Tag: Cafes

  • What Is the World Barista Championship?

    The World Barista Championship (WBC) is the most prestigious competition in specialty coffee. Run annually since 2000 by the World Coffee Events organization, it brings together national barista champions from around 60 countries to compete for the global title.

    The format

    Competitors have 15 minutes to prepare and serve four espressos, four milk drinks (typically cappuccinos), and four signature drinks of their own design to a panel of judges. They are scored on taste, technique, presentation, and the integration of their narrative around the coffee.

    The signature drink portion is where competitors get creative. Some build elaborate multi-stage presentations. Others focus on extreme simplicity to highlight a specific coffee. The signature drink format has driven significant industry experimentation, particularly with processing methods, brewing techniques, and presentation styles.

    The path to the world stage

    National champions qualify by winning their country’s barista championship. Most major coffee countries (US, Brazil, Italy, Australia, Japan, Korea, the UK, Norway, etc.) have multi-stage national competitions. The national champion represents their country at the WBC.

    Why it matters to the industry

    WBC competitors and winners often become major industry voices. Past champions have started influential roasteries (James Hoffmann from the UK, Michael Phillips from the US), launched widely-read educational content, or shaped what techniques and processing methods spread through specialty coffee.

    The competition also drives technical innovation. Techniques that win on the WBC stage often become standard at specialty cafes within 1-2 years.

    Notable champions and influence

    James Hoffmann (UK, 2007) became one of the most-watched coffee educators on YouTube. Tim Wendelboe (Norway, 2004) built a Norwegian roastery that influenced the entire Nordic specialty coffee scene. Sasa Sestic (Australia, 2015) helped popularize anaerobic processing through his competition presentations.

    Criticisms

    The WBC has been criticized for skewing toward elaborate technical performances rather than reflecting actual cafe work. Winning routines often involve coffees and processes far removed from what a customer would experience walking into a cafe. Some argue this disconnects the competition from the broader profession.

    The format has evolved in response, with judging giving more weight to drink quality and less to elaborate presentation. The balance between performance art and practical craft is a continuing tension in the competition.

  • Tipping at Coffee Shops: What Is Expected?

    Tipping at coffee shops varies dramatically by country, service style, and local convention. Here is what is generally expected in 2026.

    United States and Canada

    Tipping is expected for any made-to-order drink. The standard convention is $1-2 per drink for a simple coffee, or 10-20% of the total bill for elaborate drinks or larger orders. The digital tipping screens at most modern POS systems default to 15-25% suggested tips.

    For takeaway drip coffee with no preparation work, tipping is more discretionary, but a small tip ($0.50-1) is still appreciated. For sit-down service, table service tipping conventions (15-20%) apply.

    Western Europe (excluding the UK)

    Tipping is generally not expected. Service is included in menu prices in most places. Rounding up to the nearest euro or leaving small change for friendly service is appreciated but not obligatory.

    Italian espresso bars in particular do not expect tips. You pay the price on the menu and that is it. Trying to over-tip in Italy can confuse or even mildly offend the barista.

    United Kingdom

    Tipping coffee shops in the UK is in transition. Historically not expected; now increasingly common, particularly with the spread of digital tipping prompts. A 5-10% tip on a large order or for sit-down service is appreciated. For a quick takeaway coffee, no tip is fine.

    Australia and New Zealand

    Tipping is not the cultural norm. Workers are paid living wages and tips are not factored into income. A small tip for exceptional service is fine but not expected.

    Asia (Japan, Korea, China)

    Tipping is generally not done and can be confusing or refused. Pay the menu price. Some specialty cafes in larger cities have started accepting tips through digital systems, but it remains uncommon.

    The digital tipping screen problem

    Many specialty cafes now use POS systems that prompt for tips on every transaction, including takeaway drip coffee. These prompts often default to 15-25%, which feels excessive for a simple takeaway.

    It is fine to skip the tip on the screen for a basic to-go coffee with no preparation work. The expectation is real for made-to-order drinks; for self-served drip you brewed yourself, not so much.

    The bigger picture

    Tipping covers what wages do not. In countries where baristas are well-paid (Australia, much of continental Europe), tips are minimal. In countries where wages have not kept pace with skill expansion (US in particular), tips materially supplement income for baristas.

    If you can afford the drink, you can almost always afford the tip. For specialty coffee in particular, the people pulling your shots are highly trained and often underpaid for their skill.

  • Cafe Etiquette: What Not to Do

    Specialty coffee cafes have informal etiquette that regulars know and tourists often violate. None of this is gatekeeping; it is just the social norms of any specialized space.

    Order at the bar, not from your seat

    Most specialty cafes are counter service. Walking in, sitting down, and waiting for a server is the most common visitor mistake. Approach the bar, look at the menu, order. The barista will tell you to grab a seat or wait at the bar depending on what you ordered.

    Do not customize beyond reason

    You can absolutely modify drinks. But asking for “extra hot, half foam, three pumps of vanilla, stirred not shaken” at a specialty cafe will produce eye-rolls. Specialty cafes design their menu to highlight specific coffee preparations. Trust the menu first; modify if you must, but lightly.

    Asking for sugar, milk, or oat is fine and welcomed. Asking the barista to remake a drink because you want it different is also fine if you do it once politely.

    Tipping is normal in much of the world

    In the US, Canada, and parts of Europe, tipping at coffee shops is expected. A dollar per drink, or 10-15% of the bill, is standard for table service or made-to-order drinks. Even for a takeaway drink, a small tip on the digital pad is the norm.

    In Italy, France, and other places where tipping is not the cultural norm, it is fine to skip. Pay the menu price.

    Do not ask for free wifi password before ordering

    Order first, then ask. Walking in, sitting down, and asking for the wifi password before buying anything signals that you are using the cafe as a free coworking space. Some cafes will refuse the password until you have ordered.

    Do not crowd around the espresso machine

    The bar area where the barista is working is their workspace. Standing too close, peering over the machine, or asking detailed questions while they are pulling shots makes their job harder. If you want to talk shop, wait for a slow moment and ask.

    Limit how long you camp on a single drink

    If the cafe is busy and you have nursed one drink for three hours while occupying a four-person table, you are part of the problem. Order another drink, give up the table, or take your laptop somewhere else. This is not enforced rigidly in most places, but reading the room is appreciated.

  • What Is a Slow Bar Cafe?

    A slow bar (sometimes “tasting bar”) is a cafe model where one barista focuses on a single multi-method brewing station, prepared coffees are brought to you with attention and explanation, and the experience is intentionally unhurried. It is a deliberate counterpoint to the high-throughput espresso bar that defined the third wave’s middle years.

    How it works

    Instead of an espresso machine and a queue of waiting customers, the slow bar typically has a workspace with multiple brewing methods at the ready: pour-over (V60, Kalita, Origami, Chemex), siphon, AeroPress, sometimes immersion methods or specialty espresso. The barista takes one customer at a time, often discusses the available coffees, and prepares the chosen brew with full attention.

    Drinks may take 5-10 minutes to prepare. The cafe expects this. Customers expect it too. The pace is part of the value.

    The economics

    Slow bars serve fewer drinks per hour but at much higher ticket sizes. A standard cafe might serve 30-40 drinks per barista per hour at $5 average. A slow bar might serve 8-12 drinks at $9-15 average. The math works because the experience is what is being sold, not just the coffee.

    Operations are also simpler. Less hardware, fewer staff per shift, less waste. Profit margins can actually be better than high-volume cafes, especially in markets where rent allows lower throughput.

    Where they are growing

    Slow bars work best in second-tier cities where rent is moderate, in destination neighborhoods where the cafe itself is a draw, and in countries with strong coffee cultures (Japan has had slow bar equivalents for decades). They are less viable in expensive downtown locations where the per-square-foot economics demand higher throughput.

    The customer experience

    You order, are seated or stand, and watch your drink being prepared. The barista may explain the coffee, talk about origin or processing, ask about your taste preferences. The cup arrives with care. The whole interaction takes 5-15 minutes.

    This is genuinely different from picking up a latte to go. Whether you find it engaging or annoying depends on what you want from a coffee visit. For people who treat cafe time as a deliberate experience rather than a transaction, slow bars are increasingly the favored model.

  • What Does Barista Mean?

    A barista is a person who prepares coffee, particularly espresso-based drinks, in a cafe or bar setting. The word comes from Italian, where it literally means “bar person” or “bartender.” In Italy it can refer to either a coffee server or a bartender; in English it almost always specifically means a coffee preparer.

    The role’s expansion

    Through the second wave (Starbucks era), the barista role was largely service-oriented: take orders, push buttons on commercial espresso machines, steam milk, hand off drinks. Skill mattered, but the workflow was standardized for speed and consistency.

    The third wave dramatically expanded what being a barista meant. Modern specialty baristas are expected to understand extraction theory, dial in espresso for changing beans and conditions, brew multiple manual methods, identify origin characteristics in cup, and articulate all of this to customers. The role moved closer to a sommelier comparison than a service worker.

    Training and certification

    The Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) and other organizations offer formal barista certifications across multiple skill levels. The SCA has Foundation, Intermediate, and Professional levels covering brewing, latte art, milk technique, and shop operations.

    Many specialty cafes also have internal training programs that take new hires through weeks or months of formal instruction before they pull customer shots.

    Competitions

    The World Barista Championship has been running since 2000 and is the premier competition for the role. Baristas prepare a series of espresso, milk drink, and signature drink courses for judges, scored on technique, taste, and presentation.

    Top competitors often go on to influential industry roles, opening their own cafes or running training programs for major roasters.

    The wage gap

    Despite the skill expansion, barista wages have lagged the role’s complexity in many markets. The third wave produced more demanding work without proportionally raising base pay, a structural tension that has fueled unionization efforts at some specialty cafes in recent years.

    The best specialty cafes pay meaningfully better than commercial chains. The gap between what a great barista produces and what they earn remains one of the industry’s open issues.

  • What Is Third Wave Coffee?

    Third wave coffee is the movement that emerged in the early 2000s and turned coffee from a beverage into a craft, comparable to how natural wine or specialty beer matured a generation earlier. The term was popularized by roaster Trish Rothgeb in 2002.

    The wave concept

    First wave: the post-war commodity boom of canned grocery coffee (Folgers, Maxwell House) that made coffee a household staple but treated it as a generic product.

    Second wave: the Peet’s and Starbucks era from the 1970s through the early 2000s. Espresso drinks, dark roasts, the cafe as a third place. Coffee became a social and lifestyle product, but origin still mattered less than blend consistency.

    Third wave: the focus shifted to single farms, processing methods, and lighter roasts that highlight rather than mask the bean’s character. Coffee became closer to a wine analogy: where it grew, who grew it, and how it was processed all matter.

    What changed

    Single-origin coffees became normal. Light roasts gained respect. Brewing methods diversified into pour-over, AeroPress, and siphon. Baristas became craftspeople rather than service workers. Direct trade and traceability became expected. Cafes built their identity around the quality of the coffee, not just the atmosphere.

    The aesthetic

    The third wave produced a recognizable visual language: minimalist white tile, plywood, exposed industrial elements, hand-lettered chalkboards, and so on. This look became so widespread that it eventually became a cliche. Many of the cafes most identified with the movement deliberately moved away from it in the late 2010s.

    The plateau

    By the late 2010s, third wave practices had become the new baseline. The movement reached cultural saturation. Younger drinkers raised on third wave norms started rejecting some of the dogmas, especially the implicit gatekeeping around what a serious coffee drinker should and should not do.

    What comes next

    The next wave does not have a settled name yet. Themes include warmer hospitality, more inclusive menus (oat milk in your espresso is fine now), deeper attention to producer-side issues, and continued processing experimentation. The third wave’s core legacy, that coffee can be a craft worth caring about, is now permanent.

  • The Third Wave Movement: Where It Started, Where It Is Now, Where It Is Going

    The Third Wave Movement: Where It Started, Where It Is Now, Where It Is Going

    The phrase third wave coffee gets thrown around so loosely that it has nearly lost its meaning. To some, it’s a marketing term for any coffee shop with a minimalist logo and white tile. To others, it’s a specific historical movement with founders, manifestos, and consequences. The truth is closer to the second one, and the story is worth knowing if you care about the coffee in your cup today.

    What the waves actually refer to

    The wave metaphor was popularized by Trish Rothgeb in 2002, when she wrote an article in The Roasters Guild’s newsletter that named the movement she was watching unfold. The waves work like this:

    First wave was the post-war commodity boom: Folgers, Maxwell House, instant coffee, the rise of coffee as a household staple in nearly every American home. Coffee was a beverage, not a craft. Quality varied wildly and few drinkers noticed.

    Second wave began in the 1960s and 70s with Peet’s in Berkeley and ran through the explosive growth of Starbucks in the 1990s and 2000s. Second wave introduced espresso drinks, dark roasts, and the cafe as a third place. Origin still mattered less than blend; quality was about consistency at scale.

    Third wave emerged in the early 2000s as a small group of roasters and cafes pushed back against the homogenization of the second wave. They wanted to know which farm a coffee came from, who picked it, how it was processed, and how to roast it to express that specificity rather than mask it.

    The founding cafes and roasters

    A few names dominate the early third wave history:

    • Stumptown (Portland, 1999): Direct-trade green sourcing, light roasts, dedication to single-origin transparency.
    • Intelligentsia (Chicago, 1995): Pioneered the Direct Trade certification, formalizing relationships with specific farms.
    • Counter Culture (Durham, 1995): Heavy investment in barista training and origin education.
    • Tim Wendelboe (Oslo, 2007): Pushed light roasts, washed processing, and Nordic precision into the global conversation.
    • Coffee Collective (Copenhagen, 2007): Co-founded by World Barista Champion Klaus Thomsen, brought competition-level brewing to a retail context.
    • Square Mile (London, 2008): James Hoffmann’s roastery, which became the European reference point for what third wave coffee should taste like.

    What third wave actually changed

    The lasting impact of the third wave wasn’t a single product or technique. It was a shift in what coffee was assumed to be. A few specific changes that the movement embedded into the global coffee culture:

    Single-origin became normal. A bag listing a specific farm and washing station, rather than just a country, was exotic in 2005 and standard in 2026.

    Light roasting became respected. The second wave assumed darker was better. The third wave demonstrated that lighter roasts could express origin character that disappeared at darker roast levels.

    Brewing methods diversified. Pour-over, AeroPress, Chemex, siphon, and other manual methods were marginal in cafes before 2005. They became standard offerings as the movement valued the cafe as a place to taste rather than to caffeinate.

    The barista became a craftsman. Wages rose, training programs formalized, the World Barista Championship became a serious competitive circuit, and “barista” became a respected job title in many markets.

    Direct trade and traceability became expected. Specialty buyers built direct relationships with farms, often visiting and forming long-term partnerships, in contrast to the commodity broker model that dominated previously.

    The third wave plateau

    Around 2018-2020, the movement clearly plateaued in many markets. The cafes that defined the wave reached their cultural saturation point. The minimalist white-tile aesthetic became a cliche. Younger drinkers raised on third wave norms started to find some of the dogmas (no flavored drinks, no oat milk in your espresso, no compromises on light roast) more annoying than meaningful.

    This plateau wasn’t a failure. It was the natural maturation of any movement that grows from outsider to mainstream. By 2020, third wave practices had become the new baseline, and the next conversation was about what came next.

    What’s coming after

    There’s no consensus on what to call the next wave, but several themes are emerging:

    Hospitality is back in fashion. The aloof barista era is ending. Cafes that combine third wave technical competence with warm, accessible hospitality (rather than the implicit gatekeeping of the early third wave) are growing fastest.

    Inclusive menus. The dogma against flavored drinks, alternative milks, and cold brew has softened. The best new cafes serve great espresso to the espresso obsessive and a great oat-milk vanilla latte to the person who wants one, without judgment in either direction.

    Producer-side conversations. The third wave told the story of farms in the abstract. The next conversation is more grounded: how do farmers actually capture more value, what do living wages look like across the supply chain, and how does the industry adapt to climate-driven origin shifts.

    Fermentation experimentation. Anaerobic naturals, co-fermentation, lactic processing, and other producer-side experiments are pushing flavor boundaries in ways the early third wave didn’t anticipate.

    The retail-centric model is being questioned. Subscription services, RTD coffee, and direct-from-roaster relationships are challenging the assumption that the cafe is the central institution of specialty coffee.

    What it means for you, the drinker

    You don’t have to care about the wave terminology to benefit from the third wave’s legacy. The bag of coffee on your shelf is almost certainly better, more transparently sourced, and roasted with more skill than the equivalent bag from twenty years ago. The cafe you walk into is more likely to serve a great cup, regardless of whether it markets itself as third wave or not. The brewing methods you use at home are more likely to produce something memorable.

    The third wave gave us all of that. The next wave, whatever it ends up being called, is being built on top of it.