Old Coffee Beans

No it was just sitting in the training room. It was super floral and intense. Just a fluke I guessā€¦

Hello Stephane,
For me make it less example you tamp hard for the fresh roasted beans,now you tamp it medium. 2 extraction time rduce 2-3 seconda from usuall. 3. Grimd size less like medium fine ground coffee

Hope itā€™s helping you Stephane :blush:

what im gonna do isā€¦up dosing,play around with yield(less water) and tempreture.
i experience few times that old coffee (2months+) taste still goodā€¦

i remember the one coffee i try is kenya hell yah !

out of curiosity, how much has anyone experimented with older beans for espresso? i recently discovered that beans at two weeks had a wider sweet spot (in pull time) than they had had when fresher, and were still delicious.

[quote=ā€œRozi, post:25, topic:211ā€]
For me make it less example you tamp hard for the fresh roasted beans,now you tamp it medium.
[/quote] @ Rozi For me Now i stand at Matt point of view about tamp pressure after iā€™ve read this article fews weekā€™s ago https://www.baristahustle.com/how-hard-should-you-tamp/ :wink:

I test the others stuff you said and let you know :slight_smile:

Iā€™ve been told, and used to adhere to, the industry standard of coffee needing to be used within the 2-14 days out of roasting rule. Iā€™ve come to discover that more flavors are perceived and extraction is more consistent with espresso that is 2-6 weeks old. The reason I have found this to be true is that there isnt as much crema (aka gasses) getting in the way of flavors and also expanding the bean so much that is causes it to touch the screen, while itā€™s being extracted, which in turn causes the puck to burn.

With brewed coffee, iā€™d say the gasses are more forgiving, and the optimal serve time is 1-6 weeks out of roasting.

Iā€™d love to hear what others think of what I said and to see if anyone has tried out this idea.

-Skyler Greyson

I believe there is a more rational explanation for this. Coffee cannot burn touching the screen. It was roasted to ~200C. A group head is a warm bath in comparison.

Hello stephane

Had you tried all those steps?:blush:

I definitely agree, Matt, I just couldnā€™t justify my tastes any other way. Maybe it is just the gasses that are expressing themselves too much, and getting in the way of the natural flavors that the coffee has to offer. Do you have any other, possible, explanation that can explain this?

Not yet, i test new coffee for now :wink:

@Sgreyson Even though the screen is not burning the coffee grounds, you still donā€™t want the grounds touching the screen because that will cause an uneven extraction. It is necessary for a small layer of water to build above the puck so that the pressure pushes on that whole layer and goes through evenly instead of just channeling through the coffee and also missing the area right below the screw.

@Ben_Nicholson this could work? :joy:

How about for Colin Harmon and Steve Leightonā€™s Coffee Throwing Championship?

Weā€™ve also had some of our grounds picked up by someone growing shiitake and morel mushrooms. Old coffee could be great for growing expensive mushrooms.

At my cafe, weā€™ve used old/aged beans to great effect offered as nelā€¦

http://www.parengocoffee.com/blog/2014/3/1/the-basics-nel-drip

Thanks for your advice :slight_smile: From now I will definitely try to follow it :smiley:

This is actually the best thing. Use them as a fertilizer in the plants and the plants will bless you for long. They might too need something good for their growth.

Just passing by!
What about covering them with chocolate? That way you can use them as a compliment for your guests/friends/clients.

That is a delicious idea Barb! Some chocolate covered beans are always a family favorite.

What do you think if the coffee that has been 4 weeks with a medium roast profile is roasted back to medium to dark?

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