Ok, enough of the CP/NS, crossing discussions, and political crap for a few minutes:
At the risk of sounding like our resident troll, just curious what people (including non-RRers, you people are people, too) are drinking lately. I'm not a huge coffee drinker, but have been drinking more lately. My choice of brew? Rogers Company San Francisco Bay Rainforest blend.
And this is relevant to the forum, because you don't want to see a railroad operate wihtout coffee. Just isn't going to happen. Although a lot of the newer guys like those cans of chemicals disguised as energy drinks. Ugh.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
Whatever they are brewing in the station. "Don't throw that away. It'll still be good at 2 AM."
Editor Emeritus, This Week at Amtrak
Stuff we have in our office isn't even fit to be tossed into the ballast.
I buy the beans and grind them myself. I've always liked a robust cuppa but I drink too much of it as in the whole pot every morning. Ah well, keeps the kidneys functioning.
Norm
I drink coffee more during the colder months. Not so much the rest of the year. My choice is what ever the wife buys at home or whatever the convience store has. Currently at home it's Folgers, mountain grown. The motel provides Maxwell House.
Truth be told, I like tea better, cold not hot. There I like the diet Snapple peach or raspberry. I usually get a bottle to go and then get the individual mix packets to refill it. The drinking water the railroad provides is currently in 10oz bottles and 3 bottles provide 2 refills.
As you may gather, refined I ain't.
Jeff
Not a coffee drinker - never developed a taste for it, although I always loved going to the A&P with Mom. You could grind your own, and I like the smell of fresh ground coffee.
I'm a tea drinker - hot and cold. I happen to like my tea sweet (hot and cold). I, too, will use the drink packets from time to time. For hot tea, I tend to Bigelow's Orange and Spice.
For rehydration, it's water, with the occasional sports drink. We usually have water available at the station or on the train.
Here in the north woods, finding sweet tea used to be a real challenge. The expansion of the military base a few years ago brought lots of southern transplants, so sweet iced tea is a bit more common.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
tree68Here in the north woods, finding sweet tea used to be a real challenge. The expansion of the military base a few years ago brought lots of southern transplants, so sweet iced tea is a bit more common.
I made the mistake of ordering a sweet tea when I was down south. No thanks; you guys can keep that stuff.
I usually make a gallon of Lipton plain brewed iced tea (have to go online to get the bigger bags that make a whole gallon), sweeten it up a little with some honey, then I usually cut some lemonade in with it.
I guess I'll have to give up my dream of running off and joining the railroad. I don't drink tea or coffee.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
In the 'good ole days' (1955-1957) when we were providing the engineering for two bridge projects we drank the coffee the bridge workers made, boiled on the site. To determine if it was too strong we through a metal track washer in it. If the washer floated the coffee was too strong. Thats the story I always tell when there are complaints about my coffee.
Much later, in the office, we bought Maxwell House. Their blend that Fred Harvey used in his hotels and restaurants along the Santa Fe.
Back in the day I was a coffee drinker - still remember Wreck Train coffee from the 75 cup coffee maker (perc I think). Strong enough for the coffee to rerail the equipment all by itself.
Presently an Ice Tea drinker - make it at home and 'bottle' it in 20oz Gatorade bottles and then freeze them. Take them to work and put them in the microwave for a couple of minutes to partially defrost them - Ice Tea that doesn't get diluted.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
I can't even stand the smell of coffee. I drink a lot of Aquafina FlavorSplash "Grape" flavor bottled water (don't like the smell of the other flavors!) but I have to go to 2 or 3 stores to get enough to last 2 weeks between trips for groceries.
Semper Vaporo
Pkgs.
Tap water. If its cold out like today I'll start my day with a cup of coffee or tea.
BaltACD...still remember Wreck Train coffee from the 75 cup coffee maker (perc I think).
It wasn't "Wreck Train" coffee, but I worked for a fellow who was always the first one in the office in the morning. We had a 20(?) cup "drip" pot. He'd make the coffee strong enough to pull off a cup before the perk cycle was done, meaning that by the time it was done, one's spoon would stand up by itself...
When he retired, I acquired one of his coffee cups and filled it with wax, with a spoon in it. The spoon could be used to pull the "coffee" out of the cup...
The last place I worked had one of those commercial-style coffee makers. It was funny - nobody ever drank the last cup (because they'd be expected to make the next pot...)
Those commercial coffee stations and water coolers are a real damper on productivity. Get rid of those and GDP would probably go up by a percent.
Ulrich Those commercial coffee stations and water coolers are a real damper on productivity. Get rid of those and GDP would probably go up by a percent.
Coffee is the only way to have productivity!
Ahem...Euclid - you gave a good report on coffee, but never did say what you prefer to drink.
If a restaurant has coffee that tends on the mild side - I will drink coffee. But at home - it is only really cold tap water (we have some of the best tasting water in most of the US) and 1-2% milk! Lots of milk! Does a body good! (yes, I do have good bones and teeth, thank you for asking!)
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
No coffee, no workee.
Murphy Siding I guess I'll have to give up my dream of running off and joining the railroad. I don't drink tea or coffee.
Not a coffee drinker (quit that in college ages ago)
Diet Dr. Pepper (55 gallon IV-drip)
When it gets rough, the chemicals change to Diet Mountain Dew
...follow the trail of 2-liter bottles
mudchicken Not a coffee drinker (quit that in college ages ago) Diet Dr. Pepper (55 gallon IV-drip) When it gets rough, the chemicals change to Diet Mountain Dew ...follow the trail of 2-liter bottles
Mookie Ahem...Euclid - you gave a good report on coffee, but never did say what you prefer to drink. If a restaurant has coffee that tends on the mild side - I will drink coffee. But at home - it is only really cold tap water (we have some of the best tasting water in most of the US) and 1-2% milk! Lots of milk! Does a body good! (yes, I do have good bones and teeth, thank you for asking!)
In warm weather, it's going to be Dr Pepper for me. As another poster stated "just follow the trail of empty 2 litre bottles".
In the cooler months, I think it's pretty hard to beat a good strong cup of Folgers, properly made. If I'm at Starbucks, I'll order their "espresso roast" standard coffee.
Used to landlord warehouse properties out in Oakland CA. And a number of my tenants were coffee brokers. They'd bring in coffee that was still green right off the boats, and spread them out on the cement floors to start drying. Tens of thousands of square feet at a time. Anyone who has never smelled green coffee, should give it a try. One won't soon forget it.
I did not drink much coffee until the summer before my last year in high school, when I spent two months in Baton Ruuge with my oldest brother and his family. My sister-in-law would make three cups of coffee just before we went to bed (I always got the third cup, with a few grounds in it). No, it was much better tasting than what you would find on Decatur Street in New Orleans.
In college, I did not drink coffee in the morning (I found out, one day when I was back in the kitchen, that the cooks put some kind of stretcher in the coffee). I did drink it occasionally at the evening meal after all the milk on the table had been drunk--I would put a spoon in my glass (they were heavy glass) and start pouring coffee into the glass, and my friend who had spent three years, mostly in Korea, in the Marine Corps would say, "Younger that's not Pyrex," and I would say, "I know," and fill the glass. I never broke a glass. The coffee left over from breakfast was taken to the college bookstore, a people were so desperate for coffee that they would pay for it and drink it. One day, a classmate of mine put salt into my friend's coffee; he was a bit upset, and asked me for some of the alum that I had prepared in chemistry lab. He put that into the other boy's coffee--and it improved the taste of the coffee, dragging all sorts of stuff down to the bottom of the cup.
I do not like bitter coffee, and it seems that many of the people around here do like it, so I have had to be careful when buying coffee for my use. I have appreciated the coffee served in Amtrak diners and what the sleeping car attendants make.
By the way, my Marine friend said that if the horseshoe floats, the coffee is ready to drink.
Johnny
Put me in for black silk as well, but alas I don't get it very often. Coffee upsets moh ulcers so we drink mostly decaf Folgers.
And I like either that very first cup or the stuff that's been burning aeway for hours.
Modeling the Cleveland and Pittsburgh during the PennCentral era starting on the Cleveland lakefront and ending in Mingo junction
Kirkland's (Costco) Dark Colombian Roast, fine ground, black.
Smooth, rich and full bodied.
Like Norm, no coffee, no workee...or much of anthing else for that matter.
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Mookie mudchicken Not a coffee drinker (quit that in college ages ago) Diet Dr. Pepper (55 gallon IV-drip) When it gets rough, the chemicals change to Diet Mountain Dew ...follow the trail of 2-liter bottles Psst - Sir Chicken - both contain aspertame - which could raise havoc w/your throat or esophagus - have you tried diet pepsi or diet coke w/splenda? First hand experience and big dr bill!
Psst - Sir Chicken - both contain aspertame - which could raise havoc w/your throat or esophagus - have you tried diet pepsi or diet coke w/splenda? First hand experience and big dr bill!
Will NEVER get iced tea at Starbucks ever gain. Tastes like coffee washwater.
Euclid Mookie Ahem...Euclid - you gave a good report on coffee, but never did say what you prefer to drink. If a restaurant has coffee that tends on the mild side - I will drink coffee. But at home - it is only really cold tap water (we have some of the best tasting water in most of the US) and 1-2% milk! Lots of milk! Does a body good! (yes, I do have good bones and teeth, thank you for asking!) Mookie, I drink that Folgers Black Silk that I mentioned. It is the best I can find in the grocery store. I also think it critical to use the pause-and-brew feature to extract the first cup as soon as it is produced. Any coffee is better when tapped off early in the brew cycle. That means that it is early in the extraction process. The extraction process gradually wears down the coffee to the dregs. So it pays to get it early. I like milk too.
Sir C - poor chicken. Maybe water w/caffeine in it? I think they make it or did at one time. Wonder if I could have that piped in from Lincoln Water System? Perfect!
zugmann My choice of brew? Rogers Company San Francisco Bay Rainforest blend.
Zug, Yes, Yes, and Yes. This one of the best coffees, the wife and I have found. Any of the Rogers Company coffees are very good. Different taste from each. All good though.
Ken G Price My N-Scale Layout
Digitrax Super Empire Builder Radio System. South Valley Texas Railroad. SVTRR
N-Scale out west. 1996-1998 or so! UP, SP, Missouri Pacific, C&NW.
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