No just visitWould you like to live there?
I agree with MoreCoffee where I would go for Canada as well.
Tell me, as my wife and I only spent three days in Canada (did the tourist thing around Niagara Falls), this meant that we didn't really get a chance to try out their coffee, so my question is, as we discovered that Americans seem to struggle with making a good cup of coffee, is this something that the Canadians can do as well (or at least almost as well) as we do here in Australia?
I agree with MoreCoffee where I would go for Canada as well.
Tell me, as my wife and I only spent three days in Canada (did the tourist thing around Niagara Falls), this meant that we didn't really get a chance to try out their coffee, so my question is, as we discovered that Americans seem to struggle with making a good cup of coffee, is this something that the Canadians can do as well (or at least almost as well) as we do here in Australia?
At the risk of throwing in the proverbial spanner, I will have to confess that Australians tend to lean more toward Canada than we do with the USA, who knows, this could be due to us knowing more Americans than we do Canadians? I remember seeing an Australian documentary on a major Canadian snow resort (can't remember its name) where they mentioned that 80% of the itinerant staff were Australians. When I talk to fellow Christians about Canada and the USA, we tend to perceive Canada as being a very friendly country whereas the US is sadly known for both its internal violence and with the violence that it seems to export to other countries, particularly those who are in the Middle East.Well, something is implied with that.
At the risk of throwing in the proverbial spanner, I will have to confess that Australians tend to lean more toward Canada than we do with the USA, who knows, this could be due to us knowing more Americans than we do Canadians? I remember seeing an Australian documentary on a major Canadian snow resort (can't remember its name) where they mentioned that 80% of the itinerant staff were Australians. When I talk to fellow Christians about Canada and the USA, we tend to perceive Canada as being a very friendly country whereas the US is sadly known for both its internal violence and with the violence that it seems to export to other countries, particularly those who are in the Middle East.
In your defence, I do tell our friends that during our six weeks in the USA that we did not see any violence, though we came close to possibly being mugged in Baltimore but we quickly got ourselves out of a situation that we silly tourists should not have put ourselves within in the first place.
As the Canadian and Australian dollars seem to be kept at about the same rate against the US dollar, I would imagine that they will be seeing a lot more Australians over in Canada. When we were in the USA three years back our dollar was worth $1.05 against the greenback which suited us just nicely but now it's down around 71 cents and the Canadian dollar is about 75 cents.
Having said this, I have already planned our future trip to New England (USA) after we return back from the UK in a couple of years time.
I agree with MoreCoffee where I would go for Canada as well.
Tell me, as my wife and I only spent three days in Canada (did the tourist thing around Niagara Falls), this meant that we didn't really get a chance to try out their coffee, so my question is, as we discovered that Americans seem to struggle with making a good cup of coffee, is this something that the Canadians can do as well (or at least almost as well) as we do here in Australia?
At the risk of throwing in the proverbial spanner, I will have to confess that Australians tend to lean more toward Canada than we do with the USA, who knows, this could be due to us knowing more Americans than we do Canadians? I remember seeing an Australian documentary on a major Canadian snow resort (can't remember its name) where they mentioned that 80% of the itinerant staff were Australians. When I talk to fellow Christians about Canada and the USA, we tend to perceive Canada as being a very friendly country whereas the US is sadly known for both its internal violence and with the violence that it seems to export to other countries, particularly those who are in the Middle East.
In your defence, I do tell our friends that during our six weeks in the USA that we did not see any violence, though we came close to possibly being mugged in Baltimore but we quickly got ourselves out of a situation that we silly tourists should not have put ourselves within in the first place.
What you've said is much the same that we were told by a bakery owner in Strasburg just south of Lancaster PA, where he said, "Even though there is almost a Starbucks on every block in the US, most Americans seem to hate their coffee but we go there because its a cultural thing".One problem with coffee in the US would seem to be that the masses have been convinced that "dark roast" and "sophisticated" are pretty much synonymous. Lots of coffee in the US is horribly over-roasted, to the point it could have started life as any old rubbish because about all you can taste is the characteristics of the roast rather than the bean.
Sometimes a dark roast works well and other times a light roast works well. It depends on the mean, if you dark-roast a Kenyan coffee you'll ruin it but if you light-roast a Brazilian coffee you'll miss out on the best of the flavors.
What you've said is much the same that we were told by a bakery owner in Strasburg just south of Lancaster PA, where he said, "Even though there is almost a Starbucks on every block in the US, most Americans seem to hate their coffee but we go there because its a cultural thing".
Being a Melbournian, where we take our coffee very . . . very seriously, I was looking forward to a good brew when we arrived in California but for the first few days what we got was less than average. For whatever reason, I presumed that the US would be the coffee capital of the world but by the end of the first week, where I thought that I had maybe gone to the wrong places, I then realised that this was the norm. As I drove for about 5000Km (3100 miles) across 12 States (but Virginia was an accident as I got lost where I ended up crossing the Potomac); it became a bit of a game to find a good brew. One of the barista's at a lodge in the Grand Canyon understood my 'plight' where he said that he knows that most Australians are not all that excited with their coffee, so he said that even though his machine was both old and small that he would 'try very hard to make us a good cappuccino'.
Starbucks really is odd ....
I do love coffee with hazelnut creamer in it
I drink a lot of coffee black but sometime prefer the hazelnut flavorMy wife likes creamers in coffee. I don't care for them myself, for me it's just coffee and either milk or half-and-half.