Coffee review

Introduction to the characteristics of Grinding degree of Coffee Golden ratio brewing ratio Flavor Manor

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, Several years have passed by in a hurry, and we have returned to the field. Now we are in the kitchen, making coffee. Wonderful coffee. The kind of coffee that awakens your gratitude for the good life in the first place every morning. It's art, it's ritual, it's time to share around the table. If you are like us, no one has ever taught you how to properly modulate coffee, or

Several years have passed by in a hurry, and we have returned to the field. Now we are in the kitchen, making coffee. Wonderful coffee.

The kind of coffee that awakens your gratitude for the good life in the first place every morning. It's art, it's ritual, it's time to share around the table.

If you are like us, no one has ever taught you how to properly modulate coffee or how to taste it. When you stop at the local coffee pavilion, everything about coffee is hidden behind the counter, too far away for you to understand. Not long ago, we were like that. But after repeated experiments, we made too many mistakes, and then we finally learned the right way.

What a shame to waste all this time on a bad coffee. If you drink it every day, or if you have to make it for someone else every day, you might as well make coffee a little better. What we want is a good coffee, right?

In fact, what we want is not just a good coffee, but a perfect coffee. On the contrary, the key is based on the golden ratio of 1 coffee to 17.42 parts of water. This ratio best takes you to the best area, and there is no unit limit, which means it's up to you whether you want to be in grams, ounces, pounds, quartz stones or tonnage units.

Therefore, if you want to prepare coffee with an extraction rate of 20% and a total solid solubility of 1.28%, you can use 30g of dry coffee and 523g of water as the base, and then adjust it on this basis.

At the same time, the concepts of extraction rate and total dissolution of solids are often mistakenly confused. It is important to figure out the difference between the two concepts.

Cooking strength refers to the amount of solid coffee dissolved in your coffee. And the extraction rate indicates the amount of extract you get from dry coffee. The point is that strong coffee has nothing to do with bitterness, coffee content or baking curve, only with the ratio of coffee to water in your cup.

The measurement methods of all these values were greatly innovated in 2008. A company called Voice Systems Technologies decided to apply the refractometer principle-- a refractometer is an instrument used to detect light waves refracted by particles-- to a project and developed a coffee concentration analyzer called ExtractMojo.

This instrument can accurately display the total solid solubility of coffee, and then compare it with the "coffee cooking control chart", you can not only scientifically but also pay attention to taste to prepare a better coffee.

Some purists object to using such a device to measure the quality of a coffee, which reminds us, as retired Marines, of a similar topic, which is the discussion of gun control.

Is there something wrong with the gun itself, or is it the way people use the gun?

Is there something wrong with the concentration analyzer, or is there a problem with the way people use this instrument?

These issues have triggered heated discussions, and the starting point of the discussion is good. But guns and concentration analyzers are tools, and like other tools, they can be used inappropriately.

Let's look at this in terms of the "fortress principle" (castledoctrine): just use a concentration analyzer quietly at home.

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