Something is very wrong with Spanish coffee. If you buy a pack of coffee in the supermarket, or a café solo in a bar, it too often tastes like acrid burnt rubber. Want to know why? In this video I delve into the mysterious world of torrefacto! So venga, let’s go! 🥝
⏩ Watch Next: Eat Like a Local in Spain: [ Ссылка ]
MY FREE SPAIN RESOURCES
🍤 Tapas 101 Cheat Sheet: [ Ссылка ]
🏡 Spain House Buyer's Checklist: [ Ссылка ]
🔑 Spain House Renter's Cheat Sheet: [ Ссылка ]
💰 Moving Money to Spain Guide: [ Ссылка ] (tips for sending your money to Spain from my friends at SpartanFX)
ENHANCE YOUR SPAIN TRIP
💡 Get my ultimate Madrid city guide: [ Ссылка ]
🥘 Book a food tour with Devour Tours: [ Ссылка ]
🏰 Book a walking tour with Walks: [ Ссылка ]
JOIN OUR EXCLUSIVE LIVE STREAMS
❤️ YouTube members get exclusive live stream access: [ Ссылка ]
🍤Spanish food delivered to your door (USA): [ Ссылка ]
👄Learn Spanish my way: [ Ссылка ]
🎥The gear we use to make our videos: [ Ссылка ]
👩🏻💻CONNECT
James on Instagram: [ Ссылка ]
Yoly on instagram: [ Ссылка ]
Our private Facebook community: [ Ссылка ]
MORE INFO ABOUT THIS VIDEO 😃
⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯
When I first moved to Spain in 2011, I would buy all my coffee at the supermarket. But it never tasted very good. It always had this acrid, bitter flavour. I drink my coffee black, and I found the stuff I was buying and drinking in bars almost undrinkable. It was like burnt rubber.
And then one day I looked a little closer at the coffee packet. And I noticed this common word, “mezcla”. I knew that mezcla meant mix or blend. But I thought - a blend of what? So I read further, and then I started seeing this word “torrefacto”. I had no idea what it was, but I suspected it had to do with what was going on with the coffee in this country.
So I started investigating further, and I discovered that torrefacto is a process that is applied to coffee beans sold in Spain that make the coffee taste, well, horrible. How the tradition got started is connected to the civil war. And why we still drink torrefacto coffee in Spain is about tradition, and, well, habit.
In this video I explain what torrefacto is, do a taste testing with my wife Yoly, and head to Toma Cafe to get a good cup of coffee!
Below is a list of great coffee places in Madrid:
Toma Café (Malasaña)
Toma Café (Chamberi)
Cafe Tornasol (Antón Martín market)
Zero Point (Lavaiés)
HanSo Café (Malasaña)
Coffee & Kicks (near Puerta del Sol
WHO ARE WE? 🥝
⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯⋯
Hola, Spain lovers! We're James and Yoly. James is a New Zealander, and Yoly is from Spain. And we both live in Madrid. This channel is all about giving you a local insight into life in Spain, and helping you experience this country like a local when you come to visit (or live!). If that sounds like your kind of thing, bienvenido!
*This description contains affiliate links which means we may earn a commission if you use them 🙏🏻
What's Wrong with Spanish Coffee? 😥☕
Теги
spaincoffeespanish coffeecoffee in spaincoffe in spaintorrefacto coffeetorrefactotorefactotorefacto coffeemezcla coffeerobusta coffeenatural coffeearabica coffeegood coffee in madridgood coffee in spainspanish cuisinespanish culturespanish historytorifacto coffeespanish coffespanish cofeecofee in spain