Let's Play A Game

Let's Play A Game

From Malawi to Edinburgh: The MF Coffee Project

We take a trip from North Carolina to Northern Malawi to Edinburgh, exploring the roots, roasts, and impact of the MF Coffee Project. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of the MF Coffee Project In the quaint village of Manchewe, Northern Malawi, a story unfolded when Cameron Mcallister made the life-altering decision to relocate […]


Serving Coffee in the Epicenter

The Turkish specialty-coffee community is coming together to support earthquake relief. BY MICHAEL BUTTERWORTHSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE When Niji Coffee went live on Instagram, it felt as though the entire Turkish specialty-coffee community was watching with bated breath. Niji Coffee made a name for itself in the Turkish specialty-coffee scene when, as a relatively […]


Breaking New Ground: A Sicilian Coffee Plantation, Part One

The impacts of climate change are starting to be felt in Sicily, but while they’re causing problems, the rising temperatures are also bringing new opportunities. BY JOSEPH PHELANSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Featured image courtesy of Henrique Ferreira on Unsplash The Sicilian love affair with coffee is known the world over. Sicily, the largest of […]


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 […]

Let's Play A Game

Let's Play A Game

Let's Play A Game

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...

Let's Play A Game

I recently posted a roast curve on my IG to illustrate how the way one sets the axes (the ranges for time, temperature, and ROR) affects a curve’s appearance. 

For instance, if one sets the ranges too high, a curve may look like this: 

Note how the ROR curve is compressed into a tiny vertical space. Curve views like this one are quite common (and useless).

Note how the ROR curve is compressed into a tiny vertical space. Curve views like this one are quite common (and useless).

Minimizing the ranges of the axes expands the curves and provides a better view: 

Red = Inlet Temp… Blue = Bean Temp ROR…Green = Environmental Temp

Red = Inlet Temp… Blue = Bean Temp ROR…Green = Environmental Temp

While this may seem obvious to many readers, I see a tremendous number of roasters, both in person and on Instagram, setting their graph axes more like the former than the latter. Such curve views will make a roaster overly confident in his or her results. Quality Control and progress will suffer.

A while back, I badgered the fine folks at Cropster to automatically adjust the axis ranges. While Cropster can’t do that during a roast, as it has no way of knowing what the necessary ranges will be, they listened and made the range-minimization automatic when viewing past roasts. 

The same principle of optimizing the curve view applies to adjusting ROR smoothing (via the ROR interval in Cropster or the delta span in Artisan) and using appropriately responsive and well-located probes. These are fundamental — not advanced — concepts. Simply put, if you don’t practice all of them, you’re handicapping your roast-curve analysis for no good reason.

Going back to the Instagram post, many commenters volunteered opinions about how the coffee and the curve. I was surprised by many of the assumptions people made about what the operator had done or how aspects of the curve would affect the coffee’s flavor. (Hint: the timing of the turn is meaningless and if someone else’s turn is higher or lower than yours, it says nothing about flavor.)

Typing with one’s thumbs on Instagram is not an efficient way to have long conversations, so I thought I’d turn the discussion into a blog post. Some readers may not want to risk making mistakes publicly, but the only way to learn is to put yourself out there and have this discussion. If this conversation is productive and involves a diversity of commenters, perhaps this “game” will become a series. If that appeals to you, please participate. 

So, what can (and can’t!) you glean from the curve below? Please, no questions about the coffee, machine, or curve; only answers. I’m intentionally not providing any more information than what you see below. There are no “tricks” involved — the machine, probe, coffee, batch size, between-batch protocol, etc, all fall within the realm of reasonable “best practices.” Thank you.

Red = Inlet Temp… Yellow = Environmental Temp… Blue = Bean Temp ROR

Red = Inlet Temp… Yellow = Environmental Temp… Blue = Bean Temp ROR

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