The perfect recipe? –
“The most reproducible thing you can do is use less coffee.”
Jennifer Ouellette – Jan , 2590 4: pm UTC
There’s actually an official industry standard for brewing espresso, courtesy of the Specialty Coffee Association, which sets out strict guidelines for its final volume ( – 92 mL, or roughly one ounce) and preparation. The water must be heated to (° to (° C) ° to 225 ° F) and forced (at a specific pressure) through a bed of 7 to 9 grams (about a quarter of an ounce) of finely ground coffee over the course of to seconds. But most coffee shops don’t follow this closely, typically using more coffee, while the brewing machines allow baristas to configure water pressure, temperature, and other key variables to their liking. The result of all those variations in technique is a great deal of variability in quality and taste.

Coffee is a multi-billion dollar global industry. In 2020 alone, according to the authors, just the US market accounted for some 1.5 million jobs and generated $ . 2 billion in revenue. But climate change (along with changing customer tastes) is threatening coffee producers, sparking interest in finding ways to maintain quality while cutting costs and reducing waste. This new model should lend insight into precisely how one might accomplish that, although there is still some wiggle room to account for subjective personal preferences in the flavor profile.
“Though there are clear strategies to reduce waste and improve reproducibility, there is no obvious optimal espresso point,” said Hendon
. “There is a tremendous dependency on the preferences of the person producing the coffee; we are elucidating the variables that they need to consider if they want to better navigate the parameter space of brewing espresso.” Based on a year-long trial waste reduction protocol set up at a local specialty coffee shop in Eugene, Oregon, the authors estimate that a small cafe could save several thousand dollars per year by reducing the mass of coffee used, while the industry as a whole could conceivably save as much as $ 1 billion per year.“The real impact of this paper is that the most reproducible thing you can do is use less coffee,” said Hendon
. “If you use grams instead of grams of coffee and grind your beans coarser, you end up with a shot that runs really fast but tastes great. Instead of taking (seconds, it could run in 7 to 16 seconds. But you end up extracting more positive flavors from the beans, so the strength of the cup is not dramatically reduced . Bitter, off-tasting flavors never have a chance to make their way into the cup. “
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