I live fairly close to the Starbucks Reserve Roastery and Tasting Room. I drop by often. One thing I enjoy seeing is the burlap sacks which hold the green coffee, and watching it get loaded into the green coffee loading pit. Each time I drop by, I stop and look at what’s stacked up at the green coffee loading pit, and often I’ll take a photo of the burlap coffee sacks.
Over the roughly year and a half that the Roastery has been open, I’ve noticed that it’s become increasingly common for the burlap sacks to arrive at the Roastery with a Star/R (the Starbucks Reserve trademark) stenciled onto them.
A couple of times, I’ve asked about this. How does this happen? Does Starbucks put the Star/ R on the bag of green coffee? Does the farmer do it? Each time, I’ve gotten almost identical answers: Starbucks doesn’t mark up the burlap sack. Starbucks doesn’t tell the coffee farmer what should be stenciled onto the burlap sack.
The coffee farmers are putting the Star /R on the sacks. And a couple of partners commented to me that they too noticed that it’s becoming increasingly common and all the partners came to the same conclusion: It’s farmers having pride in the Reserve brand.
This morning, I was struck by this Star / R on a bag of Ethiopia Gedeb green coffee:
Somehow, it doesn’t even look like a perfect Star /R. It looks like the work of the coffee farm or cooperative.
This is an interesting phenomena: Coffee farmers, on their own initiative, are starting to stencil a Star/R on coffee sacks, knowing that their coffee is earmarked as a premium coffee, worthy of the Starbucks Reserve logo. There’s something awesome about that.
Here it is again:
And another example:
And this Brazil Peaberry Samambia is another example:
Now you know!
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I didn’t know that! That Samambaia bag is so beautiful, let me just give an arm and leg away for one. 😛
The bags are awesome. Wish we were able to collect the bags. Side note though it is superhot in southern cal …. I had my first pumpkin spice frappe today. Makes the hot day so much better.
I’d really like one of those bags too. 🙁 Especially the Brazil or Ethiopia!
I have never been to the Roastery so I thought I should ask here. Can you go there and have them pull ristretto shots using Reserve beans? I know regular Starbucks stores cannot because they use the automatic machines but from earlier articles here, it looks like the Roastery as well as Pike Place have the conventional, fully manual espresso machines. So, Melody should be able to walk in after work and order, say, a flat white brewed using St. Helena beans.