i'm wondering if the difference in flow is from pouring the grounds from the same jar, any tapping/agitation will separate coarser grounds to the top of the jar, finer to the bottom, so the ratio of fines changes depending on which part of the jar it comes from
@ちひろ-p2d Жыл бұрын
とても分かりやすかったです。ありがとうございます🎵
@coffeecove7058 Жыл бұрын
I enjoyed the video. Thank you for sharing and I will be trying this. I also love your 4:6 method and trying to be real good with it; along with the Osmotic flow technique. Both of these are my favorite techniques.
I would be curious to know the difference with the osmotic flow, as the taste and energy is totally different than both methods shown in this video, but I don't understand why
This explains why I'm sometimes getting much sweeter cups with the same beans! Also. Could someone point me to the video re: the filters?
@silmitsisinuga Жыл бұрын
The title is: 【初公開】ペーパーの折り方とリンスについて|1つの所作で抽出が安定 It has no subs, but the visuals explain it quite clearly.
@kenchan9778 Жыл бұрын
今度は、スピンをやるか?やらないか?をやってみて欲しいです!!
@vizzo7 Жыл бұрын
so which one tasted better? the circle or the center? What TDS did you want to get?
@urouroniwa Жыл бұрын
I don't think that was what he wanted to demonstrate. For that coffee and that grind and that temperature, one would taste better than the other, but it doesn't matter because your coffee and your grind and your temperature will be different. I think he was just showing that you have some control over the extraction so if you are getting a bit over extracted, this is another tool in your tool belt. Or, at least, that's how I interpreted what he was saying.
@EunusRex Жыл бұрын
do you like or dislike a coffee based on TDS?
@vizzo7 Жыл бұрын
@@urouroniwa Well actually this is what I wanted to know. For this coffee which pouring tasted better? And he probably had in mind a certain TDS before he brewed the coffee. WHich of the 2 techniques comes nearer to the TDS he wanted?
This is not geeky at all. The problem is the many people who ignore the basics of brewing knowledge and think that they can work miracles just with expensive beans and equipment and by blindly repeating the recipes of certain experts.
Very interesting topic but unfortunately this particular test is flawed. The biggest one is that you ground 30g then separated it in 2 x 15g. You can’t do that. Your grinder produces a hugely heterogeneous set of particules and those particules will settle differently in that jar. When you try to distribute this in your V60, there is no way the distribution of those particules are equal or even similar. You need to grind 15g and then separately another 15g. Also you need to do this for at least 3 coffees for the results to be meaningful. And, obviously, you need to do a blind taste at the end. I would also try to verify the claim by grinding finer and doing a single pour and compare that to the other 2 (same grind setting circular and center pours).