malachi wrote:The key is to understand the goals and theory behind the method and make sure your variant addresses these effectively.
Huh? Nobody prompted Chris to elaborate, so I contacted him offline (
"English, please.").
malachi wrote:The idea is to rotate a pile of coffee around a center point while providing consistent and even downwards pressure. As you have rotational force and downwards force, and rotate the coffee over the entire surface of the coffee while applying these forces, you create more even bedding.
OK, better. Jim described the classic Stockfleth's move in
Cannot get good results with the naked PF:
another_jim wrote:Hold the PF and your other hand at your chest. Turn out your elbows. Put the fat part of the palm (at the end of the thumb) of your empty hand on top of the grounds, gently. Turn your elbows in. The 180 degree rotation levels the grounds. This move is also very fast, since it can be performed as you remove the PF from the grinder.
My own variant doesn't involve as much elbow action as Jim suggests, perhaps because I have to compensate for my small hands. I use the curve of the thumb / lower flattened palm to round the bottom half (first 180) and finish the top half with the index finger / upper hand area (second 180). This redistributing corrects the tendency for the center to be more heavily weighted during dosing. In my case, speed has nothing to do with it.
PS: While it is a relatively small difference, I have noticed the Mazzer Major at Counter Culture Coffee has an initially more even distribution and thus needs less "correction" than the Mini, I assume because the former ejects the grinds more vigorously.