Business Standard

Coffee waste is now fetching a 480% premium over coffee itself

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Aida Batlle grows coffee on her family’s farm in the hills surroundin­g El Salvador’s Santa Ana Volcano. Like generation­s before her, she had little use for the skin that encases the beans, so she’d turn it into cheap fertilizer or, more frequently, trash it. Then one day, walking past some husks drying in the sun, a smell hit her, a good smell: hibiscus and other floral aromas. It dawned on her, she says, that some value might be extracted from what she had long considered refuse. So she steeped the husks in hot water and had a taste. “Immediatel­y I started calling customers to try it,” she says.

More than a decade later, coffee husk—or, asit’s betterknow­n, cascara—is having a moment. Starbucks Corp. recently introduced new drinks in the US and Canada sweetened with cascara syrup, and offers a sugar top ping made from the husk. Competitor­s such as Stump town Coffee Roasters and Blue Bottle Coffee are adding it to their menus, too, as tea and a carbonated drink. At a Starbucks in Chicago’ s Loop, a medium iced cappuccino with cascara foam goes for $4.75.( In case you’ re wondering, that’ s essentiall­y a low-fat cappuccino whose foam and syrup have been spiked with an extract made from a blend of sugar and ground up dried coffee husk .)“things and introducin­g it to the masses ,” says Michael Schultz, co-founder and chief executive officer of Coffee& Tea Bar Holdings, which operates two Fairground­s Coffee& Tea locations in Chicago and is preparing to open others in Minneapoli­s .“People are becoming more and more aware .” Fair grounds recently completed its final testing for a cascara-laced specialty drink that will be priced at about $5.

Thanks to demand from these chains, the coffee husk now often fetch es a higher price than the bean itself does. Ba tl le says she gets $7 for a pound of cascara, while the average price for coffee hovers around $1.20, the lowest in about two years, because of an over supply of arabica beans.

 ??  ?? A coffee plantation in Nicaragua. Thanks to the growing popularity of a sweet drink made of coffee husk, the price of the byproduct now fetches more than the bean
A coffee plantation in Nicaragua. Thanks to the growing popularity of a sweet drink made of coffee husk, the price of the byproduct now fetches more than the bean

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