Texarkana Gazette

What’s new: self-heating coffee

- By Michael Klein

Problem: You’re miles from a coffee maker or a convenienc­e store, without a vacuum bottle, and you need a hot cup of coffee.

Solution: Philadelph­ia-based La Colombe is test-marketing a self-heating aluminum can of coffee. Simply twist the bottom, wait two minutes, gently shake, pull the tab on the lid, and get 10.3 ounces of coffee delivered at about 130 degrees.

The joe is hot, in other words, but not McDonald’s hot.

The secret is a small, patented heater built inside the shelf-stable can. It was designed by a company called HeatGen, which keeps a lid on exactly how it works, beyond explaining it as a solid-state reaction that is safe and recyclable. Other companies have tried the idea of a self-heating can without much success.

Even La Colombe CEO Todd Carmichael, who worked with HeatGen’s developers for five years, isn’t sure there’s a market for this.

Carmichael, an inveterate tinkerer who pioneered such innovation­s as cold lattes on draft and creamy lattes in cans, said in an interview that he was being cautiously optimistic.

“I want to see how people react,” he said. “I’m experiment­ing with technology and I’m experiment­ing with people. Is it a fad or a novelty or is it a trend? I want to see how it fits in with people’s lives.” For now, they’re available in limited supply at the La Colombe flagship store in Philadelph­ia. Carmichael said the $5 retail price would drop considerab­ly.

The two varieties — regular and milk and sugar — that I tried performed well, giving me hot coffee as advertised.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? ■ La Colombe is offering coffee in a self-heating can.
Tribune News Service ■ La Colombe is offering coffee in a self-heating can.

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