Thursday, 14 April 2016

LOVE IS SWEET

So you've got the coffee bar down. You've choosen the look, branded the sugar and sleeved up the cups, but you still feel there is just something missing in making your bar the most epic wedding coffee bar in the history of coffee bars. This probably means you haven't yet added coffee syrups to your list of must-haves. Imagine on your wedding day how impressed your guests will be when they can select a delicious syrupy flavour to add to their coffee. Mmmmm yum!


I'm a huge fan of sneaking a little vanilla syrup into my coffee when I am in the mood and a wedding is the perfect time to slip a bit of extravagance into your normal cup of joe. Your guests will have such a ball trying to decide which flavour shot to add or maybe even going crazy and mixing it up. Here in South Africa, Yuppie Chef stocks a range of syrups.https://www.yuppiechef.com/ab-products.htm?id=8325&name=AB-Products-Hazelnut-Syrup-240ml&ref=search, which really makes it easy to have syrup at your coffee bar. Thanks Yuppiechef!



But you don't necessarily have to get your syrup from a supplier. You can actually make it yourself. This will not only save on costs, but having your personal touch will also make the syrups that much more special. To help you out, Jessica Merchant has a couple of great syrup flavour recipes on her blog, so just take a look and get syruping: http://www.howsweeteats.com/2014/07/four-homemade-coffee-syrups-and-my-favorite-cold-brew/


Once you've made or purchased your syrup you may want to consider how to display it. Perhaps you are happy with the bought version just as is (they do have a good squirt system), but you may want add your own personalised label. If you feel the need to decant or if you have made your own syrup there are a number of containers you may want to consider. Certainly one of the more ingenius ways is to pop a drinks pourer on a sauce bottle. It looks really professional and is such a simple easy way to achieve an effective pouring device for your syrups.


It might suit you more to go for an old school syrup bottle that you can pour the syrup from. If you are going for a vintage theme then this will tie in beautifully.


Another clever idea is to make use of olive oil and vinegar bottles. Either pick up some inexpensive ones so they all match or just borrow from friends so you have a variety. They come in so many forms you'll really have a wide array to choose from. I love the idea of using frames to declare the different flavours and what's especially great about this is you can choose frames to go in with your look. However placing tags or stickers on the bottles can be just as effective and unique.






You may not be satisfied with just having the syrups at your wedding for your guests to use. You may want to take it one step further and let your guests take home a little bit of sugary delight with them. A small bottle of syrup makes the ideal gift and you can really dress them up beautifully. These lavendar themed ones are just done magnificently.


So there you have it, syrup is really the cherry on the top of any coffee bar. It just adds that extra magic that takes it from awesome to spectacular. 





Wednesday, 23 March 2016

BALIMOON


It's been well over a month since I was able to last blog and the main reason for this is I had the wonderful pleasure of going off on honeymoon. My husband and I set off for Bali in Indonesia. As we all know, Indonesia is one of the coffee capitals of the world, most famous for their production of the rare Kopi Luwak coffee, the most expensive and supposedly best coffee in existence. For those of you who are unfamiliar with this coffee, there is an animal in Indonesia called a Luwak. This animal is a civet, which is somewhere between a mongoose and a small cat, but if you ask me they are just gosh darn cute. This civet actually eats the berries from the coffee bushes, but they don't digest the beans, so these are then released in their faeces. The droppings are then collected, cleaned to leave only the bean and then roasted. Apparently this process produces a smoother less bitter coffee. Unfortunately there is a dark side to this coffee trade, which I will elaborate on later in this blog.

 

Having all these thoughts of a country renowned for their coffee I wouldn't hear of it when my husband suggested we take some coffee with us to make in our portable Bodum plunger (yes we are coffee fanatics). What craziness to take coffee back to the place it comes from. I unfortunately was not entirely accurate in my assumption.

When we arrived in Bali we stayed one night in a hotel in Kuta, close to the airport. We were due to leave the very next day for the small Gili islands off the coast of Bali. After 18 hours of flying, no sleep and a full day later we were somewhat dazed as we stumbled out into the humid air and chaos of the Kuta streets. There were several small supermarkets along our hotel's road and we popped into one hoping to gather the few supplies we thought we would need; water, gum and most importantly coffee. To my great dismay stacked on the shelves were not row upon row of delicious Indonesian, rich coffee beans, but instead rather cheap and nasty instant coffee. I couldn't believe it, not a proper filter coffee anywhere. Of course my husband revelled in this fact having had to deal with my snarky comments about taking coffee to the country that makes the best in the world. And so the next morning we set off to Gili Meno, coffee-less.




Even though I knew Gili Meno was a small island I was still hopeful that perhaps we would find proper coffee, a hidden gem in a remote place. But this was definitely more than wishful thinking. The first place we stayed was a private villa on the beach. We were looked after by a Balinese family that stayed on the property and would prepare us breakfast and clean. My first taste of coffee in Bali was certainly not a pleasant experience. The darling chap had prepared us some indistinguishable brew. It was thick and almost sweet, with a flat flavour that had none of the notes that I am used to when tasting coffee. If someone had just given it to me randomly and not told me it was coffee, I don't believe that would have been my first guess. We were rained out, in the way only a tropical storm can do, for the first two days and having a nice cup of coffee while we were stuck in doors would have been divine, but I was avoiding the wretched Bali brew as much as I could. On our third day on the island we moved to a gorgeous hotel. It was amazing, and after a divine, romantic dinner on the beach, the next morning sitting at breakfast I was certain I would be served a quality cup of coffee. But alas it was not to be. Almost certainly the coffee was instant, it had a strange artificial taste. And so my quest to drink an excellent cup of coffee in Indonesia continued.


On our return to the main island of Bali, after a slight mix up with our accommodation, we found ourselves in a 2 bedroom villa with 10m swimming pool right in the heart of Seminyak. After a stroll down our quiet road we found a quaint Italian coffee shop and to my great relief after having been deprived of good coffee for 5 days I was delighted to see an espresso machine and the promise of Illy coffee. It was good to once again taste what my taste buds recognised as coffee, but unfortunately for me this coffee experience also didn't end well as I landed up getting sick from it. This put me off trying anything coffee related for a few days and when I finally mustered up the courage to have coffee again I really wish I hadn't. The coffee we received at this villa was accurately described by my husband as mud! The taste is so unpleasant I'm really not sure how the Balinese drink the stuff.  



Being thoroughly unimpressed by the coffee we had so far sampled in Bali we made a mission to an extravagantly expensive super market down the road from our hotel. And there sitting on the shelf, costing double what we pay at home, was beautifully packaged Indonesian coffee. Of course at this point we were fairly desperate for decent coffee so we simply closed our eyes, ignored our budget and purchased the expensive grind. I'm so glad we did, because my faith in Indonesian coffee was restored. This coffee was excellent, it had a wonderful rich flavour, without any bitterness. Finally we had found great coffee in Bali!

On our way to Ubud, which was our next location on our journey, we stopped off at a coffee plantation. In part we were still holding onto hope of some good Balinese coffee and in part we just had time to kill before we were able to book into our next accommodation. I did however thoroughly enjoy our visit there, it was an interesting experience where I saw both coffee trees and cocoa trees for the first time in the flesh. We were taken around the plantation, which was actually more an education centre and home of the owner of the coffee plantation, by a sweet natured, knowledgeable girl. She informed us that the actual plantation was somewhere up in the mountains. We were shown the process of what the coffee beans look like all wrapped in the civet's excrement (they look like chocolate logs) and the way they traditionally roast coffee. We saw the civets in their cages and although these ones were only two in a large cage I knew this was really just them on display and the ones kept for commercial use were not given such 'luxury'. Originally when we were planning our itinerary I had been unsure of whether I wished to go to a plantation having heard of the cruelty inflicted on the civets. I changed my mind only from an educational perspective. These civets were definitely not in the horrendous conditions I had heard of, but they were in cages and for a wild animal that is bad enough. I also noticed some had become scraggy and lost their hair which we were told was from old age, but actually this is a direct result of being force fed copious amounts of coffee. There was actually a menagerie of animals besides the civet, multiple birds, monkeys and other small mammals and we were informed the owner loves animals, which to me is counter-intuitive, because if you really love animals you wouldn't subject wild ones to cages. 

After our tour around the facility we were able to taste some of their products. Their tea variety was delicious and we were also able to taste pure cocoa in water which was so chocolatey without any of the sweetness we are used to. They had some instant coffee as well that comes already packed with powdered milk and sugar. That basically just tasted like sugary, artificial milk and was therefore not very appealing to us. The black coffee we tried was okay, but it has quite a smoky flavour because of the traditional way they roast, so it's certainly not the type of coffee I'd find myself drinking daily. You have to pay extra to try the Kopi Luwak coffee. I wasn't interested as I had already heard that the ways in which they use the animals to produce the coffee is incredibly cruel. If you are interested to find out more about Kopi Luwak please read this article:


Once we were done with our tasting we bought a few small samples to take back home, some flower tea and Bali coffee (not Kopi Luwak). We wanted to be able to share the taste of Bali coffee with those back home.


Once we had returned home, we were able to convince our family to brew some of the coffee we had returned with. Soon the familiar smell of mud coffee brewing filled my nostrils and I felt slightly ill. Whilst in Bali I had started to become use to the smell and taste of their coffee, but upon returning home I realised how much I distinctly disliked it. We all sat drinking our coffee, my parents trying to be polite and not say that they weren't enjoying the brew. Eventually I couldn't handle drinking anymore and my parents were released from the hold that good manners had on them. We all decided that the coffee was definitely not to our taste and my mom remarked how it reminded her of how the old people used to drink it on the "plaas", which made sense seeming they would have brewed it in a similar manner. Needless to say the coffee we brought back with us has since remained untouched and I think it unlikely that we'll ever give it another chance. Had it not been for that one small packet of Indonesian coffee we found I would have written Indonesian coffee off as awful. Bali coffee is however never going to rate highly for me. Of course the moral of the story here is to never to leave home without your favourite grind. Just for in case...









Tuesday, 2 February 2016

MUGS N CUPS N HANGING UPS

If you love vintage, Alice in Wonderland or just being quirky, then you'll love this blog about making use of teacups and mugs as wedding decor. There are a surprisingly large amount of ideas for these everyday somewhat mundane drinking utensils. You can hang them, stack them, fill them or change them, but most importantly just enjoy them.


By far the activity that allows you the largest scope when using the mugs and teacups as decor is to hang them. There are simply so many places and opportunities to do this. If you are getting married under a gazebo or lapa, you might want to consider hanging mugs, either in strings or at different heights, behind your officient framing you and your partner. Just be careful if the wind blows, you don't want a swinging rogue teacup to knock out the priest.



You might also want to be really unique and have cups tied with ribbons onto the aisle chairs or shepards hooks. You could even consider filling these with rose petals that can then act as your confetti, but filling them with flowers also looks stunning. 


Hanging mugs can really make a striking backdrop for your dance floor, your main table or your food table if you are having a buffet or candy setup. Of course they will also look ideal hanging behind a coffee station. Use ribbon to accentuate the design or nylon to create the illusion of floating cups. You can add strings of fairy lights to enhance the effect especially once the sun has set. I also love the idea of a shelving structure packed full of cups. This will also look amazing as a backdrop.



You can also hang the cups above your guest tables. This will look especially glamorous if you combine the hanging cups with naked bulbs and foliage. It will certainly create a feel of Alice in Wonderland, if Wonderland was an enchanted forest;)



The truth is you can find all kinds of places to hang cups. Trees are always a big one, but really if there are any blank spaces at your wedding venue then make the space more cheerful with some decorative cups.


Apart from hanging cups, they can also form part of your table decor. Mix them up with different vases of varying heights. Place a single flower in them or create small arrangements. You could even stack them to create more height and variation. If you are looking to be very quirky and different you could place them on top of high candlesticks.




Another cute idea is to combine using them as decor and also as table name settings.


Dainty teacups lend themselves well to vintage style weddings. Often paired beautifully with strings of pearls, they look their best rested delicately on a stack of books. There's no need to reserve these only as table decorations. They can work equally as successfully on a shelf, highlighted on a plinth as part of a decor ensemble that includes trunks or wooden palette crates or sitting peacefully next to an old type writer or vinyl player. 


Teacups can also transform fairly easily into candles. Use them on your tables in amongst your flower arrangements or you can even use them as wedding favors for your guests to take home.


The humble cup such a simple piece of crockery such a wishing well of inspriation.








Tuesday, 26 January 2016

COASTER THROUGH YOUR WEDDING

Giving your guests wedding favors that combine practicality and beauty is really the most logical way to gift. You don't want to spend money on a  gift for your guests that they are simply going to toss in the bin as soon as they get home. Coffee offers up a multitude of different gifts that guests can really use. One of these options is coasters. Everyone needs coasters to protect valuable surfaces from hot drinks and on top of this coasters can be made in so many different materials that you are sure to find some style that works well with your wedding theme. Of course you are also able to print on all these materials which means your wedding favors can be personalised, which is always a lovely touch.

To start us off one of my personal favorite styles for nearly everything is the chalk board look. You can either have a romantic design printed on the coasters that gives the feel of a chalk board or you can actually have the coasters made with a chalk board surface so that your guests can decorate their coasters themselves. I love this idea as it gives your guests something to do, especially if you also provide them with some chalk. It is really quite a fun activity and an expression of creativity and not forgetting you can wipe it down and start all over again.



The glass coaster can look really stylish when printed on. I love this clever idea of printing the two different designs, especially once they are packaged on top of each other; it creates a stunning effect. Simplicity of design also works well however and a simple monogram or your initials can look equally as effective.



Cork coasters are probably going to be your most cost effective option. They can also easily find their place in a more hipster wedding as well as a slightly more tradtional, elegant wedding, just depending on the design you decide to print on them. I also love the added benefit of being able to have them in different shapes. 


Hessian coasters will look best at a more rustic style wedding especially if you already have touches of it in your other decor.


For a really personal look you can get a picture of yourself and your partner printed on the coasters. These ones are save the dates which is another clever idea, especially if you were planning to have printed ones. This way its not just a useless piece of card that is going to be thrown away. 



 It isn't necessary to print a photograph. You can choose any number of different designs to print on your coasters, all depending on what you want to say and what will work best with the look you are trying to acheive for your big day.



Although this is likely to work out far more expensive than any of the other coasters, stone coasters really are too beautiful not to consider. There's not much more I can say about these ones, the pictures speak for themselves.




These last two coasters are if you are looking for something truly unique. For a more classic wedding the lace doiley encased in glass is perfect or if you are looking for something more fun, then why not try these scrabble coasters. You can buy the lettering in packs from craft shops.  


As you can see there really are so many options when it comes to coasters. You can't go wrong if you choose them as your wedding favors. Guests will love their gifts, both for the beauty and for it's usefulness.