Female 1 Can you get onion stinks off your hand by rubbing coffee beans on them?
Female 2: And can you really clean your nasty coffee grinder with rice?
Female 1 Double roasted, fast brew.
Female 2: Two sugars and two creams.
Female 1 Try this
Female 2: at home
Female 1 Coffee has a rich bold history.
Female 2: Flavors and textures are almost as aromatic as the bean itself
Female 1 America’s love affair with coffee takes us all the way back to the Boston tea party.
Female 2: Our revolt against the British led the decrease in tea import
Female 1 And in increase of coffee import
Female 2: Caffeine, hey, what can you say?
Female 1 Get your picks while you can
Female 2: Drip, French prints, or Instant
Female 1 espressos, cappuccino, Americano—coffees is the King the in the USA.
Female 2: So, let’s get brewing.
Female 1 Revisit home, The Coffee Trader by David List fictionalizes the beginning of the coffee market in the 17th Century Amsterdam.
I drink a lot of coffee and my coffee grinder is always really nasty, I have been searching for a good way to clean it up and recently came upon across a tip I wanted to test. What you do is take some rice and fill up the grinder about at the level of the blade and then just power away.
Not only should it cleanout all that nasty gunk inside, it is supposedly double duty and sharpen up the blades too.
[Demo]
Transcription by:
Scribe4you Transcription Services