Tags · Cups



Coffee Mug of the Week #4

Coffee Mug of the Week: March 8, 2010

Coffee Mug of the Week: March 8, 2010

Coffee Mug of the Week: March 8, 2010

"Ketchikan Alaska"


I got this coffee mug a couple years ago, as you may have guessed, in Ketchikan, Alaska. Our submarine went there for some trials and we were lucky enough to take shifts and get off the boat for a few hours. This is a good-sized mug, similar to city mugs Starbucks. The cup reminds me of the town – a little rustic, but really cool. Ketchikan is a beautiful town that I’d love to visit again someday.


Share/Bookmark Subscribe


Coffee Mug of the Week #3


Coffee Mug of the Week: Saturday, February 27, 2010


This is part of 4-color dinner dish set I got about 10 years ago when I was heading off to college. The swirl around the side adds an interesting touch. I’ll post the remaining 3 mugs on other weeks.


Share/Bookmark Subscribe


Coffee Mug of the Week: Ear X-Tacy

"ear X-tacy. Louisville, Kentucky."


Meranda gave me this for Valentine’s Day, 2010.


The owner of Ear X-Tacy has recently come out saying that the store is in trouble of surviving the economic downturn. I like supporting local business, especially when they are in need. Buy your music and entertainment stuff here instead of the big chains. Help show your suport:


Web Site: http://www.earx-tacy.com/
Facebook: ear X-tacy
Facebook: Save ear X-tacy Facebook


Share/Bookmark Subscribe


I have finally decided how to display my coffee mugs on Coffee Cache: post a photo of a new one each week. The day I settled on is Saturday mornings, although if something comes up I may change it by a day or two. Just going over my cups quickly, I determined that I have at least 52, so I can keep this feature up for at least a year. Unfortunately, I don’t have much information on each one, but I will post what I can. Below is the first coffee mug of the week, just one of many to come.


Coffee Mug of the Week #1


 Coffee Mug of the Week: Saturday, February 13, 2010


"You know you’ve had too much coffee when…
…You prefer to grind coffee beans in your mouth."


Meranda sent me this as a gift while I was stationed in Hawai’i. I have significantly cut back on coffee since being out of the Navy, but at the time, I think this cup may have just applied to me.


Share/Bookmark Subscribe



Share/Bookmark Subscribe



A very entertaining video posted on YouTube by katz20two talking about “the three sizes for unnamed coffee shop: tall, grande, venti.”


See also: Coffee Cup Sizes


Share/Bookmark Subscribe


“Materials to keep drinks cold or hot for longer have been around for quite a while. Now a pair of German scientists has come up with a high-tech mug they claim keeps coffee at the perfect temperature.”


“The researchers at IBP came up with the idea of using PCM in coffee mugs. If it works in large office spaces and in jackets, why couldn’t it also keep a cup of coffee warm? To test their theory, they created the first PCM mug. The high-tech mug is made using a porcelain shell whose hollow interior is filled with a honeycomb structure made of ribbons of highly conductive material, such as aluminum. This honeycomb structure is then filled with PCM. ‘So now, if you are drinking hot coffee in one of these cups,” Sinnesbichler explains, “the drink’s heat is directed straight into the still solid PCM. This heat, in term, melts the PCM — kind of like wax — and turns it into a liquid.’”


This sounds like it could be a cool cup. Not only will your cup keep coffee better, but it’ll be a great conversation topic, too.


Read the full article, “Scientists Develop Intelligent Coffee Mug“, at SPIEGEL ONLINE.


Other Resources:


Share/Bookmark Subscribe

Now accepting cash, credit, and…Smug?

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Thanks to Chris Hallberg’s new Smug, you may be able to pay for your drink by swiping your coffee cup, instead of your credit card. Hallberg has found a way to integrate radio frequency identification (RFID) inside a coffee cup, called a smug. According to an article by WISN, this will be “like having a debit card in your coffee cup.”


This may help build loyalty, but why limit it to individual shops? I know many people enjoy trying new coffee shops, even if they already have a favorite – Heine Bros. being mine. You would think there would be a way for credit card companies to pick this up and use it in a way similar to the popuar gift cards from Visa, Mastercard, or Discover.


Will this really benefit me all that much? Probably not. I take my Heine Bros. coffee cup with me almost every time I go, so it won’t save paper there. It’s really not much of an effort for me to pull out my wallet and swipe my card or hand them some cash. That being said, would I buy a Smug? I probably would if it were from Heine Bros., or it worked like a gift card as I mentioned above. It’s a cool idea.


You should be able to find the smug starting next year at the Milwaukee-based Stone Creek Coffee. Other independant coffee chains have shown interest, hopefully with large corporate chains to follow. I’ll be interested to see if this idea takes off.


Sources:


Share/Bookmark Subscribe

Coffee Cup Sizes

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Nearly everyone I’ve seen uses six ounces when discussing the “normal” size of a cup of coffee. This isn’t set in stone, it just seems to be the amount used. In the Bunn drip maker I use, four cups of coffee equals almost 20 ounces, or five ounces per cup. Many coffee mugs you buy are going to be eight ounces or more, leaving you room for cream and sugar if you use it.


I called four coffee shops/stores and for the most part, sizes are pretty consistent. Below is a list of sizes used by Heine Bros., Highland Coffee, Dunkin Doughnuts, and Starbucks; Starbucks of course, uses fancy names for their sizes.


Heine Bros. Coffee
Small: 10 oz.
Medium: 16 oz.
Large: 20 oz.


Highland Coffee
Small: 12 oz.
Medium: 16 oz.
Large: 20 oz.


Dunkin’ Doughnuts
Small: 10 oz.
Medium: 14 oz.
Large: 20 oz.
X-Large: 24 oz.


Starbucks:
Short (X-Small): 8 oz. Note: Unadvertised and only available for hot coffee drinks.
Tall (Small): 12 oz.
Grande (Medium): 16 oz.
Venti (Large): 20 oz.


I was going to check with Seattle’s Best, but the cafe locator on their site kept resetting and not letting me zoom in/out on the map. I don’t like pages that don’t work correctly for an important function like that, so I didn’t waste much time.


Share/Bookmark Subscribe