longshanks wrote: » Third wave coffee?
alastair wrote: » https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_wave_of_coffee It's undeniably cringey, but a real thing nonetheless.
PPC wrote: » Did you complain/give feedback?
maxwell smart wrote: » Or an easier way to identify it: 6. Really acidic espresso - usually better in a milk based coffee
alec76 wrote: » I presume , you prefer classic Italian espresso i.e dark roast with no fruity/floral taste whatsoever? You could get this in 90% local coffee shops , what brought you to 3FE ?
J_E wrote: » I just couldn't go to a place that charges 3.50 regularly, for espresso.
adrian522 wrote: » Well they still have to buy in their beans and roast them, which goes into the overall cost, as does rent, wages, equipment and everything else. I'd say €0.25 is a gross under estimation of the cost per cup but I've no idea really. I'd say you get what you pay for in many instances. I'd rather pay €3 or whatever they charge for a good espresso than €2.50 for the terrible stuff you get in most places.A lot the places you mention above are very good but won't be much cheaper than 3FE are. Maybe slightly but a fairly small difference.
All My Stars Aligned wrote: » Just off the top of my head I know that three of them charge 2.50 for excellent espresso, this after paying considerably more themselves for the beans. That a massive price difference.
adrian522 wrote: » How do you know how much 3FE and the other places are paying for their benas? I'd imagine they'd be paying similar enough prices to be honest.
adrian522 wrote: » It's not like it doesn't cost them anything to roast their beans. Their roastery didn't come free, that was a pretty big investment and that cost also has to be factored in. Also it's not like none of the places you mentioned roast their own beans, as I said, I always find the coffee their excellent and am happy to pay for it, but I'd usually just buy the beans and make my coffee at home. 3.50 is a bit on the expensive side but I don't think its ridiculous profiteering or anything. You get what you pay for and their are plenty of cheaper places if that is what you are after.
Deleted User wrote: » 'third wave' coffee is what happens when Americans get their hands on things they don't understand. See also: insanely hoppy craft beer.
J_E wrote: » Totally off the ball. Third Wave is one of the best things to happen to cafes and I am so thrilled that Dublin are on point with it. I was in Switzerland last week and the general standard of coffee was not on par. It was hard to find a place that didn't put out cheap machine-made coffee for €5 a pop. All industrial beans. Was thoroughly disappointed. I don't think people know just how good we have it here. The point is now you have a wealth of flavours, not just 'dark'. Don't like the light roasts? Just go somewhere else and see what they offer! Cafes have their own signature tastes, it's so great.
maxwell smart wrote: » As a regular visitor to Switzerland I agree that some of the coffee there is terrible, but there are plenty of automated machines now making perfectly acceptable and consistent coffee. (James Hoffman recently wrote an interesting article on this). These are popular with the Swiss as they value consistency (in everything!). Regarding the €5 price, Switzerland is more expensive than Ireland for everything. A bottle of water can cost €6. So you can't compare it on a like for like price basis with here.
aristotle25 wrote: » I find 3FE a bit expensive as well but it is good quality. Easy to forget they probably forged the way forward for proper coffee in Dublin many years ago when they started in Twisted Pepper. Plently of strong competition for them now though which is good for us all. Coffee Angle is one I like. In fairness they should keep charging 3.5 for an espresso while the demand is there. They are well known now. If you don't like the price there are plenty of other excellent coffee shops in Dublin.
All My Stars Aligned wrote: » Believe it or not Coffeeangel was going a fair while before 3FE opened. I believe Colin worked for Karl for a bit! KP... the grandaddy of the Irish coffee scene :pac::pac::pac: Sorry Karl!!!