▲ | noirbot 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I think this misses the point of all of this by making any sort of objective statement here. There's nothing inherently wrong with tradition and stability of a style like Italian espresso. Someone who grew up on it may very well hate an espresso made in a different style with a different roast profile and bean origin and that's quite fine. The issue in my mind is the dogmatic orthodoxy of people who enjoy French or Italian espresso saying that anything else is borderline immoral, or at best "pretentious". I happen to prefer more modern espresso styles, but there's also joy in a good traditional Italian shot. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | thomassmith65 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
What set me off is... well, it's easiest to share some memories: 1970s, early 1980s in America: nowhere to get espresso except for fancy restaurants or italian neighborhood Late 1980s in Pacific NW, America: quirky little Starbucks chain pops up. Ambience emulates a SF hippie coffee house, but they serve Italian-style cookies and espresso. 1990s, 2000s: Starbuck becomes gigantic corporation. Coffee culture fad spreads. Average American now knows what 'biscotti' are. Today: "Italians make bad espresso" And in a plausible future... 2050s: espresso fad long dead in America. Italians carry on same as ever, since coffee there, for generations, has meant 'espresso' | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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