https://www.leanblog.org/whiskey27
In Episode 27, Mark and Jamie switch things up a bit with a morning recording of the show. While we could have just started our whiskey early, instead we decided to switch to a beverage that shares much of the same culture, craft, and appreciation as whiskey, and that is coffee.
Although a bit of throwback in terms of usages, the trend towards pour over coffee embraces the culture of single origin coffee, much like the shift from whiskey blends towards more single casks. The pour over method is meant to extract more of the “good stuff” and less of the “bad stuff” from freshly ground coffee beans.
So Mark and I poured our coffee and got into our topics of the day. You can see our coffee selections and equipment setups in the links below.
We didn’t want to lose the whiskey theme, so we used an article exploring whether 10 million barrels of whiskey resting, or aging, in Kentucky is a good thing or a bad thing.
This became a launchpad to talk about whether just-in-time is dead (as the Wall Street Journal likes to claim) or just misunderstood. We explore MIT’s The Beer Game, system dynamics, supply chain design, decision making, and the glut of face masks and hand sanitizer. We could have likely talked about this topic for a very long time, and had we been into a glass of whiskey, perhaps we would have.
In addition to a little detour into Mark’s many hats, including the reason he wears two different hats in one episode, we close on a personal note of how we both like to start our day: with coffee, reading news, and a view.
- Jamie’s coffee, Death Wish, and Mark’s coffee, Yellow Caturra
- Jamie’s KitchenAid grinder, Chemex pour over, and kettle
- Mark’s different KitchenAid grinder, Bodum pour over, and electric kettle
- 10 Million bourbon barrels resting – too much or not enough?
- The Wall Street Journey’s misinformed piece on JIT, Jeff Liker on JIT, Dr. Jonathan Byrnes on supply chain shockwaves, and Dr. Byrnes as a guest Mark’s LeanBlog podcast
- MIT’s The Beer Game, system dynamics and accumulators and delays, and supply and demand
- Mark’s hat and Jamie’s morning view