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except the SCAA has nothing on their website (http://scaa.org/?page=resources) pertaining to espresso as far as i could find. and the WBC has a set of rules that are pretty strictly for competition and not café use. and illy sells ground coffee, so i don't trust their idea of a standard.
Jared Rutledge said:brady, the scaa didn't seem to have anything regarding espresso in its download section on the site. am i missing something? and the WBC is very close to what i wrote, with the only exception they allowing brewing at up to 96 C. other than that, the standards are the same.
and chris, espresso isn't self explanatory. this site wouldn't exist if it was.
The SCAA Definition of Espresso (from last year's version of Hands On Espresso)
"Espresso is a 25-35ml beverage prepared from 7-9 grams of coffee through which clean water of 195-205 deg-F (92-95C) has been forced at 9-10 atmospheres of pressure, where the grind of the coffee is such that the brewing "flow" time is approximately 20-30 seconds."
"While brewing, the flow of espresso will appear to have the viscosity of warm honey and the resulting beverage will exhibit a thick dark, golden crema. Espresso should be prepared specifically for, and immediately served to its intended consumer."
I believe this definition is being tweaked a bit at present...
For the record, 25-35mL of espresso = 0.8-1.2 fl-oz
Jared Rutledge said:i thought it was a good idea too but it looks like i overestimated the ability of people on this message board to focus and thoughtfully discuss anything.
I think the reason why there aren't many relevant posts on this particular discussion is that "standards" already exist. From the SCAA, the WBC, Illy's "Science of Quality", et. al. What's wrong with trying to champion the ones already in place? Instead of reinventing the wheel, shouldn't we just utilize the resources available? If you want a .pdf file for bX'ers to read and understand what the brewing standards are for espressos, caps, etc., put together a list of what is already available in an easy to read and digest format. Then talk to Matt about creating a page or link to access the information. I guarantee that will be more productive than bashing the baristas who frequent this site.
well it wasn't my intention to develop a global standard, more something that allows people who are new to bX to read in 5 minutes and glean the wisdom of the countless threads we've had on this subject. if that makes sense.
i thought it was a good idea too but it looks like i overestimated the ability of people on this message board to focus and thoughtfully discuss anything.
Brady I agree - There should be a thread locked by the moderators in the forum that lists all the current "standards" of all the associations that have a set of rules/standards. People could just pick one and run with it. Making changes as they found fit after trial and error.
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