Putting olive oil in coffee is hardly a tradition in Italy, but that didn't stop Starbucks from launching a series of beverages that do just that in Milan, the.
Putting olive oil in coffee is hardly a tradition in Italy, but that didn't stop Starbucks from launching a series of beverages that do just that in Milan, the.
Putting olive oil in coffee is hardly a tradition in Italy, but that didn't stop Starbucks from launching a series of beverages that do just that in Milan, the.
Putting olive oil in coffee is hardly a tradition in Italy, but that didn't stop Starbucks from launching a series of beverages that do just that in Milan, the.
Putting olive oil in coffee is hardly a tradition in Italy, but that didn’t stop Starbucks interim CEO Howard Schultz from launching a series of beverages doing just that in Milan. Starbucks says Schultz came up with the notion of adding olive oil to coffee after visiting an olive oil producer in Sicily last summer. He worked with an in-house coffee drink developer to come up with recipes. The “Oleato” five-drink assortment launched last week at the company’s Milan Roastery. The beverages have provoked both amusement and curiosity among Italians. Some of the tourists who throng Milan Roastery say they appreciated the taste.