Starbucks to stop using bug extract to color frappuccinos, cakes

free web site traffic and promotion
starbucks

Starbucks to stop using bug extract to color frappuccinos, cakes

Starbucks, The world’s largest coffee-shop chain plans to stop using an extract made of dried insects to color some Frappuccinos and pastries after an online campaign asked for the ingredient to be removed.

Starbucks Corp. said Thursday that, by June, it will phase out use of a red dye derived from cochineal insects, a tropical bug found in Mexico and South America. The colorant will be replaced with lycopene, a tomato extract, said the Seattle-based company.

More than 6,500 people had signed a Charge.org petition asking Starbucks to stop using the insects because it isn’t vegan or kosher, and because consumers “don’t want crushed bugs in their designer drinks.” The petition was started by a South Carolina woman who wanted to inform consumers that the chain’s strawberry drinks weren’t suitable for vegans.

The extract had been used in the company’s Strawberries Creme Frappuccino, strawberry banana smoothie, raspberry swirl cake, birthday cake pop, mini doughnut with pink icing and red velvet whoopee pie, according to the statement from the company.

Cochineal dye is widely used in foods and cosmetics products such as lipstick, yogurt and shampoo.

“We’ve learned that we fell short of your expectations by using natural cochineal extract as a colorant,” said Cliff Burrows, Starbucks president for the United States and the Americas.

— From news service reports


If you require a high quality printout of this article, just click on the printer symbol next to ’Share and enjoy’, and we will do the rest.

Get the best website builder available anywhere –SBI! Lick here for more information


starbucks

Return from starbucks to Home Page


If you want to increase your site popularity and gain thousands of visitors – check out these sites THEY ARE FREE. Spanishchef more than doubled its ‘New Visitors’ last month simply by signing up to these sites:
facebook likes google exchange
Ex4Me
Likerr.eu
GetLikeHits.com
Ex4Me


Follow spanishchef.net on TWITTER

Coffee versus Calories

coffee

Coffee versus Calories

The Coffee Board should have the freedom promote its own South Indian coffee varieties, which would be healthier and tastier than the calorific coffee drinks available today. Most people who drink the daily home-made cuppa go lyrical about its callisthenic effect on the mind and on stimulating the nerves with the concurrent benefit of recharging the energy level to a new high.

Connoisseurs of filter coffee in South India and those non-resident South Indians who have settled in their land of opportunities abroad would not at all be overly enthralled by the entry into India of the US-based Starbucks, the maker of variegated liquid beverage. The Seattle-based Starbucks Coffee Company has formed a joint venture with Tata Global Beverages (TGB), the partner of Tata Coffee, to dish out its bewildering variety of brews by proposing to open as many as 50 stores across the country with an initial investment of $80 million. It is only just a year ago that Starbucks forged an alliance with Tata Coffee Ltd to source and roast Arabica beans in India. Even as the Government has notified 100 per cent foreign direct investment (FDI) in single-brand retail, Starbucks, a retail giant with a colossal brand identity, is averse to testing the waters of India single-handedly but instead opted to ally with TGB which has a medley of expertise and experience gained over decades.

The Coffee Board, engaged in the task of regulating coffee production and exports, had a monopoly procurement of the beans but this was dismantled in the mid-1990s, enabling the private industry to establish itself in the beans business with Tata Coffee emerging as a big player. In fact, the Coffee Board which boasts of having scores of distribution and sales outlets pan-India is now relying increasingly on supply from private industry with the Department of Commerce weaning the Board imperceptibly but resolutely from its apron-strings in tune with market dynamics.

While announcing the JV formation in India, President of the Starbucks China and Asia Pacific region, Mr. John Culver said that the company is keen “to sell our products in multiple channels such as hotels, restaurants, colleges and universities”. At a time when the country’s demographic dividend is a morale-booster to any overseas beverage makers to batten on, Starbucks’ focus on youth is understandable. The café market in the country is reckoned at $170 million in 2010-11 which is likely to set a scorching pace at a compound annual growth rate of about 30 per cent over the next five years. Already, big players like Café Coffee Day (CCD), Barista (Lavazza), Costa Coffee and Italian coffee chain Testa Rossa have gained solid foothold in recent years in North which seldom saw coffee consumption in any distinct manner as is seen today.

Plain vanilla coffee that is being made using a conventional filter in most of the houses sans any adornment or the retinue of cream, a pump of flavoured syrup and some sugar are not bad for drinkers. In fact, most of the people who drink daily such a refreshing home-made cuppa could go lyrical about its callisthenic effect on the mind and on stimulating the nerves with the concurrent benefit of recharging the energy level to a new high. But one need not be a nutritionist to contend the most calorific drinks on offer by these cafes are the ones blended with sugary flavourings and crowned with whipped cream. Interestingly, Starbucks heralded 2012 in its own home turfs with the tidings that it would provide calorie information with their drinks so that customers can ‘make an informed decision at the counter’!

Starbucks maintained that 15 drinks from its repertoire fall under 150 calories—the equivalent of one average hot dog, even as it pigeonholed to name some of its less streamlined servings, headed by Praline Mocha with whipped cream. While even a large latte made with skimmed milk would not exceed 200 calories—around the same as a bowl of plain porridge–, the problem starts once the gullible consumers exercise their preferences for Praline Mocha with whipped cream or other servings lavishly which would add 2220 calories on those drinking an average of four cups a day! It is small wonder that that New York passed a law in 2009 compelling all chain cafes with 15 or more outlets to print the calorie count of each of their individual offerings in a font equal or larger in size to the name of the item, with a costly $2000 penalty for any contravention of this proviso.

How salutary such a legal provision in preventing people from wallowing in their coffee with all its supernumerary servings is still being debated in the US. But in India the consumer law provisions being measly and patchy, the situation may turn out to be unwholesome for millions of youth getting mired in café culture before long! It is time that the Indian authorities gave full freedom to Coffee Board to promote its own 16 South Indian coffee varieties(three of which are speciality coffee) carried forward from ages by the small, medium and large plantations within the country. Since coffee from coffee chains is invariably unhealthy than the one being made at home or being sold by the Coffee Board outlets with just milk and sugar simple offerings that it adds to caffeine, a bitter chemical.

Coffee Board can set up vending machines in malls/metro stations/universities/cinema halls to promote India-brand Arabica roasted and grounded fresh to serve the palates of those who seek simple coffee flavour and not the dressed-up beverage that would be lethal just as junk food in the long haul if you get addicted. This way the price per cuppa could come down drastically with the drinkers’ thirst getting slaked in tow!

Unfortunately, India’s per capita consumption is barely 90 grams as compared to 4.8 kgs in Brazil and 6 kgs in the United States, even as domestic consumption has been galloping annually with more than half coming from the non-traditional coffee-quaffing regions. Already, retail coffee outlets such as Barista and CCD have caught the fancy of the youth in the North, making other overseas retail café chains to enter the fray. It is time the authorities in India saw the writing on the wall to help promote the weal of Indians by making them aware of the risks in huge servings on coffee in preference to the simple serving that Indian coffee is traditionally known in general and south of Vindhyas in particular.

([email protected])

Coffee with Bill & Sheila
_____________________________________________________________________
If you require a high quality printout of this article, just click on the printer symbol next to ’Share and enjoy’, and we will do the rest. This site is hosted by (click on the graphic for more information)coffee

Return from coffee to Home Page


If you want to increase your site popularity and gain thousands of visitors – check out these sites THEY ARE FREE. Spanishchef more than doubled its ‘New Visitors’ last month simply by signing up to these sites:
facebook likes google exchange
Ex4Me
Earn Coins Google +1
Ex4Me
Follow spanishchef.net on TWITTER

Starbucks unveils blonde roast coffee

coffee

Starbucks unveils blonde roast coffee

Starbucks unveils lighter roast coffee to appeal to more drinkers

The coffee company known for its dark-roasted beans unveiled its lighter blend “Starbucks Blonde Roast” Tuesday, as it tries to reach a wider base of consumers.
Starbucks has long faced criticism from people who think its coffee is too dark or bitter. The company said it developed the new roast for the large number of U.S. consumers who prefer a lighter-tasting coffee.

“We recognized the unmet consumer need for a super-premium light roast coffee, and our coffee developers went to work to craft a great-tasting, quality lighter roast coffee we are proud to stand behind,” Cliff Burrows, president of the Americas for Starbucks said in a statement. “This is a significant opportunity for Starbucks to gain a greater share of the brewed coffee market — both in our stores and down the coffee aisle.”

The company, citing Nielsen research, said that more than 40 percent of U.S. coffee drinkers prefer a lighter-roast coffee. The new product represents a major market opportunity for Starbucks too, as more than 70 percent of total premium coffee sales in grocery stores are of light and medium roast coffee.

Consumers who don’t favor the company’s dark tastes have mockingly called the company “Charbucks” for its darker taste profile, like Joe Cook, an evangelical pastor in Tulsa, Okla.

“I like their concept but I’m not a fan of their coffee product,” Cook said. “I like my coffee to be robust…but that acidic bitterness that is directly connected to their over-roasting of the beans in my opinion.”

Kristen Clough, of Rochester, N.Y., says Starbucks coffee is “undrinkable” and that none of her family likes it. She found Starbucks iced coffee sometimes tasted okay, but the last two times she has had it, it was too bitter.

“I’m over Starbucks,” she said. “I’m certainly not going to spend $2.54 on a medium iced coffee that goes down the drain.”

Starbucks was established with a dedication to bold coffee and stood by its dark-roasted roots for some time. But the company has been adapting more to consumer’s desires as it faced increased competition from McDonald’s and Dunkin’ Donuts, which offer milder and lower-priced options. The company added a lighter Pike Place blend in its stores in 2008 as one of its daily brews and emphasizes its low everyday price.

The company said it went through 80 different roasting recipes before finding its blonde roast. Starbucks will begin selling and brewing the new roast in stores in January.

It will be sold under the “Verana Blend” or “Willow Blend” names for $11.95 or $12.95 respectively for a bag of whole bean coffee, comparable with its other products.

Starbucks also said Tuesday that it will try to help consumers differentiate between the various roasts in stores, organizing its coffee in stores by three rankings: blonde, medium and dark.

The company took a similar approach with its Seattle’s Best Coffee brand last year, offering that coffee in a range of categories ranked from one to five based on intensity of flavor. The coffee comes in brightly colored bags with the ranking prominently displayed to help draw customers who might be overwhelmed by the array of choices that now fill the coffee aisle.

Starbucks said the average consumer spends about 60 seconds in the coffee aisle to make a purchasing decision, based on taste and intensity. And it’s part of the company’s heavier push into grocery stores and retailers to capture more of the at-home coffee drinking market.

Starbucks is the world’s largest coffee company, with roughly 17,000 stores worldwide and products in retailers across the country.
Starbucks shares rose $1.29, or 3.1 percent, to close at $42.45 amid a broader market rally.

This site is hosted by (click on the graphic for more information)coffee

Return from coffee to Home Page



Coffee with Bill & Sheila