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Black Ivory Coffee: Canadian’s elephant poop coffee makes a pricey cup of Joe

  

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Via:  nona62  •  10 years ago  •  18 comments

Black Ivory Coffee: Canadian’s elephant poop coffee makes a pricey cup of Joe

Black Ivory Coffee: Canadians elephant poop coffee makes a pricey cup of Joe

Coffee business has given elephants and their handlers a second chance

Each elephant eats 150 kilograms of food a day, with raw coffee cherries sprinkled in.

Each elephant eats 150 kilograms of food a day, with raw coffee cherries sprinkled in. (A

The sun rises over a branch of the Mekong River in northern Thailand that serves as bathing waters for local elephants.

Blake Dinkin, a Toronto entrepreneur, carefully watches a few of the large mammals.

"Oh, there!"Dinkin says, cringing as he points to the river. An elephant has just taken a dump and an island of feces is now floating downstream. Dinkin stares at it.

"We cant save it," he says.

Once the elephant poop is wet, Dinkin cant sift through it and recover the hidden nuggets of coffee beans hidden within. Hes already lost several thousand dollars this way.

The Torontonian is the first person in the world to feed raw coffee cherries to elephants and harvest them from the elephants deposits to make some of the most exclusive and expensive coffee in the world.

The Black Ivory Coffee is found in exclusive hotels for about $50-60 Cdna cup or can be purchased online for around$130 for just over 100 grams.

Each elephant eats 150 kilograms of food a day. Dinkin slips a few coffee cherries into their diet, but they can be fussy about what they eat. Dinkin mixes tamarind, salt and other fruits into their food, depending on the elephants preferences.

"Its like being a waiter in a restaurant,"said Dinkin. "Some elephants like it ... a little more plain. Other elephants like it with some rice. Some elephants like it with banana."

It takes one to two days for the coffee cherries to make their full trip through the elephants digestive tract. During that time, they pick the flavours of the elephants diet, giving the coffee a distinctive taste, says Dinkin.

To make a single kilogram of coffee beans, it takes about 33 kilograms of raw coffee cherries. Many beans are crushed when the elephant chews or lost in the river during bathing.

From civets to elephants

Over a decade ago, Dinkin was aiming to market civet cat coffee from Africa. The pricey coffee was popular several years ago. Known in Indonesian as kopi luwak, it also involves the red, ripe cherries encasing the coffee bean being eaten by the animal.

coffee-mug

Black Ivory's $50-a-cup coffee tastes like the diet of the elephants that digested the beans, says founder Blake Dinkin. (Shutterstock)

But he decided to move on after finding its production fraught with fraud. Farmers often would merely wipe cat feces over coffee beans to pass the beans off as digested, he says.

His quest led him to various animals and took him to Indonesia before he finally settled on elephants in Thailand.

The key reason he chose elephants was they only have one stomach and consume a lot of food in a day. Also, coffee cherries may naturally have been part of an elephants diet, if grown in an area where they were grazing, he says.

Dinkin works in partnership with the Golden Triangle Asian Elephant Foundation, a sanctuary for rescued elephants. Its located in the far northwest corner of Thailand where the country meets Burma and Laos, an area once synonymous with opium production.

John Roberts, who runs the sanctuary, remembers his first thought when Dinkin approached him with the idea.

"Am I going to have a lot of wired elephants on my hands? Am I going to have a lot of depressed elephants on my hands with headaches and withdrawal symptoms if we arent feeding [them coffee]?"

Dinkin worked with a veterinarian at the Toronto Zoo to show that the caffeine wont absorb into the elephants bloodstream. With his worries quelled, Roberts gave Dinkin the green light for production.

Roberts says if the idea takes off, he envisions herds of wild elephants devoted to the task of producing the coffee.

"It could pay for the total upkeep of elephants and mahouts, [a person who takes care of elephants], and families and that is a goal."

Many of the elephants handlers were destitute before arriving at the reserve he runs in association with the luxury hotel chain Anantara.

Thailand banned logging in 1989, leaving many mahouts without a source of income from their elephants. Many ended up living on the street, struggling to find a way to provide for their families and feed their elephants.

The broader impact

Dinkin knew he needed the co-operation of the mahouts for his business idea to work. The idea of feeding elephants coffee cherries and then sifting through their excrement to pick them out wasnt immediately appealing to the mahouts.

ii-elephant-coffee-creator-

Blake Dinkin says it took nine years to perfect the process of making Black Ivory Coffee beans. (Apichart Weerawong/Associated Press)

To motivate them, the entrepreneur decided he would need to pay them extremely well.

Nowadays, the mahouts and their wives can make the equivalent of a days worth of pay in about an hour.

The impact of that extra cash is evident in the mahouts small village nestled in the forest of the elephant sanctuary. Every family seems to have at least one scooter and is able to send their kids to school. One woman CBC spoke with said next year she will be able to afford a car, too.

At the sanctuary, Dinkin scoops a handful of the Thai Arabica beans that have been drying in the shade after being excreted.

He holds them to his nose. "You can definitely tell there is some elephant there,"he says, describing it as a bouquet.

Perfecting the brew

Dinkin says it took nine years of trial and error to perfect the coffee. At first, it tasted horrible.

The scale of Dinkins production is small, at about 300 kilograms a year, and the price of the coffee is steep at around $1,500 per kilogram of beans. Still, demand is outstripping supply.

"Hotels are re-ordering, and we are getting inquiries from all over the world."

As Dinkin watches the elephants dig into their coffee cherry-infused morning meal, he admits to feeling proud.

"When I first approached people with the idea, they thought I was crazy."

He acknowledges the coffee is not for everyone.

"There is always going to be people who are going to be put off by the process," saysDinkin. "This is a small niche market."

Ultimately, though, the bottom line lies in how the coffee tastes. Dinkin describes it as floral, earthy and full-bodied.

"And there are lingering notes of chocolate,"he adds, with the playful glint in his eye.


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Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

umm.....I'll pass on the coffee thank you...

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     10 years ago

Here in the US, it will be called ''shit coffee''.Smile.gif

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

lol...That's because people in the US tell it like it is! 24.gif 24.gif

 
 
 
jennilee
Freshman Silent
link   jennilee    10 years ago
Yuck!
 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

lol My sentiments exactly!

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

Very good points!!

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

24.gif 24.gif

 
 
 
Nigel Dogberry
Freshman Silent
link   Nigel Dogberry    10 years ago

Well, I have a special, "new" coffee product for free!!! Grump Poop and Pee Coffee. I will pour a "cup" for my "special" friends.

 
 
 
jennilee
Freshman Silent
link   jennilee    10 years ago
So what will Starbucks call it? A Grande Mocha Latte Shitte?
 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
link   Bob Nelson    10 years ago

I can't believe I just spent five minutes of the rest of my life, reading about shitty coffee...

47.gif 47.gif 47.gif 47.gif

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

Better to read about it, than to drink it..Smile.gif

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

24.gif 24.gif 24.gif 24.gif

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

LOL...Good one!!

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient    10 years ago

As soon as I saw this article I thought of the movie "The Bucket List". Many of you know I love to say that life imitates art , and I recalled this conversation between Carter Chambers (Morgan Freeman) and Edward Cole (Jack Nicholson). When I saw the movie I was sure that the story was a joke because I thought Freeman was pulling Nicholson's leg with the story, since Nicholson (who was very rich and could afford it) loved that coffee.

The conversation:

[ Carter hands Edward an article about Kopi Luwak, Edward's favorite coffee ]

Carter Chambers : Read it.

Edward Cole : [ reading ] Kopi Luwak is the world's most expensive coffee. Though for some, it falls under the category of "too good to be true." In the Sumatran village, where the beans are grown, lives a breed of wild tree cat. These cats eat the beans, digest them and then... defecate.

[ pauses ]

Edward Cole : The villagers then collect and process the stools. It is the combination of the beans and the gastric juices of the tree cat that give Kopi Luwac...

[ Carter starts laughing ]

Edward Cole : ...its unique flavor... and aroma. You're shitting me!

Carter Chambers : [ laughing ] Cats beat me to it!

[ Carter and Edward both laugh hysterically ]

On their Bucket List was "Laugh until you cry" which happened then.

As I said above, when I watched that movie, I thought the coffee story was just crap (pun intended) in order to upset Nicholson, but now that I read this article I realized that there are people in the world who are rich enough and nuts enough to make it, and this Elephant story, true.

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

I thought the coffee story was just crap That'sfunny!!!

 
 
 
sixpick
Professor Quiet
link   sixpick    10 years ago

I think that what they had on base in Taiwan when I was there, except I never saw any elephants.

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

lol..

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

Hell, I'd try it You're a better man than I am...Smile.gif

 
 

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