Posted on 02/04/2007 6:42:33 AM PST by Millee
There's nothing average about the Joe at McDonald's.
The Golden Arches beat out java giants Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts, along with Burger King, in a coffee taste test run by Consumer Reports magazine.
The magazine proclaimed McDonald's Premium Roast Coffee had "no flaws" and was easiest on the wallet.
"Try McDonald's, which was cheapest and best," Consumer Reports says in its March issue. "Or make your own coffee."
Of the four, McDonald's cost the least, $1.35, on average.
It "was decent and moderately strong," the magazine says, "although it lacked the top notes needed to make it rise and shine."
Starbucks might have the most vocal fan club among the caffeine crowd, but its $1.55-a-cup brew was deemed ordinary. "Strong, but burnt and bitter enough to make your eyes water instead of open," the report said.
McDonald's main competitor is Burger King, but McDonald's beat it on taste and price.
Burger King's coffee cost $1.40 a cup, and was a pale imitation. "Looked like coffee but tasted more like hot water," Consumer Reports said.
(Excerpt) Read more at seattletimes.nwsource.com ...
As she says, "Braces are a tough way to do it."
The slow eating and grazing are probably the keys.
She isn't too worried about the C levels. Every woman in her family tree has had high C levels and made it to 90 or close to it. She has an aunt, who will hit 100 in a year, and her C levels are out of site. Her GP keeps wanting her to go on the statin drugs. Her response, "It is a little too late to prevent early death in my case doc, forget it."
My Mother went on the statin drugs when she was 85. She was concerned with dementia, and the drug therapy seemed to really help her memory and thinking processes for 4 years.
Our younger son, who will turn 38 this spring has been a grazer all of his life and is a pyscho bike rider. If he doesn't ride 25 miles a day, he is impossible to be around. He got into gi trouble a few years ago and fortunately went to a clone of him, who was a GI doctor. The diagnosis, he wasn't eating enough and needed at least 4-5,000 calories a day in the winter time and more during spring summer and fall when his bike riding would hit 500 miles per week. Also, he was to gear down 2 days a week and only ride his bike a couple of miles per day.
Because of his high energy levels, this doctor and now a friend, suggested that he quit being a chef and get a high energy demand job. He is now working about 50+ hours a week in a winery and loves it. Both of his uncles, my wife's brothers choose similiar high energy type jobs and weigh the same at 65 and 62 as they did in highschool. My joke is we need to isolate some of their gene factors, clone them and make America fit, muscular and psycho workers and athletes for life.
I travel to Alabama a lot because most of my family lives down there. However, the lack of a decent cup of coffee down that way has always one of the downsides of going down there (mitigated somewhat by the great home cooking). No Dunkin Donuts, no Green Mountain, not even a Starbucks unless you want to go all the way to Birmingham (and you don't).
So I always had to settle for coffee at McDonalds when going down there. Nasty, bitter stuff that was always way too hot and left on the burners way too long.
But about a year ago, I went down there and saw this new "Paul Newman" coffee in all the McDonalds. What a difference. I still won't eat any of the "food" in there but the coffee now brings me into the Golden Arches on a regular basis, even here in New England.
We decided we would do a taste test, so we had the vendors install coffee machines from three different makers, one of whom was Starbucks. After two weeks, we did a poll. Starbucks came in last of the three. Cost was not an issue in this test, since these machines are installed at the firm's expense and cost the users nothing. People just were not crazy about the taste of Starbucks' coffee.
Problem is, that the coffee that beat out Charbucks is another local roast called Seattle's Best.
I used to buy it alot, they have some very nice brews... rather, they had. Getting harder and harder to find lately.
The reason it's getting harder to find is that they were bought out by - you guessed it - the charcoal kings themselves, Starburnts.
Starbucks would gag a maggot!
I found the biggest problem, is no matter what coffee is used, virtually no consumer drip-type maker get the water hot enough to extract all the flavor out of the coffee, esp. when they get a few miles on them and calcified. It's possible to make "strong" but weak or poorly extracted coffee. So it does no good to buy yuppie-eunuch brew but not make it right.
The old percolators boiled the coffee, but at least didn't waste the coffee. Camping put a big enamelware cowboy pot by the fire or coals, not in it, for several hours and it's just as smooth as possible.
"IMO the old school places like Waffle House and McDonalds serve the best stuff."
Ditto from a 46 year old.
McDonalds knows to not burn the coffee.
Jack's is pretty darn good.
But in my area it has the cachet of being The Place Where The Illegal Alien Labor (and Marty) Eats
just look for all the cop cars
My favorite coffee is the House Blend at Holiday gas stations. I used to go to Starbucks for cappuccino, but I gave up on that for the sake of my arteries.
McD = Castor oil
Home brew = Priceless.
Your papers please or your green card are required for any eat in orders. :)
Yes, but back then $2.50 was an eighth of an ounce of gold. Gold is approx. $640.00/ounce now. So your Tournados of beef or Maryland terrepin costs you $80, or your half chicken is $40 in gold terms. FWIW.
"big starbucks fan here, always will be. "
Yea, I dont get the gas station/fast food joint coffee is better crowd either too bland too weak. I like my coffee like I like my men tall, strong, dark, deep and full-bodied LOL!
I prefer Starbucks over most but I really like my local independent coffee shop the best great coffee, everyone knows me by name and I know all them if I want a medium sugar-free, skim milk Caramel Macchiato with an extra shot, all I have to say is give me the usual, they have comfy couches, a fireplace, host art shows and open mike nights for local talent, game and chess boards and a free lending library/book exchange its my second home.
When I want whole coffee beans for home brewing theres a company in Baltimore that sells coffee beans that are freshly roasted on-site. Just the smell of the place makes me crazy
Kona and Jamaican Blue Mountain are my favorites.
I also like Dunkin Donuts whole bean coffee and I did laugh at the DD commercial that makes fun of Starbucks Tall, Grande, Venti Is it French or is it Italian, perhaps its Fritalian
at Dunkin Donuts you order in English.
Of course the irony of that commercial is that no one speaks English in any of our local DDs all the franchises are owned by Indians (and I dont mean Seminoles).
"...i love the starbucks atmosphere when i have one in there too..."
I don't linger, but I do carefully look over the CD offerings. Some are great discoveries.
What a shocker!
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