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Espresso tips, or, how to pull a decent shot.

edited January 1970 in Espresso Machines
Always use freshly roasted beans from a quality roaster.

These are generalized basic snippets of accepted wisdom designed to help those new to espresso.

If you want more detail or explanation of the point jump in.

Comments

  • Allow your machine, portafilter and cups time to warm up before pulling a shot. Approx half an hour is usually around the mark, if in doubt check your owners manual.
  • The ubiquitous rule of 3's (to be taken with a grain of salt): Green coffee stales after 3 years Roasted coffee stales after 3 weeks Ground coffee stales after 3 minutes Know your roast dates!
  • on 1421203791:
    The ubiquitous rule of 3's (to be taken with a grain of salt):
    Perhaps so, however it does convey the message that unlike wine coffee does not improve with age.
  • Cleanliness is close to God-shotliness :)
  • Dry the inside of the filter basket thoroughly before dosing, a clean microfibre cloth is good for this.
  • Learn and embrace the idiosyncracies of your equipment... From temperature surfing to sweeping the chute today's learning curve is tomorrow's consistency of quality.
  • Grind and dose are closely related, many use the 5 cent test to get into the ball park then fine tune from there. "Correct depth of the coffee puck is a whisker away from the shower screen at lock in" suggest you try the 5 cent piece test, fill the porta filter, tamp and place 5 cent piece in the centre top then lock PF in, if the coin is pushed into the coffee reduce the dose a little, the object is to have a gap between the tamped coffee and shower screen approx the thickness of the 5 cent piece. :)"
  • Never heat your milk above 70degC and the optimum temperature range is between 60 and 65 degC!
  • Don't expect to fill the grinder hopper with beans and have them remain fresh over a couple of weeks, it won't happen.
  • Learn how your grinder works so that you can effectively grind single doses into your apparatus.  This helps with  freshness and repeatability.
  • on 1421544825:
    Learn how your grinder works so that you can effectively grind single doses into your apparatus.  This helps with  freshness and repeatability.
    If there was a like button I would certainly like this tip.
  • Brett's tip is worth repeating. "grind single doses into your apparatus.  This helps with  freshness and repeatability."
  • Always start your journey with the double basket for your portafilter.  It's less finicky and most requested.  But I want a glorious single shot only: remove/skim the Crema with a spoon... Trust me ;)
  • on 1421645062:
    Always start your journey with the double basket for your portafilter.  It's less finicky and most requested.  But I want a glorious single shot only: remove/skim the Crema with a spoon... Trust me ;)
    Noooooo, sacrilege, our paths don't simply diverge here Brett they turn 180
  • Oh I absolutely agree with you in my own practice however my wife was a non-coffee drinker who didn't even like a single shot.  Enter an article by coffee guru Luca and after skimming the Crema, she was a convert.  Fast-forward a few years and she's a double shot latte girl!!  Sure you can simply halve the shot and sink the second half but where is where it's the art, the manipulation of science and the fun in that... ;)
  • There is a direct and closely coupled correlation with the roast depth and the set brew water temperature band of espresso machines A roast to second crack is coupled to 89-92 Deg C temp band KK
  • When it comes to espresso repeatability is the key. So when establishing a grind and dose only change one variable at a time and take notes. Don't change both grind level and dose at the same time, when your reasonably happy with the dose weight (use scales if you desire, it certainly helps in the early stages) start to vary the grind, coarser or finer until you reach a point where you are only fine tuning.
  • Espresso shot timing should be between 25 and 30 seconds from the time the pump is activated.
  • The art of making true espresso is more of a craft!
  • A Ristretto is approx 16 grams of beverage from 16 grams of coffee. An espresso is approx 32 grams of beverage from 16 grams of coffee.
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