
I couldn't find decent coffee in Vietnam, the second largest producer of beans in the world. NZ, however, is a different matter. Coffee is a pretty serious business here, and I still haven't reached Wellington, where it rivals rugby as almost a religion. The particular gift of the Antipodeans to the coffee world is the Flat White, of which there is no direct equivalent in Europe. This is a crime, as it towers above all espresso-based drinks. The closest is France's Cafe au lait, but it's just too milky to do the trick.
To use a hackneyed metaphor, the Flat White is the coffee a daughter would be happy to bring home to meet her parents. You'd be embarrassed to sit down to a first dinner with a Latte, a lanky, disappointing, slip of a thing whose nose would probably run into mum's home-made soup. An espresso, a short fiery man with an advanced sense of his own importance, would argue with your dad. A Cappuccino, the desert of the coffee world, would stand out a mile as a short-term fling, bound not to last and only suitable under certain specific conditions. And as for an Americano? Stronger and bigger than everything else and completely vulgar. But a Flat White, third espresso, third milk and third foam, is a keeper, husband material from the outset. Strong enough, but with an edge of creativity displayed in the swirly pattern on the top (see photo). Just perfecto.
Hi Fred. If you had told me two months ago that you would be writing an ode to a coffee I would have thought you had lost the plot !!! NZ is really that good?
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