Making espresso with ultrasound
Posted by darktoto 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by jurf 22 hours ago
> It is noted that espresso is normally consumed hot and has transient sensory attributes that are temperature- and time-dependent. Hence, serving espresso at 22 °C will alter its sensory characteristics.
This is a weird test, coffee get’s so much worse when cold. So people can’t distinguish between two bad coffees.
Comment by cush 15 hours ago
This is a myth. Bad coffee tastes better when hot because your sense of taste is dulled - reducing bitterness. Also, at higher temperatures, aromatics and volatile compounds are more airborne, improving the smell of coffee. Good coffee is better enjoyed around 60-70C
Comment by jurf 13 hours ago
Regardless, I would say it’s an objective fact that good coffee is ruined at room temperature. It still tastes fine, but no where near as good.
What especially irks me is that they could have just heated the stuff in a microwave [1] to 50°C and have a much better test.
Comment by nickff 16 hours ago
Comment by jurf 14 hours ago
Comment by hylaride 15 hours ago
Coldbrew is a thing and done right it brings out a refreshing sweetness. Also iced coffee. Bad coffee is bad hot or cold.
Comment by david-gpu 12 hours ago
Comment by jurf 13 hours ago
I would rather have room temperature coffee than a cold brew usually though. I just did not have good luck with it so far
Comment by cush 15 hours ago
How does ultrasound affect flow rate? Do fines sink to the bottom of the puck and choke the shot?
There is a new movement happening, especially in lighter roast coffees, where we're finding that more balanced extractions (less bitterness/acidity/acridity) are happening at lower pressures, even going so far as grinding so coarse that the puck offers zero resistance - effectively making the pump the limiting factor for flow rate. Light roast coffee is much less porous and more hydrophobic.
I wonder if adding ultrasound would allow light roasts to yield more extraction in general, maybe even keeping the high temperature. Or, would adding ultrasound allow a finer grind size and more resistance without adding the harsh flavors of a high-temperature shot.
So many experiments to be done!
Comment by supertroop 15 hours ago
Comment by ceejayoz 15 hours ago
I like the ritual of it, for sure, but I'm not sure that's what makes it a good shot?
Comment by supertroop 15 hours ago
Comment by slwvx 15 hours ago
Comment by wuliwong 14 hours ago
Comment by manarth 10 minutes ago
Comment by supertroop 14 hours ago
Comment by cush 15 hours ago
Comment by duped 14 hours ago
Comment by swiftcoder 22 hours ago
Where's James Hoffmann when you need him?
Comment by swiftcoder 22 hours ago
Comment by cocodill 9 hours ago
Comment by erikgahner 22 hours ago
[1]: https://www.unsw.edu.au/newsroom/news/2024/05/Ultrasonic_col...
Comment by klausa 22 hours ago
(You might quibble whether it's actually espresso if there's not pressure and it's extracted cold; but it's closer to espresso in strength.)
Comment by erikgahner 16 hours ago
Comment by thomasoffinga 23 hours ago
Comment by Febriss33 14 hours ago
Comment by cush 13 hours ago
Comment by fabian2k 23 hours ago
Comment by hultner 23 hours ago
Comment by ChrisMarshallNY 22 hours ago
Makes nice coffee, but I don’t think it’s worth the cost (but he has a lot of money, so it’s not a big deal for him).
I envision some fairly high-end kit, coming from this.
Comment by tjcvirage 23 hours ago
Comment by fabian2k 23 hours ago
Comment by klausa 22 hours ago
Comment by swiftcoder 22 hours ago
An awful lot of people drink iced espresso drinks these days. Room temperature (or below) brewing would make a big difference to the dilution in those drinks.
Comment by exitb 22 hours ago
Comment by ma2kx 23 hours ago
Comment by mzitelli 23 hours ago
Comment by klausa 23 hours ago
There's a semi-famous, super hipster cafe near me in Tokyo, that I sometimes go to.
Once, they had a special on the menu, when they give you a flat white, and a double shot of espresso on the side, with a thermometer hovering over the shot, with suggestions of tasting notes that you can get out from sips at different temperatures.
Now, that's generally very much a thing — things definitely taste differently based on the temperature (or maybe _they_ don't, but we _perceive_ them differently? distinction without a difference, I guess.).
The suggested temperature ranges were 51-40C; 40-30C, and 30-20C.
51-40 was great. 40-30 was getting weird, but still _interesting_, because you definitely got different notes.
But the 30-20 was terrible. That is absolutely too cool to enjoy a shot of espresso. I'm all for experimentation and doing weird things, but that was no longer riding the line of "not great but interesting" and went straight into "why would you ever do this" territory.
Comment by thenthenthen 23 hours ago
Comment by elil17 23 hours ago
Comment by moodyScarf 23 hours ago
It's not for you
Comment by alansaber 23 hours ago
Comment by weird-eye-issue 23 hours ago
Comment by uberex 23 hours ago
Comment by david-gpu 12 hours ago
A typical recipe is something like 20g coffee and 80g water, yielding about 60g of concentrated coffee. Lance Hedrick has done a few videos on the subject.
It is not espresso, obviously, but it takes no time to prepare, it tastes fantastic and it is very easy to dial-in.
Comment by emptybits 15 hours ago
TL;DR: Aiming for a high-volume industrial goal, tone-deaf to coffee enthusiasts.
Comment by econ 15 hours ago
Comment by abujazar 23 hours ago
But perhaps this can be used in the instant coffee industry or something.
Comment by elil17 23 hours ago
As stated in the article, the whole point is for use in ready-to-drink coffee manufacturing.
Comment by klausa 23 hours ago
If you're drinking light, floral and acidic coffees, it's been relatively "trendy" recently to skim the crema off before drinking it.
I don't bother with that, but pulling two shots and removing the crema from one of them and trying them side by side is an interesting sensory experience — I'd encourage you to try, at least once!
Comment by nomilk 23 hours ago
An average coffee shop's espresso machine might use $200/month of electricity, so even though the percent saving (75%) is high, it's off a base that's small relative to other costs; possibly too small to be enticing.
Comment by cush 13 hours ago
Comment by david-gpu 11 hours ago
Comment by abujazar 10 hours ago
Comment by abujazar 11 hours ago
Comment by rstuart4133 23 hours ago
Cold drip coffee is a thing, done well a very nice thing.
Comment by abujazar 11 hours ago
Comment by uberex 23 hours ago
Comment by blcknight 23 hours ago
Comment by abujazar 23 hours ago
Comment by tjcvirage 23 hours ago
Comment by abujazar 22 hours ago
Technically you can also buy a bottle of grape juice from the grocery store, let it sit on the kitchen sink with a yeast lock for a few weeks and call it wine, and technically it even is, but it's also going to taste quite shitty.
Comment by klausa 22 hours ago
You could just read the linked paper?
> Esp was prepared using a Sanremo Cube espresso machine. Brewing parameters were standardised following the supplier's guidelines: extraction time of 35 ± 3 s, pressure of 9 bar, and boiler temperature of 122 °C, with the corresponding group-head temperature of 94 ± 1 °C. A total of 21 g of ground coffee (GS = 2.6 ± 0.1; ∼262 μm) was placed in a ridged coffee basket and tamped using a constant-pressure tamper (MHW Flash Constant Pressure Tamper 2), applying 13.6 kg of force. The BR was reduced from 2 to 1.7 following the recommendations of the coffee roaster for better flavour (1 g of coffee grounds yielding 1.7 g of coffee brew).
1:1.7 is a bit short for my preferences (I like longer shots, usually aim for ~2.5); but otherwise that sure sounds like a pretty good double to me!
Comment by abujazar 21 hours ago
Comment by hultner 23 hours ago
Comment by kzrdude 23 hours ago
But I also need my coffee: I'll drink whatever quality coffee is being offered, as long as it's the best I can get that morning.
Comment by jemmyw 23 hours ago
Comment by hultner 23 hours ago
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Comment by thenthenthen 23 hours ago
Comment by ValentineC 12 hours ago
https://www.vice.com/en/article/a-vietnamese-company-is-brin...
Seemingly as early as 2010:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trung_Nguy%C3%AAn#Weasel_and_L...