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According to The Professional Barista Handbook by Scott Rao, when a puck is hit with 9 bars of atmospheric pressure, it is equivalent to around 150 lbs. of pressure across the surface of a 58mm+ puck(I don't have the book on me at the moment to give the exact #, but I know it's around 150). He also has the math in the book explaining how he got that #. Because of this, it doesn't really matter if you tamp the hell out of that shot, it's nothing compared to what the machine is putting the puck through.
The purpose of the tamp is to remove "pockets" of air from inside the coffee bed to prevent channeling.
This said, I have a theory about tamping pressure which I have yet to prove involving reduction in crema due to over tamping. If crema is the result of oils in the coffee wrapping themselves around the air in the coffee bed, then it would seem that a tamp with excessive pressure would remove a lot of the air from the bed as the particles compress together, creating less available material for the creation of crema. I have seen hands on evidence of this, especially when working with a much finer grind.
Any feedback on this in particular would be much appreciated.
"This said, I have a theory about tamping pressure which I have yet to prove involving reduction in crema due to over tamping. If crema is the result of oils in the coffee wrapping themselves around the air in the coffee bed, then it would seem that a tamp with excessive pressure would remove a lot of the air from the bed as the particles compress together, creating less available material for the creation of crema. I have seen hands on evidence of this, especially when working with a much finer grind.
Any feedback on this in particular would be much appreciated."
I don't think that I agree, but I'm not sure I understand fully. The gases that create crema are coming from inside the grounds, so the fact that you tamp harder really would have no effect on this. You are essentially saying that if you squeeze a roasted coffee bean you can get CO2 to come out, and that you cannot do.
Again if I misunderstood your post please correct me and accept my apologies.
The first few drops of coffee are the darkest and the least infused with crema bubbles, so based on that, we might rightly assume that the air held in the spaces between the coffee particles has been pushed out the bottom by the time most of the crema is created.
At 9 bars, a machine is pushing against the espresso with a force of 130.68 psi. Pretty close to the 150 you estimated.
Jonathan Jarrow said:According to The Professional Barista Handbook by Scott Rao, when a puck is hit with 9 bars of atmospheric pressure, it is equivalent to around 150 lbs. of pressure across the surface of a 58mm+ puck(I don't have the book on me at the moment to give the exact #, but I know it's around 150). He also has the math in the book explaining how he got that #. Because of this, it doesn't really matter if you tamp the hell out of that shot, it's nothing compared to what the machine is putting the puck through.
The purpose of the tamp is to remove "pockets" of air from inside the coffee bed to prevent channeling.
This said, I have a theory about tamping pressure which I have yet to prove involving reduction in crema due to over tamping. If crema is the result of oils in the coffee wrapping themselves around the air in the coffee bed, then it would seem that a tamp with excessive pressure would remove a lot of the air from the bed as the particles compress together, creating less available material for the creation of crema. I have seen hands on evidence of this, especially when working with a much finer grind.
Any feedback on this in particular would be much appreciated.
Jonathan:
The ambient air is O2 and the gas that creates creama is CO2. This is where I disagree with your theory. The ambient 02 would be displaced by any water that entered the puck. When the oil and H2O emulsify, only then does the liquid (now espresso) have enough suface tension to contain bubbles. Water alone does not have the power to hold gas.
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