Signature Drinks
With only about 10 days until the Semi-Finals of this years UKBC kick off, i’ve spent a lot of time thinking about signature drinks recently.
Now, I realise blogging about competition is a bit of a weird one. Nobody wants to give away their secret weapon, risk letting slip what blends they’re using, or (heaven forbid) let on what water glasses we’re using, plus we’re all far too busy practicing or counting teaspoons to even have time to write about it. Except for me, i’m sick of counting teaspoons right now.
Firstly a few facts before I start ranting, winning or qualifying is about points. There are 43 points available for your signature drink. That’s 20 less than the points available for your espresso, multiplied by four means that in total there’re 80 more points available for your espressos than your signature drink… 80 points is quite a big difference. Now obviously all competitors will be putting hard work into making sure their espresso is the best it can be, but a hell of a lot of work will go into planning out your signature drink.
For what? Well the 43 points are separated into two parts: Look, explanation, creativity AND taste balance. 24 of those points are awarded to taste balance alone, leaving one point for serving them all at the same time and six points each for look, explanation and creativity. Now, if we’re all honest I reckon most/some of us devote more waking hours to those 12 points for creativity and look than any other 12 points on the whole scoresheet. Sure flavour balance is important to us (and really it is, potentially 24 points adds up to nearly 10% of your overall score), but often I think it can come secondary to an idea or vision of a creative masterpiece.
In the South-West heat my signature drink was espresso with orange flavoured cream on top inside a ‘glass biscuit’ cup which had cardamon infused into it. Creative? hell yeah! - It’s a frickin’ cup made out of biscuit! But did it taste good? It was alright, but I didn’t focus nearly enough attention on flavour. How much cardamon was in my biscuit and how much orange zest was in my cream? Couldn’t tell you. subsequently on a couple of sheets I was marked down for an imbalance of flavours. I focussed too much on making it original, unique and different, but I wont make the same mistake again!
Maybe i’m speaking only for myself, i’m not trying to preach my knowledge to anyone, i’m not experienced enough, just my own thoughts on how I plan to tackle this subject. Comments appreciated. Now, where did I put those teaspoons…

Here’s my thoughts. Almost everything but the signature drink is what a good barista does every day for a living (don’t get me started on competitors who aren’t and don’t). For competition you may dress impractically, use tiny china cups, less milk and a tray but in essence the techinicals should be reflex, the knowledge ingrained and the skills well developed.
The signature is something we don’t do and that’s what makes it stand out so much in our consciences and the competition. Almost nobody gets to taste any of the coffees you make on stage, but we all know what good capps and espressos should taste like. Few can imagine what some of our signatures actually taste like, they excite and stimulate both imagination and discussion.
Signatures should be given a lot of effort but not a lot of points because they’re important to the show and score but all but irrelevant to what we have to do to make great coffee.
The imbalance for me is in expense. Signatures don’t encourage thrift.