The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf Introduces an Exciting New Line of Lattes

The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf Introduces an Exciting New Line of Lattes

 

Los Angeles, January 6, 2025 – The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf is kicking off the new year with bold new flavors for latte lovers. Known for its signature 5-bean espresso blend, the brand continues to elevate the coffee experience by expanding its latte lineup with three exciting additions.


The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf’s unique espresso blend is crafted from beans sourced from five renowned coffee-growing regions, including Costa Rica and Sumatra. Each bean type is roasted separately to enhance its distinct flavor before being blended, resulting in a rich, complex espresso that forms the foundation of their creamy and flavorful lattes.


The new lattes include:


Honey & Nut Latte (hot and iced) – A sweet and nutty creation with bold espresso, hints of honey and hazelnut, and a smooth finish with Califia Farms almond milk.  

Honey & Nut Matcha Latte (hot and iced) – Perfect for tea lovers, this latte combines bright, vibrant matcha with sweet honey and creamy almond milk.  

Spanish Latte (hot and iced) – A delightful mix of bold espresso, rich condensed milk, steamed milk, and a touch of vanilla, with a subtle cinnamon aroma.


At The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, quality is at the heart of everything we do, said Jay Isais, Vice President of Coffee and Sourcing. From working closely with farms and roasters to crafting every cup with premium espresso, our dedication to excellence is unmatched. These new lattes showcase our espresso’s superior quality and offer our guests exciting new flavors to enjoy.


The new lattes are available now through March 18, 2025, in cafés, online, and via The Coffee Bean mobile app. To sweeten the deal, new members who sign up for The Coffee Bean Rewards program in January will receive a free drink. Existing members can earn 25 bonus points for every order placed through the app this month.



About The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf


Founded in Southern California in 1963, The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf is a global specialty coffee and tea brand committed to delivering exceptional beverages inspired by flavors from around the world. Known for its premium coffees and teas, the brand continues to innovate with beloved classics and new creations alike. With over 1,100 locations in more than 20 countries, The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf remains a leader in the coffee industry and is part of the Jollibee Group of Companies.


For more details, visit www.coffeebean.com.



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Jan 08, 2025, 09:01 ET


NESCAFÉ Expands Portfolio with New Espresso Concentrate Innovation  


Arlington, Va., January 8, 2025 – NESCAFÉ, the world's largest coffee producer, has introduced its first-ever liquid concentrate line in the United States with the launch of NESCAFÉ Espresso Concentrate. This innovative product is designed to meet the growing demand for customizable, convenient, and premium at-home coffee. NESCAFÉ Espresso Concentrate dissolves quickly in water or milk, making it easy for coffee enthusiasts to create café-style iced espresso beverages in seconds.


NESCAFÉ believes everyone deserves a high-quality espresso experience. With NESCAFÉ Espresso Concentrate, there's no need for expensive equipment or complex brewing methods. Whether inspired by a creative espresso drink seen online or simply craving a classic iced latte, coffee lovers can craft their favorite beverages effortlessly at home. Just pour a shot over ice, mix with water or milk, customize to taste, and enjoy a café-style mocha, macchiato, or cappuccino in moments.


Made with 100% Arabica beans, NESCAFÉ Espresso Concentrate is available in two delicious options, offering something for every at-home barista:  


- **Black** – A rich and robust concentrate, perfect as a base for any espresso creation.  

- **Sweet Vanilla** – A smooth, sweet blend that adds a comforting touch to every sip.  


"Gen Z and millennial consumers are constantly seeking cold, convenient, and customizable café-quality coffee," said Felipe Acosta, NESCAFÉ Senior Brand Marketing Manager. "Following the success of our NESCAFÉ Gold Espresso and Ice Roast, we’re excited to continue meeting these evolving preferences. NESCAFÉ Espresso Concentrate empowers coffee lovers to unleash their creativity and enjoy premium espresso drinks instantly from the comfort of their home—no special equipment needed."  


NESCAFÉ Espresso Concentrate comes in a 300 mL bottle, yielding approximately 20 servings of high-quality espresso when prepared as directed. It will be available nationwide starting in February, with a suggested retail price of $9.49 (prices may vary by retailer).  


Stay updated with the latest news from NESCAFÉ by following them on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and X, or by visiting nescafe.com/us/.  


About Nestlé USA  


Nestlé USA is dedicated to enhancing the quality of life through its food and beverage products. Its portfolio includes iconic brands such as Coffee mate, DiGiorno, and Nestlé Toll House. The company also holds the largest coffee portfolio in the United States, featuring NESCAFÉ, Starbucks Coffee at Home, and Seattle's Best. Nestlé USA is a subsidiary of Nestlé S.A., headquartered in Vevey, Switzerland, recognized as the world's largest food and beverage company and named among "The World's Most Admired Food Companies" by Fortune magazine for over 25 consecutive years. For more information, visit nestleusa.com.  

 

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With each sip, coffee takes you on a journey through time and space, awakening your senses and invigorating your spirit. It's not just a beverage; it's a passport to different lands and traditions, a key to unlocking new perspectives and connections.

How can you embrace the coffee adventure?

Step out of your comfort zone and explore the diverse world of coffee. Try different brewing methods, sample beans from various regions, and immerse yourself in the rituals and stories that accompany each cup. Challenge your taste buds and expand your horizons with each new blend.

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So, are you ready to embark on this coffee journey? Grab your mug, take a sip, and let the rich aroma of coffee transport you to new heights of taste and discovery. The world of coffee awaits, full of bold flavors and exciting experiences. Cheers to the coffee adventure!

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The Brew Theory of Pour Over Coffee

Why is it so tricky to brew a great pour over coffee? After all, at its heart, making a pour over is a simple process—pouring hot water over ground coffee dissolves flavor and aromatic compounds in the beans. The challenge lies in dissolving only the right kinds of compounds in coffee—and in the right proportion. To make a perfect pour over coffee is to find a coffee’s “sweet spot,” a balance of the extraction percentage and strength level we consider most delicious.

Coffee Strength and Extraction

When it comes to understanding strength and extraction, we find it helpful to compare coffee to a spice cupboard. Much in the same way spices are stowed away in a cupboard, an array of delicious flavors—aka volatile and soluble compounds—are locked inside roasted coffee beans. To be exact, coffee contains on average 30 percent soluble compounds and 70 percent insoluble compounds. But like any cook’s cupboard, it also contains a handful of flavors we don’t want—or want only in limited quantities—particularly bitter compounds that impart flavors of ash, tobacco, or carbon. What’s so fun about making a pour over coffee is how much control it gives you in pulling out exactly the right flavors at exactly the right ratio. It’s the Michelin-starred chef of coffee brew methods.

Coffee Strength

The concentration or intensity of flavor in a cup is what we refer to as coffee strength. On the palate, a coffee’s strength registers on a spectrum between watery and dense. In scientific terms, it can be measured by the percentage of dissolved coffee to water, a measurement we call the total dissolved solubles, or TDS.

For example, a well-made espresso has a TDS of between 9 and 20 percent coffee to water. By comparison, the more mellow pour over coffee has a much lower TDS of between 1 and 2 percent coffee to 98 to 99 percent water.

Strength is largely influenced by the amount of coffee you brew. In barista terms, this is referred to as the brew ratio or coffee dose. In lay terms, the more coffee you brew, the stronger the cup. At Blue Bottle, to set accurate brew ratios, we use gram scales to measure both our coffee and our water.

And we set individual brew ratios for all our coffees: We prefer our blends slightly stronger, to stand up to milk, so we generally brew them at 30 grams coffee per 350 grams water. We prefer our single origins more nuanced and expressive, so we “turn down the volume” a bit and keep their brew ratio slightly lower, at 22 to 24 grams coffee per 350 grams water.

If this seems like a lot to remember, a good way to assess a coffee’s strength is to judge its body. That is, the weight and feel of the coffee on your tongue. Does the coffee feel light like skim milk or heavy like whipping cream?

Coffee Extraction

Picture a cup of tea: Steep it too little and it will taste like water. Steep it too much and you have tar. Coffee behaves much the same way. Extraction is a measure of the quality of the solubles in coffee, which emerge at different rates the longer you brew. Those rates are influenced by time, temperature, and ratio of ground coffee to water. An underextracted coffee tastes sour. An overextracted cup is overwhelmed with bitter, even burnt flavors.

Ground coffee contains at most about 30 percent soluble compounds; the remaining 70 percent are fiber and other compounds that water cannot penetrate. But if you dissolve all 30 percent, your cup will not taste good. In a properly extracted cup of coffee, only between 18 and 22 percent of the coffee’s solubles have dissolved.

In pour over coffee, extraction is shaped by pour rate and pour patterns. It’s also impacted by grind size. Grind your beans too fine and the water will pass too slowly through the coffee, extracting too many bitter compounds. Grind them too coarse and the water will rush past the best flavor compounds, leaving you with a coffee that tastes only sour, not sweet or radiant. Grind your beans just right, and the optimal flavor compounds will dissolve in the water, leaving the undesirable flavors behind.

If this all seems like a lot to remember, a good way to assess extraction is by the coffee’s finish. Once you’ve finished a cup of coffee, pay attention to whether or not you can still experience its flavors. We often describe finish in terms of duration, how long the taste lingers, and texture, the feel of it in your mouth. Is the finish fleeting or does it linger? Does it feel smooth or rough?

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The trick to any method of coffee brewing is to hit the sweet spot—to balance a coffee’s strength and extraction percentage to achieve one delicious cup.

Now that you have an understanding of brew theory and the concepts of strength and extraction, we recommend you practice making a pour over coffee, perhaps altering the coffee-to-water ratio to see how flavors can either become more distinct (with more more water) or more opaque and textured, as happens with the addition of more coffee grounds. Notice if you have a preferred strength. Do your preferences depend on the kind of coffee you’re making, whether a lighthearted single origin or a hefty blend?

Play with the extraction quality, too, by honing your pour over coffee skills, from dialing in the grind to pour technique. Somewhere in this quest you’ll start to notice that your coffee becomes more resonant, with every aspect of it coming into clearer focus. Like notes played on a tuned-up piano, individual flavors start to ring, until the entire coffee, from its mouthfeel to its finish, hums like a chord progression.

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