Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
15 MIN LESEZEIT

Cool Beans

BY NICHOLAS FOULKES

SINCE NESTLÉ began selling Nespresso in the 1990s, its little capsules have changed the way many in the West consume coffee. Thirty percent of Michelin-starred restaurants now serve Nespresso pods, and the machines sell all over the world, generating an estimated $4 billion in 2015. The capsule-co ee maker is part of kitchen geography, right there between the toaster and the kettle.

POD BLAST: Capsule coffee now has a huge audience, one that Difference Coffee Co. is hoping to take upmarket.
NILS KAHLE/4FR/GETTY

The convenience, novelty, variety and perhaps even the pretty-colored capsules made a convert: Amir Gehl. Gehl, the 39-year-old son of a tobacco family, did his postgraduate studies at the London School of Economics, followed by stints at Harvard Business School, the Kellogg School of Management and the London Business School. He spent the early part of his career as a consultant to the energy drink business; then, in 2014, his wife convinced him to buy a Nespresso machine. From that moment on, he was a pod convert—so much so that when he drank coffee after a restaurant meal, he felt that “a Nespresso [at home] was actually tastier.”

Schalten Sie diesen Artikel und vieles mehr frei mit
Sie können genießen:
Genießen Sie diese Ausgabe in voller Länge
Sofortiger Zugang zu mehr als 600 Titeln
Tausende von früheren Ausgaben
Kein Vertrag und keine Verpflichtung
Versuch für €1.09
JETZT ABONNIEREN
30 Tage Zugang, dann einfach €11,99 / Monat. Jederzeit kündbar. Nur für neue Abonnenten.


Mehr erfahren
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
Newsweek International
27 January 2017
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


BIG SHOTS
Tears of Joe
Washington, D.C.— In the U.S. capital, the public bromance between
Law and Mordor
Ankara, Turkey— A police officer blocks a protester from marching
Deathly Cold
Budapest, Hungary— As chunks of ice oat in the Danube
Human Shield
Mosul, Iraq—An Iraqi man walks with his daughter in the
PAGE ONE
THE TRUMP ESTABLISHMENT
Donald Trump isn’t just turning Washington, D.C., upside down; he’s also leading a revolution against the cultural elites
CRACK AND PUNISHMENT
Jeff Sessions is a hard-liner on crime, but his record suggests he may not be a Torquemada in the war on drugs
WHO LEAKED THIS?
Donald Trump, Russian spies and the infamous ‘golden shower memos’
TRUMPONOMICS, EXPLAINED
We’ve seen this movie before, and it doesn’t necessarily end well
FEATURES
COMMANDER IN TWEETS
WILL TRUMP’S FIRST 100 DAYS IN OFFICE BE LIKE HIS LAST 100 TWEETS?
THE RADICAL EDUCATION OF BETSY DEVOS
WILL THE HARD LINE CHRISTIAN CONSERVATIVE LEADING THE NATION’S SCHOOLS BRING A CRUSADE OR AN INQUISITION?
NEW WORLD
TUMOR TRACKERS
Genetic signature unmasks aggressive prostate cancers
DIGITAL DIVIDE AND CONQUER
Trump has a brilliant plan to turn Silicon Valley into a desert
VETERINARIAN SWEATSHOPS
Internships with little oversight lead to exploitation and poor training
UNRAVELING ZIKA
Researchers pat down Zika to find the weapons it’s packing
SLAM THE SCREENING DOOR
Study finds one-third of women with breast cancer are being treated needlessly
DOWNTIME
THE FAMILY MAN
Mike Mills can’t stop making films about his parents. Thank God
HIGHS AND LOWS
Mirihi Island Resort feels like paradise— for now
PIE IN THE SKY
Who’s the best post-truth commentator? A (not real) news reporter
the To-Do List
Tom Waits once growled, “We sail tonight for Singapore,” but