PureArabica wrote:Any thoughts on the polish in the tamping technique?
sounds like pure BS to me.
Chris D wrote: One thing I often reflect on when training is the idea that when tamping downward in a clockwise motion you are locking the individual coffee granules into an architecturally strong structure; one that will resist 135 PSI and force the pressurized water to push coffee lipids into the liquor and ultimately the demitasse. If you ever twist or tamp in the opposite (counter-clockwise direction), you are breaking this structure
PureArabica wrote:Any thoughts on the polish in the tamping technique?
Chris D wrote:One thing I often reflect on when training is the idea that when tamping downward in a clockwise motion you are locking the individual coffee granules into an architecturally strong structure; one that will resist 135 PSI and force the pressurized water to push coffee lipids into the liquor and ultimately the demitasse. If you ever twist or tamp in the opposite (counter-clockwise direction), you are breaking this structure and rendering the cake of coffee permeable to pressure.
Chris D wrote:Nicky,
whatever direction you do twist as you tamp, it's important to keep that direction consistent.
John Sanders wrote:To polish a puck is also very important for the ability of the whole puck to withstand a huge amount of pressure and temperature. As a single grain of coffee it has very much less of an ability to withstand the extreme temperatures of brewing
John Sanders wrote:especially with some of the machines temp curves today.
John Sanders wrote:with this happening it has a tendency to overextract as much little grains as you have floating on top. As a whole nicely polished puck tamped ever so nicely together it will join together to take the water on as a whole and not as a single grain.
John Sanders wrote:i find on darker roasts it sends it over the top of charcoal notes and into ashey if not nicely polished. as far as lighter roasts not as extreme but still happening.
John Sanders wrote:i also have seen no discussion on flow restrictors and how they are totally involved with this discussion.
James Hoffmann wrote:Yet everybody does it. I just don't know how it got to be part of the essential routine?
AndyS wrote:In the "third wave" we're pretty obsessive about tamping and polishing.
AndyS wrote:I happen to have some Starbucks beans on hand, I have to try that.
nick wrote:My initial training with Schomer was, if I remember correctly: 20 lbs, twist, 20 lbs, twist, tap, 40 lbs, light polish, done. Lately, my technique is: ease the tamper onto the coffee with a very light tamp to establish level, then slight regrip and tamp about 40-50 lbs, then polish-twist three times.
nick wrote:AndyS wrote:I happen to have some Starbucks beans on hand, I have to try that.
THIRD WAVE MEMBERSHIP CARD REVOKED!!!
nick wrote:After all, a lot of us are dosing-up to the point where any polishing is silly: you're gonna mash that nicely-polished puck up against the screen anyway!
nick wrote:Something that I've heard about many times before that I'll experiment with more tomorrow, is that tamping as lightly as possible, while (hopefully) still staving-off channeling, might be ideal. Maybe if we tamp too hard, the difference between the density of the upper-most part of the resulting puck and the lower-most part creates a less-ideal environment. *shrug*
Lots of questions. Any thoughts?
DoubleM (from coffeegeek.com) wrote:As barista at a major hospital in the Seattle area, I personally pull around 1,000 shots of Starbucks Espresso Roast per week on a two-group Nuova Simonelli Maxi as part of the, "We Proudly Brew," foodservice/wholesale program. Though I would much rather work with over a dozen other roasters, I enjoy excellent salary/benefits as well as the opportunity to make drinks for many wonderful regulars. My responsibility is to make the best coffee possible for each and every one of my customers out of those big silver bags of oily beans.
Properly extracted, Starbucks Espresso can be reasonably pleasant, though it is nowhere in the league of Paladino, Hairbender, Vita, Dolce, Streamline, etc. I like it best at ~3/4 ounce shots at 25-28 seconds, dosed just under the line. For the most part, I get a nice deep crema and straight, honey-like pour.
The taste is simple at first, concentrated ash turning to leather and prune with light nut and soft spice that finishes somewhere toward bland chocolate with a well-pitched acidity rising through to linger. For me, the trick is balance and sequence: to elicit a round mouthfeel of dense syrup that has the ability to be soft and caressing while carrying the strong undertones of all those earthy/smoky hallmarks. I want as much delicate nuance as I can get in the finish, pushing all the lemon and whatever fruit and flower I can find to the very end. I prefer a distinct taste/aftertaste experience where you have full immediate upfront impact of what you'd expect and then trails and echoes of pleasant surprises arriving in a bloom-like denouement. I want the ending to taste like an opening, if that makes any sense to anyone. [...]
Chester wrote:This may sound really silly, but has anyone tried tamping with a convex tamper initially, then swtiching to a flat based tamper, and tamping down again? This of course after evenly distributing the grinds before hand.
It seems that it might create a better seal around the edges, but at the same time create a denser area around the sides? I don't have a naked portafilter to check for channeling, and i can't discern any taste differences, but my spent pucks are much more intact than simply tamping with just one type of tamper.
Thanks
macchiattomatthew wrote:Wouldn't it also be the case that a curved tamper will lead to a denser puck in the middle? Or am I missing something huge here?
Matthew
jimmyo wrote:Here we go again...
convex tampers are intended to be used on convex showerscreens, so the distance between the showerscreen and coffeebed is the same - or if it gets squished, at least it's being squished uniformly.
And yes, a curved tamper does lead to a denser centre - if you're leveling flat... however, I find curving your index finger during the final level to create a divot corrects this tendency.
And for the tamp twice technique - I've tried that too, and you can actually use it to fit more ground coffee into a given basket. Try it!
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