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Peter Giuliano's avatar

Happy birthday!!

And what a good question. I definitely have experienced this phenomenon in my own life- the Kenyans and Yirgacheffes of 25 years ago seemed much more intense than today.

Climate change is likely to be one culprit, but changes in variety and processing make it hard to discern. I collaborated on a scientific paper attempting to document climate change effects on coffee quality and it was very difficult to glean evidence. Just as you say, long term projects like George’s would be essential to actually understanding this. Also, we have a bias towards assuming all change is bad- in fact some coffees might be improving by all these same influences. I tasted some coffees from Colombia last week which are entirely unlike anything I could have tasted 20 years ago- and very very good.

Also, we have to remember that, as Anaïs Nin once wrote, “We see things not as they are, but as we are.” I know that I have changed both physically and psychologically in the past 25 years, a fact which I have to keep in mind as I compare current coffees with my memories of past coffees. I still remember my first intense Yirgacheffe: how did my excitement about that moment color my memory of the flavor?

It seems to me that the phenomenon of coffee not tasting like it used to is a mixture of real change and nostalgia, and a huge variety of material differences. Probably a good reminder to cherish the great coffees of today- we may miss them in a decade or two.

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Phil Mcelbow's avatar

Hey, Happy Birthday! As an official geezer (77yrs old) I can tell you coffee has changed.

Started drinking the weak transparent coffee shop coffee, (yech) and then discovered Yuban,

which was better. Decades later, while visiting Seattle, discovered boutique coffee shops, namely The Siren (Starbucks). Look up a Siren's true nature by the way, not nice. But the coffee was better than the market stuff. A bit burned, but drinkable. Then the exotic coffees appeared, and i became a coffee snob, drinking real Kona coffee every morning, and others from far away locales. Now the coffees have lost their deep richness, or I have with age and aging tastebuds. I still drink a pot in the morning before work, but now its more like 50 years ago Yuban....

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