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Starbucks's Good coffee for 100 Baht


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Starbuck's didn't put the local coffee shop out of business. Their customer's put them out of business. Starbuck's offered and continues to offer an excellent product and they charge a premium price f

When I want a cup of coffee, I just want a regular cup of coffee. I don't need 2 dozen different brews and the bottom line is that I absolutely refuse to pay 100 baht for any cup of coffee. Trendy shi

Starbucks is dishwater the world over

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Solly, Starbucks has this Venti & Grande shite that I can't keep up with.

 

LOL - you have my sympathy. I once made the mistake of venturing into one of those Subway sandwich shops in Bangkok with the aim of ordering a cheese and tomato roll. I left 10 minutes later a broken man - and without any sort of food. They might as well have been speaking Urdu the way the bombarded me with this, that and the next option. Needless to say, I haven't been back. :cry2

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are we talking 100 baht for a "normal" coffee?

 

I'd define normal as the smallest or perhaps the next size up regular brew.

 

Looks to be 16oz.

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Big D Big D. Where did you go so wrong. Skytops sponsorship was OK but when I found out that we were both shareholders in Starbucks, I was sad.My shares will be on te market in a week or so because your taste is questionable if you think a 100 baht in Pattaya is a good deal for mediocre coffee!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

t

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Big D Big D. ... My shares will be on te market in a week or so because your taste is questionable if you think a 100 baht in Pattaya is a good deal for mediocre coffee!

 

 

In defence of BigD, I don't think he's wrongly claimed it's good value. Only that it's good. :ninja:

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you like a decent cup of coffee ! "yet you go to starbucks" WTF !

I'll tell you some were that makes better coffee than starbucks. "Any were that has a kettle and a jar of coffee.

I'm not going to say any more. or i will start ranting.

 

Mad dog

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Solly, Starbucks has this Venti & Grande shite that I can't keep up with.

And coming out of my mouth it seems Venti & Grande sound the same to the sweet young things taking my order--and that's in the U.S.

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When I want a cup of coffee, I just want a regular cup of coffee. I don't need 2 dozen different brews and the bottom line is that I absolutely refuse to pay 100 baht for any cup of coffee. Trendy shit means nothing to me.

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I love my French press, but I might just give this a try. Thanks.

 

You'll love it. I believe they still have a package that lets you substitute a stainless steel filter for the paper ones. That's the way to go AFAIC.

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I have found the best way to extract good flavor is with a Bialetti Stovetop Maker.

 

There are many different flavors and roasts available at SBUX. The quality of the beans is good. You control the strength when you brew your own.

 

Available in 3 sizes, also known as a Moka Express. Doesn't make espresso, but makes excellent strong coffee.

 

bialettitrio.jpg

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Starbucks coffee I don't rate, but have you tried McDonald's? I never eat at McDonald's but their coffee is bloody good, friend got me addicted to it (also a Starbucks hater). Commenting on the European McDonald's, not sure if the coffee in Thai stores are the same, never used.

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If they don't do good coffee. Why do they sell so much coffee to so many people everyday? I know they sell good coffee or I wouldn't buy it. Starbuck's at Central Festival has a steady stream of customer's.

 

Mc Donald’s does more covers than Mum Aroi ,that doesn’t mean its better food only that they have more suckers coming through the door

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I rarely drink coffee in Pattaya but I make an exception with the Buakow market. On the tented side half way up on the rightside there is an indoor /outdoor place with great Danishes etc. I think that the coffee is 35 baht and similar for the pastries. Now that is what I call a good buy. In addition to this I can read the local news as papers are available and of course the people watching is great as well.

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I rarely drink coffee in Pattaya but I make an exception with the Buakow market. On the tented side half way up on the rightside there is an indoor /outdoor place with great Danishes etc. I think that the coffee is 35 baht and similar for the pastries. Now that is what I call a good buy. In addition to this I can read the local news as papers are available and of course the people watching is great as well.

 

I know that place, and it is good. Strange location, but they seem to get customers regularly.

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This is Benjamit coffee, not open saturdays, that II mentioned earlier on. capp or late is 50 baht but bloody good as they grind their own beans and sell cofee to the public

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I was in there (Benjamit) today and agree the capp is excellent but price was small @ 40B and large capp 45B

perhaps in response to the nearby previously mentioned coffee shop where the capp is 35B

 

cheers rogero :beer :beer :beer

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I'm by no means a coffee expert but I do know a good cup of coffee when I get one. If you get to Bangkok and happen to be on Soi 22, try the New Cowboy bar near the Queen's Park Hotel. I usually stay at the Honey House 2 so it's a convenient place to have breakfast. It's a ways off of Sukumvit, maybe 600 meters. They use a coffee press for each cup of coffee.

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I have found the best way to extract good flavor is with a Bialetti Stovetop Maker.

 

There are many different flavors and roasts available at SBUX. The quality of the beans is good. You control the strength when you brew your own.

 

Available in 3 sizes, also known as a Moka Express. Doesn't make espresso, but makes excellent strong coffee.

 

 

Yep I have a small coffee stove top brewer for when I'm up in the boonies in Chaiyaphum - love a decent cup of coffee or two in the morning to get the old ticker going!

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Seems like Starbucks bashing is the hip thing since 2010 or so. True, they have silly prices but their stuff sells and always crowded. I personally only drink Starbucks Sumatra that I buy in the local PX which is about $1 cheaper than if I would buy it at Starbucks but the good thing about buying it there is that they ground it for you there at a grade per your request. It is expensive as opposed to Jacobs, which is $6 but I like Sumatra and one bag lasts me for almost a month. I don't buy their brew but if it happens, it is usually much better than any cat-piss like coffee you get serve at any average restaurant

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Seems like Starbucks bashing is the hip thing since 2010 or so

 

Oh, we've been bashing Starbucks for over a decade. I lived in the San Francisco/Berkeley area, where local coffee houses were family run outfits, not chains, and Starbucks managed to put many of them out of business.

 

No Starbucks will ever compete with Caffe Trieste in San Francisco's North Beach...great coffee, history, and stimulating environment.

 

From the Wiki...

 

The Caffé Trieste also becomes a convenient meeting place for Beat movement writers like Lawrence Ferlinghetti (still a regular), Alan Watts, Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, Richard Brautigan,Bob Kaufman, Gregory Corso, Michael McClure, Kenneth Rexroth and Neeli Cherkovski, who lived in North Beach in the 1950s and 1960s.[2] Jack Hirschman, Poet Laureate of San Francisco, has also been a regular patron. The Caffe has been featured in several movies, on television, radio, in magazines, and in many photography books, ranging from local to national and international in scope.[3][4] Francis Ford Coppola wrote much of the screenplay for The Godfather while sitting in the Caffé Trieste. Its is also the home of the internationally chronicled Caffe Trieste Saturday Concert, the longest running show in the City of San Francisco (since 1971). Giotta Family members Papa Gianni, Ida (matron) and children Gianfranco (1944-1999), Sonia and Fabio have set-up a musical vibe with their performances at the Caffes and about Northern California and beyond, starting with their first radio appearance on KYA-AM (on Dean "Buddha" Maddux' Amateur Hour, sponsored by Marin Dell Milk) in the SF Bay Area in 1953. That vibe has attracted many famous artists and entertainment personalities that have visited or frequented the North Beach location: Bill Cosby, Joey Reynolds, Michael Douglas, Chris Isaak, Armando Peraza, Paul Kantner, Boz Scaags, Robert Vaughn, and Vincent Price to name a few. In 2009, for example, Israeli poet Roy Arad visited the cafe and wrote about it in his diary [2]. It remains a favorite destination for writers, artists, hipsters, neighborhood residents, and tourists from all over the world. The Giotta Family has performed for celebrities such as Luciano Pavarotti and Frankie Laine, and has produced several videos and record albums, operates a newly built Hollywood Class recording studio (TRIESTE RECORDING STUDIOS) and is producing a 90 minute documentary about founder and legend Papa Gianni Giotta, slated for release in 2012.

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