride and ethyl acetate, triglycerides, and other unpleasant substances are still being used for decaffeinating conventional coffee. These are the subject of health concerns, and are not permitted for removing the caffeine from organic coffee. For decaffeinating organic coffee, one of two methods is generally used.

The Swiss Water Process was developed in the 1930s in Switzerland, but the only facility currently processing coffee this way is actually based near Vancouver, in Canada. The Swiss Water Process involves soaking beans in hot water, releasing caffeine. The beans are then discarded (after all coffee solids and caffeine have been released into the water) and the liquid is passed through a carbon filter. The caffeine is trapped, but coffee solids are passed through.

The resulting solution is called flavor charged water by the company, and is filtered again. Then, new coffee beans are added. This water can’t accept any more coffee solids, being completely saturated with them, but it can accept caffeine, so only the caffeine is removed from these beans. The process is repeated until the beans are almost entirely caffeine free. They retain most of their smell and flavor, and have no solvent residue, since no solvents are used.

Another process uses carbon dioxide. Called supercritical fluid extraction, it involves steaming the beans, then soaking them in supercritical carbon dioxide at high pressure. After the beans are soaked, the pressure is reduced and the CO2 evaporates, taking the caffeine with it. The pressurized CO2 may also be run through a charcoal or water filter to remove the caffeine. This liquid is somewhat more effective than water, requiring fewer filtrations, and also avoids the use of solvents, resulting in a safe, nearly caffeine free bean.

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