Moka Magic! (Against Conventional Wisdom)

Moka Magic! (Against Conventional Wisdom)

Florencia y Fortunata: A Café Empowering Women in Peru

The Cusco café, founded by Carolina Peralta Minaya, sells coffee from women producers and features women demonstrating their skills behind the bar. BY JORDAN BUCHANANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of Carolina Peralta Minaya Traceability, sustainability, and conscientiousness are key values pervading the specialty-coffee trade. For many consumers and traders, these values inform their decision to […]


Competition, Cold, and More from the 2024 U.S. Coffee Competition Qualifiers in Houston

The first round of qualifiers for the 2024 season of the United States Coffee Competitions featured the U.S. Barista, Cup Tasters, and Roasters qualifying competitions. BY KATE VAN PETTENSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE Photos courtesy of U.S. CoffeeChamps The first round of qualifiers for the 2024 season of the United States Coffee Competitions took place January […]


Design Details: A Petit Le Café Coffee in Midtown Manhattan

Welcome to Design Details, an ongoing editorial feature in Daily Coffee News focused on individual examples of coffee shop architecture, interior design, packaging design or branding. If you are a coffee…


Exploring the Potential of Drones in Coffee Production 

New drone technology has the potential to revolutionize coffee farming from the air. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Cover photo by David Henrichs via Unsplash In an ever-evolving technological landscape, coffee producers have begun turning to drones in an attempt to increase efficiency and operations. These unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) offer a wide range of […]

Moka Magic! (Against Conventional Wisdom)

Coffee News Recap, 2 Feb: Applications open for Australia’s Richest Barista 2024, De’Longhi reports 4.6% revenue increase after La Marzocco move & other stories

Every Friday, Perfect Daily Grind rounds up the top coffee industry news from the previous week. Here are this week’s coffee news stories. The word of the week is: expansion. Mon, 29 Jan AeroPress launches limited-edition Clear Pink brewer. The coffee brewer is made from the same Tritan material used in the standard Clear model. […]


What I Learned from My First Tea Ceremony

After taking in a brief moment of a tea ceremony in Thailand, I finally had the chance to participate in the full experience recently in Malaysia. BY TANYA NANETTI SENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos by Tanya Nanetti In the years that I worked as a barista in a café, tea always played a marginal role in […]


The Color of Coffee Collective Symposium Returns for Its Second Year

The collective and the nonprofit Koffee with Keith will hold their second annual symposium in Houston on March 10-12. BY J. MARIE CARLANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of the Color of Coffee Collective The Color of Coffee Collective (COCC) is an organization that seeks to promote equity and opportunity for people of color in the […]


Brewing at Home and on the Road With Diego Campos

We talk to the first Colombian World Barista Champion and Diamante Coffee Farm founder Diego Campos about his brewing habits. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of Diego Campos The focal point of a coffee worker’s professional life is, obviously, coffee. Whether for a customer, to check a specific production batch, or to verify the […]

Moka Magic! (Against Conventional Wisdom)

Moka Magic! (Against Conventional Wisdom)

minimum dose size?

I use the Hario switch to brew my coffee and am trying to reduce my caffeine consumption. Hence I would like to brew smaller cups of coffee. I am currently using 10g of coffee with 160g of water. (1:16 Ratio) I am wondering if there is a minimum amount of coffee...

Moka Magic! (Against Conventional Wisdom)

Just got a 3 cup Bialetti Moka Express. I've previously been using a 6 Cup and 12 cup, both of which I believe are more tolerant to "experimentation" due to bigger doses, more water, etc.

So with the 3 cup I started brewing as "classically trained" which is pouring boiling water into the base (which cools it down to around 200F), dose the beans, and brew on medium heat. While on the 6 and 12 cup Moka's this produced fine enough brews (though I do plan to keep experimenting with them as well), on the 3 Cup Moka, it produced an awful brew that not only was lifeless and under-extracted, it went for the hat trick and had a notable bitter/astringent aftertaste as well – i.e. the nightmare brew with little to no redeeming qualities.

Since I already knew grind, ratio and stove heat were generally stellar for a Moka Pot brew, to troubleshoot, I opted to change water temperature here instead, and went for a little colder than room temperature for the next brew. Conventional (modern) wisdom is to fill the base with as hot water as possible to avoid metallic flavor, "overcooking" of your beans while the water heats up, and general over-extraction.

The result, though? Going from a 2m45s total brew to a 6m35s total brew (with same exact settings other than starting water temperature), this brew produced a fabulous cup: flavorful, juicy acidity (highlighting the clementine notes), and just enough buttery savory body to highlight the hazelnut; additionally, all bitterness and astringency was entirely gone.

What's the moral of the story? Who even knows, this is specialty coffee after all and it's a damn alchemy. All I know is conventional wisdom totally failed in this particular instance, as the whole purpose of starting with hot water to rule out bitterness and metallic flavors completely backfired. So, keep experimenting, all! I plan to. I'll post tomorrow if I encounter any more interesting revelations with the 3 Cup vs. 6/12.

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