Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

Philadelphia’s Café Don Pedro Seeks to Build Up Small Businesses

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Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

An Unfiltered History of Vietnamese Coffee

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How to roast anaerobically fermented coffee

Among the many different kinds of experimental processing methods, anaerobic fermentation is perhaps the most popular and intriguing. Interest in this processing technique is only growing, with more and more anaerobic fermented coffee available in cafés and roasteries around the world. Moreover, of all the advanced processing methods, this particular technique has one of the […]


Philadelphia’s Café Don Pedro Seeks to Build Up Small Businesses

A Dominican-owned coffee roasting company called Café Don Pedro recently launched in Philadelphia with ambitions for direct trading and boosting more Latino-owned small businesses throughout its supply and distribution networks….


A Recap of The Barista League’s Mystery Coffee Vacation in Colombia

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Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

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...

Dialing In – too coarse at finest setting

I just bought my first espresso machine – and to set expectations, I'm working with the Bambino Plus and a Baratza Encore and I plan to drink lattes.

Despite taking the Encore all the way down to grind level 1 the brew still seems under extracted. It came out too fast, and it's a little sour.

I was using 9.5 oz of what ought to be reasonably fresh beans, though I don't have the packaging anymore, in the single-cup filter. I ground to level 6, 4, 2 and 1 and frankly didn't notice a huge difference in grind between them.

My beans were medium roast because I prefer that for pourover; I know espresso is often dark roast. Would that affect the grind texture this much?

Anyone have other tips for what I might be doing wrong?

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