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                                                         this applies to customers, cafe owners, baristas and even
                                                         producers. I wanted to be a part of this solution to change
                                                         the dynamics of knowledge withholding, disparity of in-
                                                         formation and coffee education in general.
                                                             I soon joined a Coffee Machine & Equipment suppli-
                                                         er as their Head of Training and Development, and worked
                                                         with them for almost 2 years, before I realized that the
                                                         company’s goal and my personal goal didn’t align. Right
                                                         before the pandemic, I quit that job, and during the pan-
                                                         demic I started doing online training, online coffee quiz-
                                                         zes and so on.
                                                             I  thought  about  how  all  these  amazing  people  in
                                                         coffee have podcasts from different countries, but there
                                                         wasn’t one that was from India, or spoke about the Indi-
                                                         an coffee scene. I was determined I wanted to be the first
                                                         one in India to do this and wanted to share stories from
                                                         the perspective of the Indian coffee system, that’s how
                                                         the Coffee Protocol Podcast started, and we are currently
                                                         on the 4th season.
                                                             Post pandemic, I started work in a coffee farm, help-
                                                         ing  with  post-harvest  processing  techniques.  Slowly,  I
                                                         realized  that  was  something  which  made  me  feel  like  I
                                                         was really adding value. The first year I worked with one
                                                         farm, the year after with six and the one after with eight.
                                                         I am not a big believer of certifications but I also became
                                                         a Q Processor because it added credibility to my work,
                                                         whether I like it or not.

                                                         Can you tell us a bit more about your relationship
                                                         with motorcycles? When did it start, how it developed
                                                         and how you are involved with them today.
                                                             I  think  it  started  when  I  was  quite  young,  when  I
                                                         first stole my dad’s scooter, for a ride when I was around
                                                         thirteen years old. I remember I loved the thrill of it. As
                                                         I got older, I got a motorcycle that was handed down to
                                                         me from my brother while I was still in school.
                                                             I  was  really  into  motorcycle  racing,  that  got  me
                                                         hooked  on  learning  more  about  the  two  wheels.  After
 Sadly  “simple”  doesn’t  sell  well,  if  you  have  half-  replicate and coffee shops need to offer consistency. An-  Tell  us  about  your  journey  from  Barista  on  Bike  to   coming back to India in 2015 the first thing I saved for
 baked  knowledge  and  you  throw  in  some  complicated   other challenge is influence and power dynamics. Imagine   becoming a Q Processor, Coffee Trainer, and Host of   was a motorcycle. Post the 100-day trip, I was invited by
 words  which  no  one  understands,  people  automatically   someone  from  a  different  country,  a  different  culture,   Coffee Protocol Podcast?   TedX  to  give  a  talk  on  solo  traveling.  Today,  when  the
 believe you know a lot about the subject. Only if you know   with  different  food  habits,  who  probably  doesn’t  have   When I was working for this Indian chain of cafes in   coffee harvest season starts, I ride from my current place
 a lot about a subject, can you actually make it simple.  earthy or umami taste in their food culture or flavor lex-  Gujarat,  I  went  on  a  trip,  partly  for  the  company  and   in Delhi all the way to Bangalore and then to Chikmaglur,
 Another  challenge  is  that  we  are  making  specialty   icon, declares that umami or earthy flavor is a defect or   partly for my own research. This trip was a 100 days ride   Coorg, Koddai, Yercaud, Munnar.
 coffee very exclusive and non “simple”. We are forcing too   unwanted taste.   through  India  and  Nepal  on  my  motorcycle,  talking  to   I pretty much live from my bags that hang on the
 many  do’s  &  don’ts  on  our  customers.  Like  “drink  your   But maybe for a country like India or Japan for ex-  people about coffee. Barista as a profession never had any   motorcycle.  I  love  that  part  of  the  year.  When  it’s  me
 coffee black”. Recipes are getting just too complex, like you   ample  these  flavors  are  favorable  and  perhaps  a  good   respect  in  India.  During  this  trip,  I  kept  my  Instagram   talking to myself in my helmet and thinking about ideas,
 are supposed to swirl it nineteen times and stand on one   flavor note for a lot of people. With our current Instagram   handle as @Baristaonbike, because I wanted to use it as a   random things, and songs while I reach the next coffee
 leg to pour the water from the expensive kettle at the speed   trends, a lot of things get pushed on as facts and universal   conversation icebreaker. That’s how I got that name.   farm.  I  even  got  married  on  a  motorcycle  last  year.  I
 of 3.5 ml per second and what not. My idea is to make it   law in coffee just because a well-known influencer said   After the trip, I realized that a huge gap exists be-  currently have two motorcycles: a Royal Enfield Hima-
 simple and repeatable, otherwise it will be impossible to   so and has a huge following.   tween what people know about coffee, and the truth. And   layan & a KTM 390 Adventure.



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