I have learnt coffee oxidizes quite fast giving that horrible burnt taste, which even milk won’t hide. The longer it has been in a open-to-air-pot, the worse the taste gets. Storing in an air-tight container (thermos) it stays “ok” for days. So actually, I think all such servings from the coffee shops are thus inherently worse than brewing your own coffee.
(There are no starbucks in my country, but I think McDonald’s coffee really is somehow heated past 100*C and it’s the first sip away to burn your mouth, so you wouldn’t taste it anyway.)
It is technically possible to heat water beyond 100° and I wouldn’t put it past McDonald’s to do it for no reason at all. I’m not a big coffee fan, so I don’t drink a lot of it but from what I’ve heard McDonald’s coffee is actually okay.
I have learnt coffee oxidizes quite fast giving that horrible burnt taste, which even milk won’t hide. The longer it has been in a open-to-air-pot, the worse the taste gets. Storing in an air-tight container (thermos) it stays “ok” for days. So actually, I think all such servings from the coffee shops are thus inherently worse than brewing your own coffee.
(There are no starbucks in my country, but I think McDonald’s coffee really is somehow heated past 100*C and it’s the first sip away to burn your mouth, so you wouldn’t taste it anyway.)
It is technically possible to heat water beyond 100° and I wouldn’t put it past McDonald’s to do it for no reason at all. I’m not a big coffee fan, so I don’t drink a lot of it but from what I’ve heard McDonald’s coffee is actually okay.
If anyone remembers the McDo hot coffee lawsuit, 85°C is enough to cause serious burns and permenant damage (McDo was found to be at fault)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liebeck_v._McDonald's_Restaurants