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  • How Long Does Coffee Stay Fresh? The Real Timeline (and the Fastest Ways to Ruin It)
    2026/05/01

    Coffee doesn’t “go bad” the way milk does—but it absolutely goes stale, and most people are drinking coffee that’s already flattened out. In this episode of The Bilge Brew Show, Nate and a fellow coffee nerd break down what “fresh” actually means, why roast date matters more than “best by,” and the three clocks that control flavor: degassing, oxidation, and aroma loss. We keep it simple and practical: whole bean vs. ground, what happens the moment you open the bag, the real enemies of coffee (oxygen, heat, moisture, light), and when freezing helps—or hurts. If you want coffee that tastes alive, this is the baseline.

    Show Notes: 00:00 — “Fresh” is three different clocks: degassing, staling, contamination 03:40 — Oxygen is the primary enemy; temperature/moisture close behind 06:30 — Whole bean stays fresh longer than ground because surface area accelerates staling 09:10 — Opening a bag speeds staling by changing the package atmosphere 11:00 — Freezing can work if portioned and sealed; refrigeration is usually a bad move 13:20 — Typical “best flavor” windows vary; many guides suggest using beans within weeks, grounds within ~2 weeks 15:10 — Roast date beats “best by” for flavor decisions 17:00 — Related reading: Bilge Brew’s “fresh roasted coffee near me” guide (storage + roast-date red flags)


    EPISODE: How Long Does Coffee Stay Fresh? (The Real Timeline)

    Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/how-long-does-coffee-stay-fresh

    Fresh roasted, roasted-to-order coffee → https://bilgebrew.com/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=how-long-coffee-stays-fresh


    What you’ll learn:

    - “Fresh” vs “stale” (what it actually tastes like)

    - The timeline that matters (and what doesn’t)

    - Storage mistakes that kill flavor fast


    Resources mentioned:

    - How Long Does Coffee Stay Fresh After Roasting? (Real Timeline) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/how-long-does-coffee-stay-fresh-after-roasting-real-timeline

    - Coffee Roast Date Explained → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/coffee-roast-date-explained-what-it-means-what-to-avoid

    - Fresh Roasted Coffee: Why It Tastes Better + How to Buy It → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/fresh-roasted-coffee-why-it-tastes-better-how-to-buy-it


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    11 分
  • Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) Explained: What “Specialty Grade Coffee” Really Means (and Why It’s Changing)
    2026/04/24

    “Specialty coffee” gets thrown around like it’s a magical stamp of quality—but what does it actually mean? In this episode of the Bilge Brew Show, Nate breaks down the Specialty Coffee Association (SCA): what it is, why it exists, and how it shaped the way the coffee world evaluates quality.

    We unpack the classic “specialty grade” idea—clean green coffee, defect standards, and the famous 80+ scoring threshold—then explain what’s changing right now as the SCA moves toward the Coffee Value Assessment (CVA), a newer system designed to look beyond a single number. If you buy coffee online (or run a coffee business), this episode helps you spot real quality vs. buzzwords.


    Show Notes:

    • 00:00 — “Specialty” as a buzzword vs a real standard

    • 02:10 — What the SCA is and why it formed (including the 2017 unification)

    • 04:40 — What SCA actually does: standards, education, events, research

    • 06:45 — Where “specialty coffee” came from (Erna Knutsen, 1974)

    • 08:10 — The classic “80+ points = specialty” shorthand (and why it became common)

    • 10:05 — The shift: SCA’s updated definition + Coffee Value Assessment

    • 11:30 — CVA becomes official cupping standards; older protocol/form superseded

    • 13:00 — Green coffee grading and defects (why “clean coffee” matters)

    • 14:45 — Q Grader program today (now issued by SCA; aligned with CVA)

    • 16:00 — Shared sensory language: the Coffee Taster’s Flavor Wheel

    • 17:10 — World Coffee Championships and why competitions influence trends

    • 18:10 — Buyer checklist: how to spot real quality signals vs marketing

    Bilge Brew references mentioned in the episode (optional links for your show page):

    Bilge Brew Coffee Co: https://bilgebrew.com/

    Anchor Espresso (Dark Roast): https://bilgebrew.com/products/anchor-espresso

    Red Alert! (African Espresso Blend): https://bilgebrew.com/products/red-alert-african-espresso-dark-roast

    ALL HANDS (Light Espresso Roast): https://bilgebrew.com/products/all-hands-light-roast

    “What ‘Specialty Grade Coffee’ Actually Means” (Bilge Brew blog): https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/what-specialty-grade-coffee-actually-means


    EPISODE: Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) Explained (What It Is + Why It Matters)

    Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/sca-explained

    Try a specialty-focused sampler → https://bilgebrew.com/products/bilge-brew-crew-sampler?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=sca-explained


    What you’ll learn:

    - What the SCA does (and what it doesn’t)

    - How cupping + scoring works in real life

    - How to use “specialty” info without becoming a coffee snob


    Resources mentioned:

    - What Is Coffee Cupping? → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/what-is-coffee-cupping-how-pros-evaluate-quality

    - What “Specialty Grade Coffee” Actually Means → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/what-specialty-grade-coffee-actually-means



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    18 分
  • The Tiny Cup That Built Coffeehouse Culture (Plus How to Brew It Right)
    2026/04/17

    Turkish coffee isn’t a “type of bean”—it’s a centuries-old method, a social ritual, and a core piece of coffeehouse history. In this episode of The Bilge Brew Show, we break down where Turkish coffee came from, how Istanbul’s early coffeehouses shaped public life, why rulers sometimes cracked down on coffee culture, and why foam, water, sweets, and even coffee-ground fortune telling are part of the tradition. You’ll also get a practical, beginner-friendly guide to brewing Turkish coffee in a cezve—without scorching it—plus a subtle nod to Bilge Brew’s Red Alert! African espresso blend for listeners who like bold, aromatic intensity.

    Show notes: Turkish coffee culture and tradition is recognized by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage, including its role in ceremonial occasions and the tradition of reading fortunes from the grounds. Istanbul’s early coffeehouse history is often traced to 1555 and the Tahtakale area, with accounts emphasizing coffeehouses as community hubs and social institutions. Coffeehouse crackdowns in the Ottoman period—especially under Murad IV—are widely discussed as targeting coffeehouses as spaces of public gathering and political risk. Traditional serving cues (foam as a quality marker, served with water and Turkish delight) and basic preparation ritual are described in UNESCO’s Courier and official travel/culture resources. The grind requirement is extreme—finer than espresso—and is one of the biggest success/failure factors for authentic Turkish coffee. Bilge Brew’s Red Alert! is described as a dark roast African espresso blend with dark berry, citrus peel, cocoa, and warm spice notes—useful context for why it can work as a bold cezve option when ground Turkish-fine.


    EPISODE: The Tiny Cup That Built Coffeehouse Culture (Plus How Espresso Took Over)

    Episode page (canonical): https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/tiny-cup-coffeehouse-culture

    Espresso Bundle → https://bilgebrew.com/products/bilge-brew-espresso-bundle?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=tiny-cup-coffeehouse-culture


    What you’ll learn:

    - Why espresso became the “social” coffee

    - How café culture spread (and why it stuck)

    - What makes a great espresso at home (simple rules)


    Resources mentioned:

    - Espresso Ratios (ristretto vs 1:2 vs lungo) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/espresso-ratios-ristretto-lungo

    - How to Dial In Espresso (dose/yield/time) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/how-to-dial-in-espresso-dose-yield-time-simple-method



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    12 分
  • Siphon Coffee: The Vacuum-Brew Time Machine, Wild History Facts, and a Guatemala Whiskey-Barrel Twist
    2026/04/10
    Siphon coffee looks like a chemistry experiment, but it’s one of the oldest “serious” brew methods in the coffee world. We break down how vacuum brewing actually works, why it used to be a mainstream kitchen staple, and why it stayed alive in café culture. Then we pivot to Guatemala’s coffee history—how it grew from ornamental plants to a major export—and explain what whiskey barrel-aging really is (and what it isn’t). Finally, we talk about why a Guatemala single origin like Bilge Brew’s Drunken Sailor—aged 30 days in a whiskey barrel—pairs perfectly with siphon’s clean, aromatic style.Show notes (sources + links):Vacuum coffee maker overview + early invention attribution + global popularity notes (including continued popularity in parts of Asia): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_coffee_makerSiphon history notes (Loeff 1830s patent references; Mme. Vassieux commercial success in the 1840s): https://perfectdailygrind.com/2015/10/vacpot-syphon-the-history-brewing-guide/Hario company history timeline (includes launch of Coffee Syphon in 1948): https://global.hario.com/about/history.htmlSmithsonian object listing for the Sunbeam Coffeemaster vacuum coffee maker: https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object/nmah_324290WWII-era “Victory Model” Silex vacuum brewer made primarily of glass to conserve metal: https://search.library.wisc.edu/digital/A6T7E5CRDX4C6H87Guatemala coffee export history details (including late-1800s export dominance and the shift from dyes/cochineal): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_production_in_GuatemalaAnacafé (Guatemalan National Coffee Association) founding in 1960 + purpose: https://worldcoffeeresearch.org/countries/guatemalaBarrel-aged coffee concept + trade-history connection: https://imbibemagazine.com/barrel-conditioned-coffee/Whiskey barrel-aged coffee basics (resting green coffee in barrels for weeks): https://mtpak.coffee/2022/03/a-roasters-guide-to-whisky-barrel-aged-coffee/Bilge Brew “Drunken Sailor” (Guatemala, whiskey barrel-aged): https://bilgebrew.com/products/drunken-sailor-medium-roast-whiskey-barrel-aged-roastedEPISODE: Siphon Coffee (The Vacuum-Brew Time Machine)Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/siphon-coffeeSmooth medium roast for clarity → https://bilgebrew.com/products/maritime-medium-roast?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=siphon-coffeeWhat you’ll learn:- How siphon brewing works (without the chemistry lecture)- Why it tastes “cleaner” when done right- The easiest way to avoid bitter, thin resultsResources mentioned:- From Bean to Brew (best methods for drip grind specialty coffee) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/from-bean-to-brew-exploring-the-best-methods-for-drip-grind-specialty-coffee- What Makes Coffee Taste Bitter → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/what-makes-coffee-taste-bitter-and-how-to-avoid-it
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    18 分
  • Pour Over Coffee: The Paper Filter Revolution, Weird History Bits, and Why Colombia Became a Legend in the Cup.
    2026/04/03

    Pour over coffee didn’t start as a trendy hobby—it started as a fix for gritty, sloppy brews. We cover the 1908 paper filter breakthrough, iconic brewers like the 1941 Chemex, the lab-glass roots of Hario and the V60 timeline, and why a Colombian single origin like Admiral’s Brew is a natural match for pour over’s clean, clear flavor.

    Show notes: Sources referenced include the German Patent and Trade Mark Office summary of Melitta Bentz registering her filter idea in June 1908 and Europeana’s account of her using blotting paper from her son’s notebook and a perforated brass pot . Chemex background (patented 1941, Dr. Peter Schlumbohm, and his broad patent portfolio) comes from Chemex’s official “About Us” page , and MoMA’s collection entry confirms the Chemex Coffee Maker listing . Hario’s founding in 1921 as a laboratory glassware maker and the V60 dripper being released in 2005 are from Hario’s official company history timeline . Colombia history points (early testimony tied to José Gumilla and exports by 1835) are summarized by Sucafina , with additional context on early records and exports from Barista Hustle . The Coffee Cultural Landscape of Colombia as a UNESCO World Heritage site is documented by UNESCO . The grower organization milestone (FNC founded 1927) is supported by an overview of the federation . Juan Valdez creation timing is noted as 1960 by the official Juan Valdez site and the FNC timeline, while late-1950s campaign origins are discussed in other historical accounts .


    EPISODE: Pour Over Coffee (The Paper Filter Revolution)

    Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/pour-over-coffee

    Signature Roast (Peru) for pour over → https://bilgebrew.com/products/signature-roast-single-origin?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=pour-over-coffee


    What you’ll learn:

    - Why paper filters changed coffee flavor forever

    - The 3 variables that actually matter

    - A dead-simple pour-over method that’s repeatable


    Resources mentioned:

    - How to Brew Pour Over (without bitter/watery) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/how-to-brew-pour-over-coffee-without-bitter-or-watery-results



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    11 分
  • Moka Pot Coffee: The 1933 Italian Invention, Weird Little History Bits, and How to Brew It Without Wrecking the Flavor.
    2026/03/27

    The moka pot isn’t espresso, but it’s one of the most iconic home brewers ever made. We cover its origins, the real story behind the name “Moka,” the mustache mascot, and why a Bali Blue like Bilgewater is a perfect match.


    EPISODE: Moka Pot Coffee (The 1933 Italian Invention)

    Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/moka-pot-coffee

    All Hands (Light Espresso Roast) → https://bilgebrew.com/products/all-hands-light-roast?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=moka-pot-coffee


    What you’ll learn:

    - What moka pot is (and what it isn’t)

    - Why moka pot turns bitter for most people

    - The easiest setup for smooth, strong cups


    Resources mentioned:

    - Moka Pot Guide (without the bitter burn) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/the-ultimate-guide-to-brewing-great-coffee-with-a-moka-pot-without-the-bitter-burn



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    10 分
  • French Press Coffee: Origins, Fun History, and How to Brew It Right (Without the Mud)
    2026/03/20

    French press coffee is simple, but it has a surprisingly messy history and a few easy mistakes that ruin the cup. We cover where it came from, why it’s called “French,” how immersion brewing works, and the clean, repeatable method—plus why a Sumatra like Poseidon’s Wrath is a killer match.


    EPISODE: French Press Coffee (Origins, Fun History, and How to Brew It Right)

    Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/french-press-coffee

    Maritime Roast (smooth medium) → https://bilgebrew.com/products/maritime-medium-roast?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=french-press-coffee


    What you’ll learn:

    - Why French press tastes “bigger” and heavier

    - The #1 reason it turns bitter or muddy

    - A simple press method that’s consistent


    Resources mentioned:

    - Best French Press Done Right → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/best-french-press-done-right

    - How to Make French Press Coffee That Tastes Smooth (Not Bitter) → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/how-to-make-french-press-coffee-that-tastes-smooth-not-bitter



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    12 分
  • Vietnamese Coffee: How a Slow Drip Became a Global Obsession
    2026/03/13

    On paper, Vietnamese coffee is simple: strong coffee, a slow drip, and often sweetened condensed milk. In real life, it’s a whole culture—built from French colonial history, Vietnam’s rise as a robusta superpower, and a brewing method that forces you to slow down for seven to ten minutes while your coffee drips. In this longer episode of The Bilge Brew Show, Nate and Mason unpack where Vietnamese coffee came from, why robusta dominates, how the phin filter works, how cà phê sữa đá became the signature drink, and why variations like egg coffee and salt coffee exist. We’ll also give you a practical, no-nonsense home method—and point you to our Specialty Grade Coffee episode if you want the “what makes coffee good in the first place” foundation. Learn Vietnamese coffee basics: why Vietnam is the robusta powerhouse, how the phin filter works, how cà phê sữa đá became iconic, and how to brew it right.

    On paper, Vietnamese coffee is simple: strong coffee, a slow drip, and often sweetened condensed milk. In real life, it’s a whole culture—built from French colonial history, Vietnam’s rise as a robusta superpower, and a brewing method that forces you to slow down for seven to ten minutes while your coffee drips. In this longer episode of The Bilge Brew Show, Nate and Mason unpack where Vietnamese coffee came from, why robusta dominates, how the phin filter works, how cà phê sữa đá became the signature drink, and why variations like egg coffee and salt coffee exist. We’ll also give you a practical, no-nonsense home method—and point you to our Specialty Grade Coffee episode if you want the “what makes coffee good in the first place” foundation.

    Key sources:

    - Michelin Guide: Vietnamese coffee culture + cà phê sữa đá + bạc xỉu + salt coffee origin (Huế)

    - Serious Eats (July 2024): Vietnamese coffee history, robusta dominance, phin method, steeping + drip time, condensed milk guidance

    - World Coffee Research: Vietnam as the world’s largest robusta producer (>40% of global robusta output)

    - Reuters: robusta has stronger taste and higher caffeine than arabica

    - Café Giảng + Food & Wine: egg coffee origin in Hanoi (1946; Nguyễn Văn Giảng; milk shortage story)

    Related episode:

    - The Bilge Brew Show — “What ‘Specialty Grade Coffee’ Actually Means (And What It Doesn’t)”


    EPISODE: Vietnamese Coffee (How a Slow Drip Became a Global Staple)

    Episode page: https://bilgebrew.com/podcast/vietnamese-coffee

    Strong + smooth dark espresso option → https://bilgebrew.com/products/anchor-espresso?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=shownotes&utm_campaign=vietnamese-coffee


    What you’ll learn:

    - What makes Vietnamese coffee unique (beyond sweetened condensed milk)

    - The phin filter basics

    - How to make a legit version at home


    Resources mentioned:

    - Vietnamese Coffee Explained + Recipe → https://bilgebrew.com/blogs/from-the-bilge-blog/vietnamese-coffee-explained-plus-the-best-vietnamese-iced-coffee-recipe




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    10 分