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Newz: Vodka For Stress & Digested Coffee Beans

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
Vodka ideal for post-match stress?

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia head coach Vladimir Krikunov has acclaimed the virtues of at least three shots of vodka as a remedy for post-game stress.

"Three shots of vodka after every game. It's a must," Krikunov told the Sovietsky Sport newspaper. "It does the trick for me. Then after three shots if I feel like I want some more, I'll drink more."

Krikunov, 55, guided Belarus to a surprise fourth-place finish at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games. He now hopes to lead Russia to their first Olympic gold since 1992.


Pricey coffee good to the last dropping

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Would you pay $175 for a pound of coffee beans which had passed through the backside of a furry mammal in Indonesia?

Apparently, some coffee lovers wanting to treat themselves to something special are lapping it up.

Kopi Luwak beans from Indonesia are rare and expensive, thanks to a unique taste and aroma enhanced by the digestive system of palm civets, nocturnal tree-climbing creatures about the size of a large house cat.

"People like coffee. And when they want to treat themselves, they order the Kopi Luwak," said Isaac Jones, director of sales for Tastes of The World, an online supplier of gourmet coffee, tea and cocoa.

Despite being carnivorous, civets eat ripe coffee cherries for treats. The coffee beans, which are found inside of the cherries, remain intact after passing through the animal.

Civet droppings are found on the forest floor near coffee plantations. Once carefully cleaned and roasted, the beans are sold to specialty buyers.

Jones said sales for Kopi Luwak rose three-fold just before the Christmas holiday compared with the first half of the year. The company started selling the rare coffee in February 2005.

He expects to sell around 200 pounds of the coffee this year, with orders coming from North America and Europe. So far, most of the orders have been from California.

Indonesia produces only about 500 kilograms, or roughly 1,100 pounds, of the coffee each year, making it extremely expensive and difficult to find.

"It's the most expensive coffee that we know about in the world," said Jones.

By comparison Jamaica's Blue Mountain coffee, considered to be an expensive type, sells for $35 to $40 per pound, while a pound of Colombia's Supremo arabicas can be bought for about $14.
 

Qman

Monkey
Feb 7, 2005
633
0
One of my favorite roasters used to sell this. http://www.ravensbrew.com/NewFiles/kopiluwak.html
Guessing they didn't sell much. They said it was pretty hard to tell a difference between Dead Man's Reach which is also a fine bean. Our house favorite is the '3 peckered billy goat blend'. With 'Deadman's Reach' a close second. Looks like they've got a new one, "Skookum Blend" I may need to check out.
A coffee shop in Skagway, AK (Mabel G. Smith's) used to sell it for $5/cup one day every summer. I was always on the road so I never tried it.
 

zmtber

Turbo Monkey
Aug 13, 2005
2,435
0
man my friends will swear on their life that vodka has healing powers, so curing stress doesn't seem imposible