Many thanks to
GoodShave for posting
this video in the Mmm, Coffee thread.
Another rabbit hole that have ventured into is making a great cup of coffee at home and for work. I use a nice drip coffee maker for making a thermos of coffee for work (it has a "bloom" feature that I *believe* helps to make a better pot of joe!) and for home I brew by the cup, using pour over and French press (cafetiere across the pond).
Using the 4:6 pour over method was used this morning with a dark roast, Vienna from Jim's Organic Coffee (Massachusetts). I chose to use the "formula" that brings out more sweetness and less acidity. It did make a smooth cup, and a dark one. For work I'd love it. But I wanted to see if by using this method I could start to detect the flavor profile listed on the various roasts that I like. As I wrote to friend this morning, small batch roasters sometimes give flavor notes or profiles that rival fancy wines! I want to educate my palatte and see if I can detect "A bold mocha character balanced with spice and lemon," or "Big, balanced taste with complex chocolate and berry notes." Currently my palatte can detect a difference between the Ethiopian beans (first profile) and the Guatemalan beans (second profile), both of which are medium roasted. On rare occasions I can detect the chocolate or mocha. But no berry, lemon, or spice! I want to evolve from an uncouth barbarian into a true coffee snob!!
The second cup was the Ethiopian single origin listed above. I sense the chocolate quickly, and maybe (?) the spice. What is cool about the video Good Shave posted is that you can tweak the 4:6 method and bring out different "bodies" of the final cup by varying how you do the final pours of water. So the third cup (and then I'll have to stop due to jitters and needing to urinate too much!!) I'll try getting less body and see if the sweetness brings out more of the flavors.
And then you can change the initial pour/bloom, and highlight the acidity/brightness. Now I will admit, I don't fully grasp all this lingo yet. As a chemist, I know acids are sour and bases are bitter. I find that light roasts often taste sour to me. This is another reason why I need to up my game. Light roasts have complex flavor profiles and I would love to experience those and not be overwhelmed by "sour" tastes. I am hoping my bad experiences with light roasts is due to poor technique. Just like shaving, if I can learn the right techniques, I believe I can make delicious coffee no matter what kind of roast I have. And sure, I still may prefer a "heavy" cup, but I want to be able to experience the other cups as best I can!
Thanks for reading along and please, jump in with any experiences or tips or stories you have!
HighSpeed,
GoodShave and
ewk like this post
- Eric
Put your message in a modem,
And throw it in the Cyber Sea
--Rush, "Virtuality"
Overloader of brushes, Overlander fanboy, Schickhead, and a GEM in the rough!