The publicist from Dean & DeLuca emailed to let me know that the worldwide purveyor of fine foods, wine and kitchenware, Dean & DeLuca, will be hosting its first-ever latte art competition, along with Counter Culture Coffee, at D&D’s shop in the New York Times building, 620 Eighth Ave. (at 40th St .), in New York, at 3 p.m. Wednesday, February 23.
Considering the crazy good coffee scene going on in New York these days, with the likes of Gimme!, Stumptown, Grumpy, Gorilla, and Intelligentsia all offering fantastic roasted coffees, along with Counter Culture, of course, this is likely worth a looksy. “In early 2009, Dean & DeLuca partnered with Counter Culture Coffee to place a greater emphasis on barista education and the quality of coffee served. Now, all Dean & DeLuca baristas are trained by Counter Culture’s industry-leading staff, and many have learned how to top lattes and cappuccinos with beautiful designs like hearts and tulips. Our goal with this competition is to give our baristas the opportunity to have some fun, and we want to get the word out about the impressive latte art they’re pouring, reads the press release. Wish I could beam myself over to New York to see for myself, but I’ll be in that neck of the woods soon enough for Coffee Fest (March 5 “7 at the Meadowlands in New Jersey).
But if YOU are able to make it, let us know how it goes! It’s free and open to the public. And one last thing: anyone who has been involved with promoting the specialty coffee industry through latte art competitions should give themselves a pat of the back– setting the standard for biggie companies is something to be proud of.
I want to make a comment, and mean it with all due respect, as I’m friends with most of the said “staff”, but how did they come up with “industry-leading staff” in the line, “Now, all Dean & DeLuca baristas are trained by Counter Culture’s industry-leading staff.” I don’t dispute there are amazingly talented people working for Counter Culture, but I think of so many, who are just as talented, who work for different companies. Who determines who staff has the best in the industry? Is there a competition? An award? Is it based on a legit certification? Guess it’s just a standard PR trick, but when I read it, I thought, it seemed preposterous to make that claim.
Again, I’d say being trained by Lem Butler is a huge thing, he’s one of the best in the country, a good friend, and a three time SERBC not just champion, but destroyer. And I’d say they have some great staff there, including people I’ve worked with on the SCAA’s Professional Development Committee. Heck, Lydia Iianetti is the bees knees, too! Just curious.
I wanted to also say that Rocio is amazing. I flew out to Napa Valley in October to train the baristas at Dean & Deluca St. Helena. Rocio had never poured latte art before I arrived and when I left a week later she was pouring hearts. Rocio is so dedicated to her craft as a barista that she emails me with extraction questions, latte art questions coffee origin questions, etc. She truly is a coffee professional. She won!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/counterculturecoffee/sets/72157623389007421/