Is leveling off the coffee necessary? - Page 10

Beginner and pro baristas share tips and tricks for making espresso.
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Psyd
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#91: Post by Psyd »

"Tastes great" isn't good enough anymore. I'm seeking the holy grail of maximum clarity!
Here there be tygers, Marshall! ; >

As they say in racing, "How fast can you afford to go?"
Maximum clarity, as with maximum velocity, is an exponentially increasing expense conversely couples to an ever-narrowing margin of improvements. I ain't saying that you can't do it, brother, but that that holy grail may be a bit more expensive and elusive than the original to which you referred!
To quote another career path of mine, sound recording, "It's far easier to be done than finished." Being happy with the results that you can reasonably achieve is a hard thing, but not as hard as following perfection down that rabbit hole.
Good Luck, and publish your findings, willya?
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JimWright
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#92: Post by JimWright »

shadowfax wrote:The quality (repeatability and adjustment granularity) of timed dosing certainly varies from grinder to grinder. I believe that most of the very high end ones (Mazzer Electronics and Mahlkönig K30, for example) are pretty impressive on both fine-grained adjustments and consistency. I'm also reviewing the new Baratza Vario grinder, which has timed dosing, and it works pretty nicely on this front as well, although, so far, for the coffee I have used and my Elektra T1, it doesn't perform as well as the larger grinders at hands-free distribution. I get channeling and sometimes even a bit of spritzing at the beginning of shots when I just dose and then tap (or not) and tamp.
mikemckim wrote:I did quite a bit of testing when we were trying to decide what direction we wanted to go with espresso grinders. I have to try to find all my notes on my computer, but my testing was with the Ditting/Mahlkonig espresso grinder. I ran 250 shots based on the assumption that every coffee house should shoot for serving at minimum 250 espresso drinks each day. I ran both a single origin coffee and a blend. The blend did have more variation, but my theory is that is due to density of coffees at different degrees of roast and the ratio of those coffees in each shot. I will look for my notes, but I want to say that I never had more than 1 gram differential and in the single origin it was single digits and the blend was less than 20 shots. I do understand that 1 gram can make a big difference, but I would challenge that with the most accomplished barista leveling 250 shots any day...hmmmmmm, maybe I should give Clancy a new job description. :twisted:
Veering slightly OT here, but this suggests to me that if you are not one of those who weighs the coffee routinely, grinders with timed dosing could make a material difference in home prep consistency... Seems obvious of course, but I'd been curious to hear people's actual experiences of this, and there it is. I'm probably in the minority here, but I dose visually, redistribute if not even and fluffy, and level (I own a gram scale but don't use it day to day). My consistency is usually but not always reasonable and of course not up to what I wish it were, and without going down the road of weighing, it sounds like the larger timed units might be the lazy man's substitute...

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JmanEspresso
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#93: Post by JmanEspresso »

Been reading this thread, but refrained from posting, as I dont think I have the level of 'geek' to contribute, but..what the heck. Thought I would state how I do my grinding/dosing etc etc..

Grinder: Mazzer Major, w/ Doser(sweeper mod from vanes, upside down funnel over star)
Machine: QM Anita, Boiler-1.3max, Brew, 10BAR

First, I weigh out my beans, every time. I grind per shot.

Load up hopper with one dose, for a double. Updosed, 16grams.

Dose into PF.. clear out throat, brush any extra on doser edges/corners of things, twack clean. Then, WDT with a tiny wisk, level, and lightly compact everything, chicago chop style, evenly over the basket. I BARELY have waste, but always a TINY extra so I know the whole basket got compacted evenly. Then, Light tamp to level, lift up to see where there are extra grounds on edges.. use tamper to add them to the puck, then, 50lb tamp(I find this is the easiest to repeat, I have a hard time being consistent wit 30lbs) With this method, I get beautiful pours almost everytime. I use a double basket, and a naked PF.

When I used my hand grinder, I used a Norpro canning funnel, and WDT'd, then brushed all the grounds into a mound in the basket, lifted up the funnel, tamped and went. Surprisingly, it worked well.. but I didnt like how big the canning funnel was.. and prefer the method stated above.

With the triple basket, I kinda follow the method described in Jon R's article on this site.. but ive yet to be consistent with the triple. Sometimes they are textbook, othertimes I get some side channels.

I hate my single basket.. Standard E-61 i believe. It came with Anita. In any case.. I hate it, it is impossible to get a good shot. It just gradually slopes down to a smaller circle. I like the LM style, with the definite 'hole' with straight sides, then it slopes up. Maybe ill get one.

Point is.. regardless of whatever funnel i use, or dont use a funnel, whatever tamp style i use.. If I DONT use the WDT, I CANNOT be consistent. WDT almost guarantees a good shot.. and since I wont be opening a cafe for at least a couple years.. I will swear by it. When I open my place.. ill need to learn something newer/much faster.

Sorry for the length. :oops:
Jeff

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JohnB.
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#94: Post by JohnB. »

Normally I would either use the WDT or my finger to level off the coffee but after my last two shots that may be a thing of the past. Throwing caution to the wind I decided to see what I'd get with no distribution or leveling after dosing. For both shots I dosed as evenly as possible ending up with a small pile in the center of the basket. Without tapping or shaking I tamped normally & pulled the shots. Both times I got the nicest looking pours I'd seen in ages & both shots were creamy & delicious. Again two of the best I've tasted in awhile.
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cafeIKE
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#95: Post by cafeIKE »

With the SJ or Zass?

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JohnB.
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#96: Post by JohnB. »

I've never tried using the Zass for espresso, that's my travel grinder for press pot. This was with the SJ w/stock burrs & doser.
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Psyd
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#97: Post by Psyd »

JmanEspresso wrote: I don't think I have the level of 'geek' to contribute,
(sweeper mod from vanes, upside down funnel over star)
Boiler-1.3max, Brew, 10BAR
First, I weigh out my beans, every time. I grind per shot.
Updosed, 16grams.
clear out throat, brush any extra on doser edges/corners of things, thwack clean. Then, WDT with a tiny wisk, level, and lightly compact everything, chicago chop style, evenly over the basket.
Light tamp to level, lift up to see where there are extra grounds on edges.. use tamper to add them to the puck, then, 50lb tamp(I find this is the easiest to repeat, I have a hard time being consistent with 30lbs)
I use a double basket, and a naked PF.
I used a Norpro canning funnel, and WDT'd, then brushed all the grounds into a mound in the basket,
I kinda follow the method described in Jon R's article on this site.
.
I like the LM style, with the definite 'hole' with straight sides, then it slopes up. Maybe ill get one.
Oh, Jeff, you so have the level of geek to contribute. :wink:
Welcome to the club, we meet on Tuesdays, and there are T-shirts.*
The force is strong in this one...




*I have an LM T that I got from a CG'er, a Rocket Roasters T from Larry, an Espresso Smith T from Tal, and a Barista Jam T that I had smuggled in from Barefoot, from Andy.
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Nick
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#98: Post by Nick »

Not sure if there was ever a satisfactory answer to the original question in its original context. Thought I'd throw in a couple of pence, knowing all or most of this will be review or already known.

You want an even extraction (right?). Working backwards, to achieve as even an extraction as possible, you'd need a coffee-ground matrix (puck) with even density and mass laterally. Tamping evenly doesn't hurt, though the more important thing is to have a laterally consistent (in mass and density) puck. How do you achieve that?

The most simple way is to present the coffee grounds (dose) into the basket perfectly evenly. If you were able to dose in a way that presented a particular mass of coffee perfectly evenly into the basket, then there would be no reason to then physically manipulate the coffee in order to improve the distribution, nor to control the mass (amount) of coffee in the basket.

Physical manipulation of the coffee (leveling, finger-strike leveling, etc.) comes into play when you are, for whatever reason, dissatisfied with the lateral distribution of the grinds, and/or dissatisfied with the quantity (mass) of coffee in the basket.

Some of the newer grinders feature two important elements:
1) timer switches
2) improved dosing mechanisms

The timer switches allows the barista a new level of control over the dose (mass) of coffee. Granted, using time to control mass is always going to depend on how well correlated the time of the grind is to the mass of the coffee ground (different grinders and dosing mechanisms vary greatly in this regard). If, for example, 3.52 seconds of grinding consistently yields 18.3g of coffee, you can probably use the timer to control your dose rather than leveling off excess coffee.

With improved dosing mechanisms (and improved techniques), the lateral distribution of grounds is (or at least can be) greatly improved. This reduces or eliminates the need to physically manipulate the coffee grounds to improve the distribution.

I think this somewhat represents the theories at play that have led to Marshall's and other's observations about some of the competing baristas.

Practically speaking, the jury's still out on whether or not the Mazzer E-series doserless grinders, Mahlkonig espresso grinders, Anfim grinder-dosers, dosing-chute modified Mazzers, etc., dose the coffee well enough to truly eliminate the need for physical manipulation of the coffee. For instance, reigning US Barista Champion Mike Phillips used a Mazzer Robur E and still employed finger-leveling. The issue, in my mind, is whether the resultant dose is too "center-heavy" in its lateral density. Such a distribution-flaw would not necessarily be revealed by observing a bottomless portafilter extraction.

I will add that while Mike did use "finger striking" with his Robur E, he still did use the Robur-E. In other words, the newer-design grinders do provide some improvements, even if one does not take advantage of every element. Assuming that a grinder doses very well, one unique opportunity presented is to be able to dose lower than you would otherwise.

Anyway, good topic, and I hope I didn't do more harm than good by posting. :)
Nick
wreckingballcoffee.com
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shadowfax
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#99: Post by shadowfax »

Nick wrote:For instance, reigning US Barista Champion Mike Phillips used a Mazzer Robur E and still employed finger-leveling. The issue, in my mind, is whether the resultant dose is too "center-heavy" in its lateral density. Such a distribution-flaw would not necessarily be revealed by observing a bottomless portafilter extraction.

I will add that while Mike did use "finger striking" with his Robur E, he still did use the Robur-E. In other words, the newer-design grinders do provide some improvements, even if one does not take advantage of every element. Assuming that a grinder doses very well, one unique opportunity presented is to be able to dose lower than you would otherwise.
Interesting set of points, Mr. Cho. I would argue that the bottomless portafilter can give at least hint that an extraction is "center heavy;" You just have to watch it bead at the start--it ought to bead slightly heavier in a ring pattern. Of course, that's useless if it beads evenly and exhibits the problem later in the pour (when you can't see), but I would be surprised if that were the case. In my experience, other minor distribution flaws are the worst in the first few seconds, and seem to (appear to... which can be deceiving, I know) self-correct. Of course, you'd never know if a problem like that was bad at first, and then recovered, or not, and that sucks, because I suspect that a lot of doserless designs will have a similar problem when you just dose by holding the basket right in the center of where the grinds are dispensed (and how much more can you really do in 2-4 seconds?); I'd guess that the important question is how bad that is for whichever grinder you're using--whether you can sense it in the cup consistently, untouched pucks vs. well-groomed ones.
Nicholas Lundgaard

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