
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In today's Making Coffee Podcast episode, we're taking a deep dive into anaerobic fermentation and how language reflects values.
Specialty coffee is a young industry. In the consumer space we have only recently started to differentiate between processing styles like natural, washed and honey and now we’re jumping off the deep end into the microbiology of these processing styles.
I wanted to record this episode because many Green Buyers ask me what Coffee Producers mean when they label their coffee like this and Coffee Producers ask me what the Green Buyers mean when they ask them for an anaerobic process.
Both parties expect the other one has the answers.
Even if the words are poorly understood they are still copied, pasted and repeated so much that they become familiar through sheer repetition.
We see them so much that we can sometimes convince ourselves that we know what everyone is talking about, or we assume that at least they must know what they are talking about.
But in my observations, it seems like at this point everyone has their individual, personal, un-scientific definition.
And this is a problem because when everyone defines the words differently, we undermine the point of language to communicate.
To Support this Podcast and become a Patron CLICK HERE
4.8
5858 ratings
In today's Making Coffee Podcast episode, we're taking a deep dive into anaerobic fermentation and how language reflects values.
Specialty coffee is a young industry. In the consumer space we have only recently started to differentiate between processing styles like natural, washed and honey and now we’re jumping off the deep end into the microbiology of these processing styles.
I wanted to record this episode because many Green Buyers ask me what Coffee Producers mean when they label their coffee like this and Coffee Producers ask me what the Green Buyers mean when they ask them for an anaerobic process.
Both parties expect the other one has the answers.
Even if the words are poorly understood they are still copied, pasted and repeated so much that they become familiar through sheer repetition.
We see them so much that we can sometimes convince ourselves that we know what everyone is talking about, or we assume that at least they must know what they are talking about.
But in my observations, it seems like at this point everyone has their individual, personal, un-scientific definition.
And this is a problem because when everyone defines the words differently, we undermine the point of language to communicate.
To Support this Podcast and become a Patron CLICK HERE
90,431 Listeners
26,114 Listeners
3,555 Listeners
43,406 Listeners
123 Listeners
246 Listeners
8,344 Listeners
256 Listeners
87 Listeners
11 Listeners
12,328 Listeners
3,104 Listeners
993 Listeners
19 Listeners
389 Listeners