Talking Hands
<font color=purple><b>|,,|/</b> DEAF DISNEY LOVER<
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2002
- Messages
- 9,711
ok, how would I ask for a café con leche but with splenda and soy milk not sugar and milk?
Exactly like you just typed. You don't need to know the lingo, the baristas are extremely nice and will note down your order, give you your coffee with no fuss.ok, how would I ask for a café con leche but with splenda and soy milk not sugar and milk?
Half caf, skinny vanilla, grande...etc. I don't speak Starbucks!Is there a quick course We can take prior to entering the Magic Kingdom?
All we want is a decent cup of coffee but we don't want to sound stupid doing it.
(posted just for fun)
After reading all of this Starbucks lingo, I'm so glad I don't drink coffee. It is too complicated.
Feel the same way about Disney too ! I never had a fancy $$$$ Starbucks coffee in my life I can't imagine having to learn a new language at my age I'll probably just point and nod![]()
I've never been happier to not be a coffee drinker then right now. What a pretentious bunch.
One thing as a non-coffee drinker that I have always wondered, why does coffee come in different flavors besides coffee. Don't coffee drinkers like coffee or are they just doing it for show.
I drink a lot of Iced Tea and I do not understand why so many people have to have it tasting like lemonade. If they want Lemonade why not just order Lemonade? Some of the mysteries of life that I will never understand, I guess.
Yes, sir...I understand that part. Coffee from different areas would taste different, but still be coffee. I'm referring to things like Hazel Nut or Cinnamon or Chocolate and a zillion of other combinations that I have notice through the years.
And Americano has just slightly less caffeine in it the a coffee of the same size does at Starbucks.
Pretentious is ordering a Starbucks Reserve Blend Burundi Ngozi made in their $10,000 Clover machine (available only in a few of their stores) and then standing around discussing how much more nuanced the flavors are than coffee brewed in a a normal coffee maker.
and all of a sudden reading your post I immediately thought of Frazier and his brother Niles in their favorite coffee shop![]()
I speak fluent starbucks and am a frequent customer. But sometimes i order in plain english and the employees will just translate for you - so its no big deal to order a small for ex (instead of a tall) or to say unsweetened (instead of no classic). they will order it for you. No worries.
STILL thinking Main Street Bakery featuring Starbucks coffee????
It's beginning to look a lot like Starbucks...
Yes, I'll accept your humble apology![]()
Now yes, a LARGE frapuccino might cost you $4.85 or something like that, but so does a large blizzard from Dairy Queen and nobody seems to complain about that... It's basically a giant milkshake with coffee in it, same thing.
A MEDIUM/Grande Frapp in Chicago tipped over $5 a few years ago and that is before anything was added to 'make it your way' when that campaign began.
...when I was on weight watchers it was 3 points for a tall mocha frap....
I see your point about 'prententious', but I see it only relating to the lingo Starbuck's uses for sizes. Why the venti, etc?![]()
If it's first thing in the am after evening EMH, then its: me, coffee, strong, large, I beg of you...
That is exactly my meaning for using the word "pretentious". If in order to fit in I must memorize some make believe groupings of terminology when what I'm ordering is a small, medium or large coffee, then that is pretentious.
I just order my coffee small medium or large. I refuse to pay their little game.
Back when you could order a small, medium, large or extra large without having to have an English to Starbucks dictionary handy, was not pretentious.
ok, how would I ask for a café con leche but with splenda and soy milk not sugar and milk?
ok, how would I ask for a café con leche but with splenda and soy milk not sugar and milk?
There is a reason for the sizes also, that is not pretentious.
Back in the 70's when Starbucks started in Seattle, there was only a SHORT and a TALL. (4oz and 8oz). That was it, two sizes. As they expanded and Americans wanted bigger drinks, they didn't want to change the name of the sizes and confuse people on what they had been ordering, they decided to add a Grande, which just means "biggest". They thought "short, tall, and LARGE" just sounded weird because tall already means large. So they had a short, tall, and grande for years. Then as Americans demanded even bigger drinks, they were totally screwed because they already had a BIG and BIGGEST. So they added the Venti, which is 20 in Italian, for their twenty ounce drink!![]()
You don't have to play.
I've been going to Starbuck's for years.
I don't drink anything with syrup in it, I've never had a latte, maybe twice a year I like an espresso.
When I order my coffee I order either a "small, medium or large", nobody has ever corrected me and I always get exactly what I want.
No biggie.
ok, how would I ask for a café con leche but with splenda and soy milk not sugar and milk?
Short and tall are heights, if they had used the small, medium, large, etc, that is standard in the US, there'd be no need for the other foofy names.
I just think it's fun to try to use the jargon, just like eating with chopsticks at a Chinese restaurant. You certainly don't have to, but it's more fun if you do. And when the Starbucks is really hectic (and they usually are when we go into one) you're much less likely to have an order misunderstood if you order using the terminology they use behind the counter.
Neither of us drinks coffee, but we do love an occasional vente non-fat chai latte! At least, that's how we order them. Would any of you Starbucks-savvy folks or barristas like to tweak our syntax there?
And why are they all called barristas? Isn't that a feminine form of the word?
To clarify, the pretentiousness comes in when people feel that they have to use the lingo. As I said, I don't drink coffee so I don't have a dog in this race either. It's the use of the words short, tall, grande, verti and barista is what projects pretentious. When all is said and done coffee is hot water poured over ground coffee beans. You want skim milk, regular milk or whatever type of milk, cream or foam along with specific sweeteners, then you ask for that in English. No need to put Italian words in to describe what you want unless you are in Italy. I know that people feel like they have somehow elevated themselves by reciting words and phrases that are substituted for what we consider language, but, in reality it just sounds silly. What you do would not be considered pretentious, its attempting to convince people that you are something that you are not that I can't wrap my head around.
To clarify, the pretentiousness comes in when people feel that they have to use the lingo. As I said, I don't drink coffee so I don't have a dog in this race either. It's the use of the words short, tall, grande, verti and barista is what projects pretentious.
To clarify, the pretentiousness comes in when people feel that they have to use the lingo. As I said, I don't drink coffee so I don't have a dog in this race either. It's the use of the words short, tall, grande, verti and barista is what projects pretentious. When all is said and done coffee is hot water poured over ground coffee beans. You want skim milk, regular milk or whatever type of milk, cream or foam along with specific sweeteners, then you ask for that in English. No need to put Italian words in to describe what you want unless you are in Italy. I know that people feel like they have somehow elevated themselves by reciting words and phrases that are substituted for what we consider language, but, in reality it just sounds silly. What you do would not be considered pretentious, its attempting to convince people that you are something that you are not that I can't wrap my head around.
You just did! See how simple that was?
Exactly, that is my feeling. Believe me though, I don't lose any sleep over any of it. I just don't go there.
All we want is a decent cup of coffee
I'm sure this has been said in 7 pages of comments several times, but if you want a decent cup of coffee, Starbucks is not the place to find it
Overpriced and just tastes burnt.
Probably not a lot of choice, but find a Dunkins![]()