Coffee Lovers Magazine | Page 20

from left: Adam from LA Coffee Club gets ready to present; Pour over demo with Kunji coffee from Chromatic Coffee; A visitor displays a Chemex Coffeemaker button. to focus on local roasters,” he says. “I’m convinced that that’s the key to it.” He likens it to a wine tasting: “You expect to get the flavor profile of each one and really get the personality.” It’s normally hard to compare one roaster’s cup of joe to another’s, but at the tasting, they’re mere feet from each other. It’s a unique opportunity for the coffee lover—a tasting experience almost unimaginable in most other contexts. The event reflects Sinnott’s deep passion for everything coffee, which includes his respect for how difficult it is to make a good cup of the stuff. “It’s a cooking art,” he says, comparing roasters to bartenders. If someone loves martinis and knows a bartender who can mix a perfect drink, they understand the expertise required. “Coffee is like that, and coffee’s more like that,” he says. For Sinnott, the touch of a talented roaster is what elevates a cup of coffee above more standard fare. Between the numerous classes and the various roasters, CoffeeCon hopes to You can't come to our event and walk away and say coffee's not a complex beverage. interview: kevin sinnott encapsulate much of what makes coffee so great. “You can’t come to our event and walk away and say coffee’s not a complex beverage,” Sinnott says. CoffeeCon isn’t aimed only at those who have already developed a passionate appreciation for coffee, either. Sinnott loves to see attendees who haven’t previously explored the full spectrum of coffee possibilities. Browsing the roaster exhibitions, for instance, often