Coffee review

Practical skills for coffee brewing | how to know the extraction of coffee by tasting?

Published: 2024-11-08 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/11/08, Professional coffee knowledge exchange more coffee bean information please follow the coffee workshop (Wechat official account cafe_style) this article will be based on the basic theory of coffee extraction, as well as tasting coffee in three cases: over-extraction, under-extraction and ideal extraction. Extraction can be said to be the most important but least understood part of coffee brewing. Extraction represents everything. If there is no extraction or even no

Professional coffee knowledge exchange more coffee bean information please follow the coffee workshop (Wechat official account cafe_style)

This paper will be linked with the basic theory of coffee extraction and the tasting of coffee in three cases: "over-extraction", "insufficient extraction" and "ideal extraction".

Extraction can be said to be the most important but least understood part of coffee brewing. Extraction represents everything. If you can't even get a cup of coffee without extraction, here's the simplest but not 100% accurate statement:

Extraction is the use of water to bring out the substance of coffee.

It's easy to talk, but it's much harder to integrate and apply.

Instead of discussing the effects of coffee oils and trace components during extraction here, we will first discuss more practical and appropriate information, such as how to taste extracted coffee and be proficient, as for chemical analysis later.

A lot of things happen when coffee is mixed with water, and the easiest thing to understand is that the water dissolves a lot of the flavor of coffee, which is almost the flavor you drink in the coffee cup. Only very fine coffee powder will affect the taste, but the fine powder is not considered in the extraction, because the fine powder only floats in the water during the extraction.

Roasted coffee beans contain about 28% by weight and can be dissolved in water, which means that about 28% of the substances in roasted coffee beans can be extracted into the water. Almost all of the rest is the fiber of coffee beans and the tissue of seeds. Water is a good medium for soluble matter, but it still needs some external help. If you throw the whole coffee bean into hot water, the extract is much less than the powder, because the structure of the coffee bean is very dense and complex. Water cannot pass through the whole coffee bean and dissolve the taste. So we must increase the surface area of coffee beans and "open it" so that the water can bring out the taste of coffee. Coffee beans can be easily extracted by using a bean grinder, the coffee beans can be ground into powder, and the surface area can be increased so that the water can be effective.

Ideally, we grind the coffee to a very fine state, throw it into the water and dissolve it to give a good flavor. Unfortunately, if you do so, this is a very bitter and terrible cup of coffee. Not all coffee flavors are good, so we have to control the number of flavors extracted in order to brew a delicious cup of coffee.

Similarly, we can't grind a lot of coffee beans and extract a little bit. In order to avoid these overextracted flavors, under-extracted coffee tastes just as scary (sometimes worse than over-extraction). Most people understand that extraction is like a two-way road, and we always try to find a balance in this way to avoid over-extraction or under-extraction.

The following simple picture can explain the follow-up, when you can control these, you can make more coffee. Before that, we all stopped at the intersection represented in the picture below.

1. Insufficient coffee extraction

Insufficient extraction means that the coffee powder is not enough, and there are many residual substances in the coffee powder that can increase the flavor of the cup of insufficient extraction. Imagine a cup of short-lived espresso, known as a premium espresso ristretto, with a sour smell, a lack of sweetness, a strange salty taste and a disappointingly short aftertaste. These four characteristics are obvious signs of underextraction, so let's take a closer look at the phenomenon of underextraction.

prickly sour

The acidity of coffee can be tricky, especially if the coffee's acidity is expected. Many people ask the author,"Isn't sourness the same as acidity?" This is a good question; many languages use the same word for sour as for acid, and you can imagine how difficult it is for speakers of different languages to test together.

To clarify this part, we define prickly acidity as a negative taste. The tongue will quickly and strongly feel the sour taste, which will cause an immediate physiological reaction. You may wrinkle your lips or have an electric shock or sharp feeling on both sides of your tongue. Sour taste can be unpleasant and spoil your palate, and it's not the taste you want.

When it comes to acid, it can be good or bad, and acid is more like a flavor than a good word. For example,"The acidity of coffee is pleasant," or "The acidity of this coffee is high," is logical. Acid and sour/juicy/acid bright/irritating acid These can be linked, you can write an article about acid, but this article is about extraction. Back to business.

lack of sweetness

From the author's point of view, the most important thing about coffee flavor is sweetness. Sweet is the best. Have you ever heard someone complain like that?" This coffee is too sweet!" Let's think about it, I'm pretty sure we're all after the sweetness of coffee. Sweet taste is like the Holy Grail, which is very hard to find, and once it is found, there are amazing rewards! Insufficient extraction is not sweet, and far apart. Lack of extraction can show post-coffee dissatisfaction, giving people the feeling of emptiness I want more coffee. It is worth mentioning that the lack of sweetness can highlight the sour taste of coffee beans and make people feel the lack of extraction more obviously.

Salty taste

At present, not everyone agrees with the author, but this part must insist that under-extracted coffee will be salty. This is not like "I'm sorry I added salt to the coffee" kind of salty, but underextracted coffee, almost always have the taste of the salty taste. From a tactile point of view, it is like the slippery feeling of contact with alkaline food.

# Science Lecture-sour and salty tastes dissolve more easily than sweetness, which is why underextracted coffee has sour and salty tastes, and sweet substances do not have enough time or opportunity to dissolve completely.

Yu Yun is short.

The aftertaste of a well-extracted coffee can last for several minutes (or even a few hours of luck). You can imagine someone putting a piece of brown sugar on your tongue, or imagine that you have just eaten a delicious taffy.

The underextracted coffee does not have this aftertaste. When you swallow the coffee, the flavor dissipates. There is no pleasant feeling left in your mouth, which makes you experience the short and unsatisfactory taste of this cup of coffee, which is bad and not delicious.

There are other bad feelings that represent insufficient extraction, but the above four items are more obvious and definite. Whenever you drink these properties, you can be sure that you are drinking coffee that is not sufficiently extracted.

Next, let's look at the other extreme of insufficient extraction.

Second, over-extracted coffee

The over-extracted coffee represents bringing out too much soluble matter in the coffee, and the result of this extraction is a bad flavor.

Imagine a boutique espresso with an extraction time of 40-50 seconds. Don't pretend you haven't tasted this exquisite coffee. Such coffee can be bitter, dry and empty, which represents the three most obvious characteristics of over-extracted coffee. Let's take a look at these characteristics again.

Bitter taste

We have all had bitter coffee. The over-extracted coffee is really bitter, and I don't want to have such a bitter taste unless I'm drinking Kimberly bitterness. Much of the bitterness comes from caffeine, but bitterness is also related to many other chemicals. Deep-roasted coffee will reach a charred state and form more bitter chemicals.

# Science Lecture-there are thousands of chemicals (mostly poisons) that trigger bitterness signals in our taste buds, warning our bodies not to eat them.

Dryness

It is very uncomfortable to drink dry coffee in coffee, because the dryness is very strong and will last for a long time. This feeling is called astringency, just like you drink unsweetened black tea, new wine, overbrewed white wine. The astringency in wine comes from the polyphenol effect: these are chemicals that are easily found in plants, seeds and bark, and may also make coffee feel dry.

Polyphenols are bitter and bind to the proteins in your saliva. As most people know, polyphenols dry your tongue and produce a rustling or dry feeling in the mouth (this should not be confused with "crisp" or "dry" in wine. These adjectives indicate distinct acidity or low sweetness, not necessarily taste)

Emptiness

The author likes to use emptiness to describe over-extracted coffee. Coffee feels empty and lifeless, just like extracting the light from the coffee, killing the beautiful substance in the process. Well-extracted coffee will make you feel full-bodied, delicious, smooth and mouth-watering. And over-extracted coffee is empty, rough, disgusting and tasteless. It is this kind of coffee that lacks flavor and characteristic (this characteristic does not refer to the characteristic of flavor), which makes the author use the word empty to describe it.

These are the flavor characteristics of overextracted flavor, and of course there are more adjectives, but these are the easiest to recognize, which also reminds you not to flush out over-extracted coffee.

The most important thing about these empty flavors is that they are common and can be extracted from the noblest rose summer coffee in the world, as well as from inferior bad coffee. These flavors are not pleasant, and most of the people who read this article are in pursuit of fine coffee, which means that we are trying to create special coffee for consumers, so that consumers will be willing to spend more money to taste it, and the mistake of insufficient extraction is so sudden.

Now let's take a look at the good ingredients, reaching the sweet spot and delicious coffee.

Third, coffee with good extraction

Some of the coffee with good extraction is hard to come by, and we invest a lot of effort to balance countless factors, just to create a cup of coffee with a good flavor, and we have to know how it tastes.

Imagine the best coffee you've ever had, with a sweet and mature flavor! The clear flavor is like transparency. Acid balance and bring a positive feeling, if you are lucky, the acid will be very rich, and the aftertaste will be long. This is the coffee that everyone is flocking to, and you will want to know more about it.

Sweetness and maturity

The author spent countless hours trying to extract more of the coffee's most mature flavor from the coffee.

Imagine plums or similar drupes ripening with rich and strong acidity at first, then sweeter and sweeter as they mature, and the sugar of the fruit develops and becomes thicker, thicker, and even greasy. Then reach a point, like the sweetness you smell when you hold the fruit close to your nose. This is the sweet and mature flavor you will want to drink from coffee, and if you have never had such coffee, you may easily be satisfied.

Clarity and transparency

George Howell describes the coffee treatment as "peering at coffee from the window of coffee", while the author likes to extend this sentence to "imagine extracting and baking into other panes of the window of coffee." if the coffee in your cup is overextracted or underextracted, it will be difficult to "see" the actual flavor of the coffee. Common extraction mistakes can distract you and waste the painstaking front-end processing of the coffee you taste.

Acid quality

Meticulous, rich and distinct acidity is the most important element behind coffee. The acidity is intoxicating but also frustrating. When you drink coffee, the acidity reminds you of certain fruits or even wine. If the acidity can be clearly defined, you can focus on remembering the last time you ate the fruit.

The rhyme is long.

The meaning of the word itself illustrates everything, and a good afterrhyme can be retained for a long time, which is one of the symbols of extracting good coffee.

So that's coffee extraction and flavor good, bad or worse, hopefully now you can notice these coffee you normally drink and be able to link to coffee characteristics of different extraction results.

Original source:

https://baristahustle.com/blogs/barista-hustle/coffee-extraction-and-how-to-taste-it

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