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C  Photo / The Barista League


             Competitions have evolved over

             the years where baristas are now

             sourcing extremely expensive coffees,
             bringing in tropical ingredients, and

             creating beverages too extravagant

             for the average café menu.







               “A lot of times people will have traveled to where the   Terroir directly translates from French to mean “soil
           coffee  is  growing,”  says  Joe  Marrocco,  2011  US  Barista   or land”, but in wine (and coffee) it takes on a deeper
           Champion and VP of Coffee Sourcing and Product Devel-  meaning,  calling  to  the  complete  natural  environment
           opment at The Roasterie in the USA. “They’ll do a drink   including  the  climate,  soil,  and  surroundings.  Eckroth
           that represents something they’ve had while traveling to   explains that using ingredients native to coffee producing
           the growing region. Like a caipirinha from Brazil.” Made   countries can elicit “lively and playful life to the flavors
           with lime, sugar, and a Brazilian alcohol called cachaça, it’s   that surround a coffee’s earlier stages” during cultivation,
           a tropical, citric, and slightly earthy beverage.  growth, and processing.
               Eckroth went this route, becoming inspired on a cof-  Competitions  have  evolved  over  the  years  where
           fee buying trip, by using a tart Colombian citrus fruit called   baristas are now sourcing extremely expensive coffees,
           lulo on the World’s stage. Eckroth explains, “I ran into lulo   bringing in tropical ingredients, and creating beverages
           for the first time while on a sourcing trip to Colombia and   too  extravagant  for  the  average  café  menu.  However,
           Inmaculada  [coffee  farm].  We  saw  it  growing  and  also   according  to  Marrocco,  in  earlier  days  of  competition
           shared a drink that was similar to lemonade but with lulo   baristas would often compete with the signature drinks
           as the base rather than lemons.” While personal inspiration   they served in their shops rather than creating a drink
           makes for a compelling story, ingredients used on the world   exclusively for the stage.
           stage must also complement the coffee. For Eckroth, lulo
           ticked this box as well. “When looking for ingredients, I   In Specialty Cafes
           needed things that had synergy with my coffee while still
           matching the drink profile I wanted. Lulo hit three different   Though  competition  has  grown  and  changed,  cafés
           important points for my drink. First, it had a distinct and   around the world continue to showcase unique signature
           pleasant  flavor.  Two,  it  added  a  balancing  tartness  and   drinks  that  utilize  ingredients  complementary  to  their
           acidity. Third, it tied directly into the origin of my coffee.”   coffees. Sometimes these flavors come from coffee produc-
           Local to where Eckroth was at the time, yet global when   ing regions, sometimes they are seasonal and local to the
           prepared on the World Barista stage in Austraila.  cafe, and – in origin countries – sometimes they are both.
               Díaz also used Colombian ingredients to complement   When a café is located in a coffee producing country, baris-
           the Colombian coffee used in his 2023 US routine. “This   tas have the advantage of using local produce and highlight
           year I integrated panela sugar, eggs, and coffee blossoms.   ingredients that are grown alongside coffee.
           In the South of Colombia we have a dessert called ponche   Díaz, who spends his time between Colombia and
           made with egg white, yolk, panela, and 1 shot of aguardiente   the USA, says he sees a lot of Colombian baristas utilizing
           or  reduced  wine.  Showcasing  the  treat  created  a  unique   “coffee  cascara,  coffee  blossoms,  panela,  local  cacao,
           synergy since both my coffees were from the south and   guava, passionfruit. They use these ingredients to create
           only very true locals would know what ponche even is. It   synergy with their drink and they are also very familiar
           really did remind me of the first time I visited Cauca and   with  the  many  ways  to  present  them  and  manipulate
           had ponche and I said I have to do this in the barista stage.   them.” He tells me that Colombia is one of the leading
           Using ingredients from the origin of your coffee has been   producers of panela in the world, so it is no wonder that
           a great way to bring a piece of the terroir to the table.”   it is used frequently alongside coffee.


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