A LETTER FROM AN ATHEIST

"You are really convinced that you've got all the answers. You've really got yourself tricked into believing that you're 100% right. Well, let me tell you just one thing. Do you consider yourself to be compassionate of other humans? If you're right, as you say you are, and you believe that, then how can you sleep at night? When you speak with me, you are speaking with someone who you believe is walking directly into eternal damnation, into an endless onslaught of horrendous pain which your 'loving' god created, yet you stand by and do nothing. If you believed one bit that thousands every day were falling into an eternal and unchangeable fate, you should be running the streets mad with rage at their blindness. That's equivalent to standing on a street corner and watching every person that passes you walk blindly directly into the path of a bus and die, yet you stand idly by and do nothing. You're just twiddling your thumbs, happy in the knowledge that one day that 'walk' signal will shine your way across the road. Think about it. Imagine the horrors Hell must have in store if the Bible is true. You're just going to allow that to happen and not care about saving anyone but yourself? If you're right then you're an uncaring, unemotional and purely selfish (expletive) that has no right to talk about subjects such as love and caring."

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Japanese Coffee is a Canny Idea


Japanese coffee is a canny idea
By Kevin Steen

Tea has been an icon of Japanese culture since the ninth century, consumed daily for medicinal, ceremonial and social purposes.


Though tea may never fall out of favor, young and fashionable Japanese consumers are willing to try new Western-style products, including coffee.

In the last couple of decades, Japan has become one of the largest super-premium coffee markets in the world, buying single-origin specialty coffees from countries like Burundi, Ethiopia, Haiti, Indonesia, Jamaica (Japan buys 90 percent of Jamaica’s famed Blue Mountain coffee,) Puerto Rico, Peru, the island of St. Helena, Tanzania…if it’s unusual and expensive, there’s a market for it in Japan.

On the other hand, the Japanese by far consume more hot or cold canned coffee than any other country…that’s right, I said canned. It’s available through vending machines which sit on every street corner. More than two million of them, in fact, dispensing 9 billion cans of liquid coffee annually, equaling an average of 75 cans per person. Sales in Japan account for three-fourths of the roughly $17.4 billion market for ready-to-drink coffee beverages around the world.
Ready-to-drink packaged coffee is to Japan what soda pop is to North America, and American companies like Coca-Cola have been selling canned coffee in Japan since the 1970’s, when hot and cold vending machines were invented.

These high-tech vending machines serve each can of coffee hot or cold, just as you like, and in just about any combination: black or with milk, sweetened or unsweetened.
This vending-machine mentality suits the fast-paced Japanese, with their stressful lifestyles and high regard for technology. Food products (along with everything else) are marketed on the basis of convenience, practicality and enjoyment.

But is it any good?
I suspect Canadians have been spoiled by the convenience of drive-thru windows serving fresh coffee and our custom-made espresso drinks offered in comfort by Yours Truly. I also suspect people drink them purely for the caffeine, and not necessarily for a taste sensation.
Unless you’ve been lucky enough to travel about in Japan, Taiwan or South Korea, you’ll have to visit a local Asian food market to find a sample here in Canada. If any readers are familiar with this product, I would love to hear your review! Better yet, the next time you’re back from Asia, could you bring me a sample of canned coffee? I’m just too busy to get away.

Kevin Steen is a true coffee lover and proprietor of Damascus Coffee House in Riverview. Do you have a coffee question for Kevin? Visit him at the shop, or call him at 855-4646.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Sumatran coffee has distinctive flavour
By Kevin Steen

Equatorial islands enjoy a tropical climate perfect for growing coffee, but they are also the places most easily devastated by natural disasters.
Sri Lanka and Indonesia took the brunt of the 2004 tsunami created by an earthquake off the Sumatran coast. The tsunami devastated coastal regions of Asia and Africa.
This traumatic event caused coffee prices to go up in Indonesia and availability to go down. Even though the tsunami didn’t touch the higher altitude coffee-growing regions of Sumatra, the deaths of least 180,000 people created a labour shortage, while roads, bridges and infrastructure were destroyed. Organizations like USAid and many others have spent the last few years assisting farmer-based cooperatives to restore production of internationally certified, high-grade, organic Arabica coffees.
Indonesia is the world’s fourth-largest producer of coffee (after Brazil, Vietnam and Colombia), producing 370,732 metric tons of coffee in the 2004 calendar year. Experts wondered if Indonesian coffee prices would soar the following year because of the disaster, and they were right. By May of 2005, Mandheling arabica was worth $3,800-4,000 per ton, compared with $1,900-2,000 per ton the year before.
Sumatra’s two main growing regions are Mandheling around the high mountain basin of Lake Toba in North Sumatra province, and the Gayo Mountain Region of Lake Tawar near the northern tip of Sumatra in Aceh province. Sumatra’s peaks rise to 3,650 m (12,000 feet.) This elevation combined with heavy rainfall, high humidity, high temperatures and low winds, provides ideal growing conditions. More than 100 active and inactive volcanoes dot the Indonesian islands, their contents spilling down to enrich the soil in the plains and lowlands.
Sumatran coffee has a distinctive, pungent top note that is absent from other coffees. Cream and sugar doesn’t cover it up, either. That musty top note gives way to a rich, heavy-bodied flavor that lingers on the tongue. Our Down East version of organic, fair trade Sumatra is soft, and silky with low acidity, unlike coffee from neighboring Java (remember, the term acidity does not refer to actual acid content but to the sensation of brightness or sparkle on the tongue.) The darker it is roasted, the richer and more syrupy it becomes. Sumatra is ideal to savour after dinner, with or without dessert!
As I finish today’s column, I’m looking at my steaming hot mug of Sumatran coffee and wondering at the bravery of the people who grew it.
Kevin Steen is a true coffee lover and proprietor of Damascus Coffee House in Riverview. Do you have a coffee question for Kevin? Visit him at the shop, or call him at 855-4646.

Monday, October 22, 2007

The Love of Jesus

What really gets me in this drama how patience and pusuit are intermingled. Jesus saved us knowing we would run from Him, knowing we would at times go back to our old ways, knowing the trickery of the enemy and how often we may be seduced by him. He saved us and pursues us because He knows we need Him. Jesus does not passively wait for us in His patience but He violently pursues us. Jesus sacrificed His life 2000 years ago for us and He continues to lay it down when necessary...
Thanks you Jesus for your love and patience.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Life these days


Hey kids,
Life has been quite a jar of cortosol lately! Really caught up with the busyness of life the past month or so. So many responsibilites with family, church, business plans and work of course. It has been an effort the past couple weeks to press into God. Patience has never been a strong point in my life but Holy Spirit has been ever present and ever mindful to call me to a deeper peace amidst the hustle and bustle lately.

This brings me to what God has been showing me lately. Waiting on God and seeing situations and the people in those situations on a personal level. There have been times lately at the peak of deadlines that I wanted to go off on people. I praise God for His gentleness; He prodded me hard enough for me to hear Him speak to me. I took a step back and saw the people and the situation itself for what it was... what kind of day, life did that guy have up to this moment? What was the value of the situation comparred to my reaction and it's eternal weight? This expression comes to mind, "until you walk a mile in someone's shoes..."

Jesus warned us, "Judge not for by the measure that you judge another, that same measure will be used against you..."

Thank you Jesus for you kindness and patience when mine are not visible...