espresso recipe:41/121 (0.370 g/ml)

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Choosing the ultimate espresso recipe isn’t a one-size-fits-all situation. Embrace the diversity of espresso by exploring a range of recipes tailored to different roast levels.

If you under-extract coffee, it is sour. If you over-extract coffee, it is bitter. Perfecting your extraction recipe is the secret to crafting a delightful espresso beverage.

This particular espresso recipe is one in a series of 120 recipes, mathematically generated to be effective for every roast level. The Dialling in Process can now use your taste buds to move up or down the scale of recipes, resulting in you finding the best-tasting recipe for your coffee.

This recipe can be used for any espresso based drink, latte, cappuccino, flat white, long black, short black, americano, cortado, you name it. Technically, they are all double espressos. Once you have discovered how to make good tasting coffee, you may need less of the chocolate syrup.

Espresso Recipe 41/121 - 0.370 g/ml

ESPRESSO RECIPE:41/121 (0.370 G/ML)

Recipe by richard.c.mayston@density.coffee
0.0 from 0 votes Only logged in users can rate recipes
Course: CoffeeCuisine: Espresso
Grind setting

350

μm
Temperature

88

c
Dose

21

gm
Yield

42

gm

This is a 'Medium Dark/Dark Roast' roast-level recipe. There is a less than 10% chance this will be the right recipe for your roast level (unless you measured the density). It is simply the middle recipe with the least steps in either direction. Expect to have to try another recipe based on the taste test.

Ingredients

  • 2.0 Espresso Ratio

  • 20 gm VST Basket

  • 7 bar Pressure

  • 27 s Shot time

  • 220 ml Cup size

  • 10 ml Bypass water

  • 168 ml Steamed milk

  • 333 μm Grind setting

  • 88 °C Temperature

  • 21 gm Dose

  • 42 gm Yield

Directions

  • Pre-heat your espresso machine, portafilter, basket, and coffee cup
  • Get your 21 grams of coffee single dose out of the freezer. If you are not single-dosing and freezing your coffee, read How to Store Coffee Beans - 9 tips. While at it, read Best Coffee Beans - Six Purchasing Tips. Shots of espresso these days are nearly always a double shot of espresso. Double shots are now the standard in America and many places worldwide. A single shot of espresso is very rare. Traditionally, a single shot (solo) of espresso uses about 7g of espresso-fine grounds. If you want to make a single, pull a double, but use a split portafilter to halve the shot for you.
  • Use RDT by spraying them with water and stirring them. This reduces static electricity, clumping, retention, and waste and produces stronger flavours (read the paper).
  • Grind your frozen coffee; do not defrost it. Using a dosing funnel, grind it into the right-sized basket in a naked portafilter.
  • Puck prep: I use a WDT tool to break up clumps and redistribute them. I do use a levelling tool and a levelling palm tamper. Then, I cover it with a shower screen to help evenly distribute the water.
  • Place scales under your cup and tare, and start the timer.
  • Ramp up to 8 bar pressure. Pre-infusion (pause till first drip) is only required if the beans are super fresh (say within 2 days of roast) and are degassing so much that extraction is being affected - pretty unlikely, so you probably don't need it. Watch the bottom of the naked portafilter with a mirror, ease of momentarily if you see spritzing. Allow the pressure to decline to 6 bars to maintain a constant flow rate. Stop the shot when the target yield has been achieved. The extraction time should be roughly 27 seconds. If the shot runs very slowly despite high pressure, you need to grind coarser. If the shot has run too fast and you cannot maintain pressure, you need to grind finer.
  • Now, the most important step. Before adding milk, stir the expresso and crema, and then taste the wet spoon (you don't need a spoonful). Is the coffee sour? If so, next time you make this coffee, extract more using the recipe indicated by the button above.
  • If the coffee is not sour, ask yourself if it is very bitter. This is more difficult because all coffee is bitter to some extent. However, you can reduce bitterness by extracting less. Go too far, and it will turn sour. You are looking for the calm spot in between. Just above sour will taste the best. If you need to reduce bitterness next time you make this coffee, extract less by using the recipe indicated by the button above.
  • Add the bypass hot water (optional). This reduces the blanket of milk and increases the apparent strength of the coffee while keeping the volume up.
  • Add the steamed milk. Espresso con panna (whipped cream) may be a little OTT, but adding 5-10ml of cream to your milk before steaming can help get the texture right for that latte art and help make a perfect espresso.

Recipe Video

Notes

  • Don't get hung up on the details. If you can't change your pressure, maybe you don't have a full set of baskets, you don't know what that grind size even means. It doesn't matter. Providing you are changing the dose, the yield, the ratio, the bits you can, you will be changing the TASTE, and that is what matters. YOU are finding a RECIPE that tastes better than the last recipe you tried.

An example of coffee I'm drinking

NEW CROP Costa Rica La Minita Tarrazu

Taste Notes: Milk chocolate, peach, walnut & maple syrup sweetness.
It has a medium body with a lingering cocoa finish.
 

Description

 The Legendary Costa Rica La Minita Tarrazu is one of the oldest specialty coffee farms producing one of the worlds best coffees. Grown with incredible care, this coffee is processed with amazing detail from seed to cup!
 

About the coffee

 
 

Altitude: 1450 – 1800 masl
Region: Tarrazu
Process: Washed 
Varietals: Caturra

 

About the Roaster

https://www.coffeelab.co.nz/store/view/new-crop-costa-rica-la-minita-tarrazu/59

 

Density.coffee is not for profit. It is the result of my research and development, freely shared in the hope it will help others.

I only endorse equipment I have purchased myself, and I do not earn a commission or have any links to the companies I recommend. 

I have a dream 

  • it might raise the standard of coffee-making globally
  • It might reduce dialling in waste, time, and frustration
  • It might encourage people to explore more varieties and pay more attention to the producers.
  • You might be prepared to pay more for better coffee if they please you, returning more money to growers.
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