The cafe blackboard artist is one of those things that exists in the popular imagination as a kind of icon: the barista or cafe owner who, every so often, takes out his colored chalks and draws a wonderful illustration on the blackboard where he also describes his common wares and daily specials.
Sadly, I found yesterday that Starbucks, which has routinized coffee, has also given us pasteurized processed cafe-artist product. The seemingly hand-drawn chalkboard illustrations found at your corner Starbucks are paint-by-numbers stencils with guidelines that make it absolutely impossible to create anything other than the official pictures that the corporate office approved.
I really shouldn't be nonplused about this. This is the company at which the return of the original CEO, Howard Schultz, was heralded with much fanfare. Schultz gave a speech where he complained that Starbucks had lost its soul. The tight, flavor-preserving vacuum packaging robbed the cafe of its roast coffee smell. Robobarista machines that made it impossible to make a bad cup of coffee also made it impossible for any cup to be distinctive and interesting. Starbucks sells caffeine in a beige room full of comforting music.
Howard Schultz's innovation to "restore Starbuck's soul?" Instant coffee. Like the Instant Artist, it's just not real enough.
Sadly, I found yesterday that Starbucks, which has routinized coffee, has also given us pasteurized processed cafe-artist product. The seemingly hand-drawn chalkboard illustrations found at your corner Starbucks are paint-by-numbers stencils with guidelines that make it absolutely impossible to create anything other than the official pictures that the corporate office approved.
I really shouldn't be nonplused about this. This is the company at which the return of the original CEO, Howard Schultz, was heralded with much fanfare. Schultz gave a speech where he complained that Starbucks had lost its soul. The tight, flavor-preserving vacuum packaging robbed the cafe of its roast coffee smell. Robobarista machines that made it impossible to make a bad cup of coffee also made it impossible for any cup to be distinctive and interesting. Starbucks sells caffeine in a beige room full of comforting music.
Howard Schultz's innovation to "restore Starbuck's soul?" Instant coffee. Like the Instant Artist, it's just not real enough.

no subject
Date: 2009-05-05 07:08 pm (UTC)I admit to spending too much money at Fivebux on a regular basis*, but from this, i can attest that on the same machine, in the same store, one person will reliably produce a latte` that is delicately flavored and perfectly balanced, and another person can make me a drink that tastes like the beans were roasted by an inexpertly wielded hand-held blowtorch.
*I have rationalized this by claiming that an outlay of $4 a day is supporting the economy. This is my story, and i'm sticking to it.**
**at least until a better one comes along.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-05 09:41 pm (UTC)A glorious mystery tour of which I'd never seen the like - and my coffe life has never been the same (I remember hearing a variation on the same travel story from a friend...but it was Key West, not Seattle - and it wasn't coffee...).
The only Starbuck's, though, was the one @ Seatac Airport...and it was the worst coffee I had the whole 10 days I was there.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-05 10:45 pm (UTC)There are 7 or 8 coffee stands in one 3 block stretch in my downtown, including two SBux (one at each end), including 5 independent shops. They all seem to be packed all the time.
paint by the numbers
Date: 2009-05-06 10:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 05:22 am (UTC)It's an urban myth that you've got yourself caught up in.