How an Ethiopian-born businessman is brewing Baltimore’s coffee culture

White Marsh proprietor Samuel Demisse isn’t your normal coffee expert — a owners and owners of Keffa Coffee is a precisionist of sorts. He rises any morning around 7 a.m. to indulge in his possess stash, creatively brewing 3 specialty coffees to start his day sans divert and sugar. Later that afternoon, he participates in a “cupping” protocol with his staff, a decoction of avocation and pleasure.

The event starts with a organisation steeping creatively belligerent coffee in H2O exhilarated between 195 and 202 degrees Fahrenheit. They call a aromas to their noses and solemnly settle spoons into their cups before slurping — contemplating a peculiarity and observant a flavors identical to a booze tasting.

By day’s end, Demisse is on during slightest his 10th cup.

Coffee is a lifestyle for a Ethiopian-born entrepreneur, whose Jonestown-based indiscriminate association sells 2.5 million pounds of specialty coffee beans a year. It’s a passion he hopes to widespread opposite Baltimore, a city he says hasn’t lived adult to a caffeinated potential.