seasoned specialty coffee drinkers, are you ever surprised anymore?

Breaking New Ground: A Sicilian Coffee Plantation, Part 2

The Morettino family has successfully cultivated a coffee plantation right in Sicily. Next on the agenda: making the island an international coffee hub. BY JOSEPH PHELANSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Feature photo by Tomas Anton Escobar via Unsplash Editor’s note: Check out part one of this story here. Andrea Morettino’s family has proven that coffee […]


Joven and Atucún Join Forces to Empower Young Farmers

The two brands have collaborated to create a unique coffee bar and support young farmers in the coffee and cacao industries. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of Joven Coffee  For their first-of-its-kind bar, Joven Coffee and Atucún Chocolateria combined coffee beans, extracted cocoa butter, and organic cane sugar. Committed to supporting young farmers […]


Out Now: The February + March 2023 Issue

The February + March 2023 issue of Barista Magazine features New Zealand coffee & chef champion Sam Low on the cover. Also inside: a special section on branding, understanding trademark law, an interview with Laura Sommers, field reports from Kansas City, Indonesia, and Hong Kong, and much more. BY KENNETH R. OLSONBARISTA MAGAZINE We’re excited […]


The First Women-Only Coffee Championships Held in Costa Rica

Feria del Café Frailes seeks to increase the gender diversity of coffee competitions. BY SUNGHEE TARKSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Cover photo by Sunghee Tark The coffee industry has come a long way in the past 20 years, with innovations happening in many parts of the world and in different links of the supply chain. […]

seasoned specialty coffee drinkers, are you ever surprised anymore?

seasoned specialty coffee drinkers, are you ever surprised anymore?

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...

seasoned specialty coffee drinkers, are you ever surprised anymore?

I've been doing this for a while now, and this morning i found myself thinking i was 'finally almost through this bag' which i then almost immediately felt bad about, as i hadn't really experimented with it at all.

Some context: i enjoy shopping around and getting new beans almost every time, the rare occasion i'll enjoy something so much to buy a 2nd or 3rd time (aside from a year or two stint where i was loyal to a local roaster until they were sold and the quality declined). there's a lot out there, a lot of talented folk growing and roasting coffee, and i want to experience as much of it as possible. i generally know what flavor profiles i prefer, but also enjoy trying new types.

Now that i'm experienced in all the brewers and variables at my disposal, i find myself losing interest pretty much right off the bat if a coffee doesn't show some promise.

Always start out brewing in a V60, and depending on how that goes, assign to a different method or plan to try tweaking for the next brew. But occasionally there will be the bag that i can't theoretically find any promise in and it becomes a slog to get through. In the past i've still experimented with these bags, but never was able to save one, so i've mostly quit doing that.There was once a while ago with one such bag that was brought back to life by a mocha pot, but that was before i had used the mocha pot very much.

Am i just jaded? overcome by ego? or is this just something that happens with experience? I guess i'm just looking for some hope, or confirmation, or someone to knock me down a peg. would be happy with any/all of the above. i know that some flavors just "aren't for me" but is it really possible to figure that out with a single brew? should i just quit trying flavor profiles that i'm "fairly certain" aren't my thing? i don't think that can be it, because even beans from the same place change over time.

Small aside: i keep saying 'flavors' and 'flavor profiles'. just to clarify, in my head, that's a combination on what i know of the 1) region, 2) roast 3) process and lastly, with a grain of salt, 4) the flavor profile listed on the roaster's description.

Generally in life i hold a "never stop learning" mindset, but it seems like with coffee i've reached the end of personally useful knowledge, with the exception of doing something i really can't afford like buying an espresso machine.

Also, reading back over this it sounds a littly braggy. it probably is, but i'm not saying i'm the best coffee brewer in the world now or anything. i've just found what works for me. great chance if i served a cup of my coffee to a World Barista Championship judge, they'd spit it back in my face.

that is a much longer post than i was expecting, thanks for reading

TLDR; Jaded local man complains about knowing too much

submitted by /u/qpockets
[link] [comments]

Shopping cart0
There are no products in the cart!
Continue shopping
0