Why Rate of Rise is a bad reference point for optimizing flavour in coffee roasting

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 14

  • @danmohan1981
    @danmohan1981 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Great content!
    I'm a home roaster thinking of giving a go professionally. This information makes so much more logical sense to my scientific brain than all the other mumbo jumbo from internet "experts".
    A short development time not giving time for the heat to fully penetrate the bean giving a more acidic and complex flavor makes so much sense. Just like cooking a steak!

  • @JCleggy
    @JCleggy Před rokem +1

    I love this seminar because it calms my obsessive side. This is good news! Great coffee is still a lot of work, but we can put in that work where it makes a bigger difference.

    • @CoffeeMindAcademy
      @CoffeeMindAcademy  Před rokem

      Yes, we need to be specific with the goal we have in order to make decisions without wasting too much effort on areas that does not matter so that we can spend the limited time and ressources we have on the things that mattes in the context we have choosen to provide value. Happy it helps 🙂

  • @Youtuberkt
    @Youtuberkt Před 8 měsíci

    this is a really good talk, that was more objective and reasoned about coffee roasting very well!

  • @deenman60
    @deenman60 Před rokem +1

    got the bundle, thank you for the knowledge and sharing, all the best, Denis

  • @romanplains
    @romanplains Před 11 měsíci

    Finally! Somebody is making sense.

  • @MrDistill
    @MrDistill Před rokem +2

    Fabulous content!

  • @zaphbrox8239
    @zaphbrox8239 Před 28 dny

    Thanks for the post. I learned quite a lot. I have a question about starting up a roaster and the first batch. Is it important to let the roaster stay at charge temperature for a while so that all the metal parts achieve a sort of steady state or is it ok to put in the first batch as soon as the probes show that charge temperature has been reached? If it needs to stay at charge temperature for a whlie, then how do we decide that the ideal conditions for the first batch has been reached?

    • @CoffeeMindAcademy
      @CoffeeMindAcademy  Před 20 dny +1

      This is a bit different from roaster to roast. Most roasters I have been working with takes around 30 min to preheat and depending on the roaster the procedure can vary a bit. But generally you need to keep the roaster close to the starting temperature for around 30 min. You know that you have done the right thing when the first roast behaves like the subsequent roasts of the day

  • @decentespressoailliobullet5748

    36:20 no... colour "intensity" would be the SATURATION of the colour... what I think you are getting at is, as you say, it's about a grey scale... A grey scale is only about luminocity... how bright or dark it is. So you are measuring degree of darkness, not intensity of colour.

    • @CoffeeMindAcademy
      @CoffeeMindAcademy  Před 20 dny

      I have learned from people with phototechnical background that the term 'photointensity' means the total amount of 'light' acorss wavelenghts so that's why I'm using it as the monocromatic concept so that it is independent of 'color' (wavelenght). Recently a study came out of UC Davis discussing this in detail and when I have read that paper I'll make a separate podcast episode that will be also launched here on CZcams about the topic.

  • @kjetilslettengundersen6944

    Thanks for a great webinar! Question: When you aim for agtron 75 at 3 minutes, are you meassuring whole beans or ground beans?

    • @psycool666
      @psycool666 Před rokem +1

      I believe it will be for ground beans, even the particle size of the ground coffee influences the colour value

    • @kjetilslettengundersen6944
      @kjetilslettengundersen6944 Před rokem

      @@psycool666 thanks 😊 I guessed so, but weren't completely sure.