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Brady, I did a bit of temperature testing earlier this morning. I don't have any high tech devices to measure temperature and simply use a very accurate digital thermometer/styrofoam cup test, which is good enough for me. The machine I own/use daily is a 2 group NS Aurelia. Here goes...
Ran 10 oz. of water through the group (into a 12 oz. cup), water started out at 199 and remained steady at 200 once the cup had the 10 oz. in it.
Then dumped that and waited approximately 30 seconds and ran 2 oz. into the cup, temp was 198.
Repeated the same thing and the temp was 196.
One last time and got the same temp, 196.
Did the same exact procedure on the 2nd group and had almost identical readings.
I was actually a bit surprised that the temp remained that stable with that much water taken out in a short period of time, but I have always been very pleased with the Aurelia, having used this machine for close to 8 months now.
Well I've heard people calling a single shot added to drip being a "red eye" and a double shot added being called a "black eye"... also heard names like a shot in the dark, depth charge, etc.
But this guy likes a quad shot added to what drip takes up the rest of the cup and since he is the only one to order it I let him call it what he wants. I think small things like this allow customers to feel a bit of importance when they step up to order. Like they're a part of something.
So you have to flush 4-6 oz. for the group to be ready? What machine would that be? Or is it pretty typical with most HX machines? That's one thing I really like with the Aurelia, there isn't a need for any flushing to get it just right. Whether I pull 1 double a minute or once an hour it's always spot on the perfect temperature.
So you have to flush 4-6 oz. for the group to be ready? What machine would that be? Or is it pretty typical with most HX machines? .
Café Crema - a HUUUUGE thing here in Germany. I thought I should add this here, whilst nobody mentioned it. And yes 12 oz. are not rare, and yes... I had to make up to 20 of them a day.
The machine was programmed to flush the water faster through the espresso powder, it was the same grind as for all the other espresso drinks (but a different bean, same used for café latte). It was my first job as barista so I didn't wonder, but now I do: Isn't that even more pressure? Sometimes... It lasted up to a minute (for the biggest size... which could have been nearly 15 oz.
That's how I've seen it at some more places.
Now I am working at another café, where I pull café crema from the machine as well. This time espresso powder for a single shot is used in a double-portafilter for a small or medium cup. For the big one double is used in a double, but is not tampered. :) Yeah... we Germans...
Because I am in a position to change a lot in this coffee shop now, I am concerned about the machine now (because you are concerned too) and wonder if we should change it...
Also, mostly café crema and americano are both offered, but café crema is more in demand. Café crema is served at every coffee shop not owning a filter machine.
Ceridwen,
What????????????? Do the Germans and Italians ever talk?
Your machine is not using more pressure because your getting a lot of Coffee through the portafilter. The pressure stays at what is was set at. Usually 9 bars or about 275 psi per lug on the portafilter if you have a two lug portafilter.
What you have with those long pulls is an extreme over extraction of the coffee.
I don't care what you call the drink in Germany or any country. It is not making coffee with the tool, (Espresso Machine) the way it was designed to be used.
Use 30 milliliters / 30 sec. pull or shot time as a starting point for espresso extracted closer to what the machine was designed to do. Many here on BX will tell you different on the amount of water per time extracted but you so far from anything that makes sense I thought I would try and get you in the ball park.
If the owner of the shop does not care to use the machine the way it was designed to be used then all that I am saying here is like dust in the wind. If you get the jest.
My next suggestion would be to spend as much time as you can on Barista Exchange. There is more combined and cutting edge coffee knowledge here on Matts site than I have ever seen anywhere.
Sincerely,
Joseph
--
Ambassador for Specialty Coffee and palate reform.
Ceridwen Taylor-Roads said:Café Crema - a HUUUUGE thing here in Germany. I thought I should add this here, whilst nobody mentioned it. And yes 12 oz. are not rare, and yes... I had to make up to 20 of them a day.
The machine was programmed to flush the water faster through the espresso powder, it was the same grind as for all the other espresso drinks (but a different bean, same used for café latte). It was my first job as barista so I didn't wonder, but now I do: Isn't that even more pressure? Sometimes... It lasted up to a minute (for the biggest size... which could have been nearly 15 oz.
That's how I've seen it at some more places.
Now I am working at another café, where I pull café crema from the machine as well. This time espresso powder for a single shot is used in a double-portafilter for a small or medium cup. For the big one double is used in a double, but is not tampered. :) Yeah... we Germans...
Because I am in a position to change a lot in this coffee shop now, I am concerned about the machine now (because you are concerned too) and wonder if we should change it...
Also, mostly café crema and americano are both offered, but café crema is more in demand. Café crema is served at every coffee shop not owning a filter machine.
Ceridwen,
What????????????? Do the Germans and Italians ever talk?
What you have with those long pulls is an extreme over extraction of the coffee.
I don't care what you call the drink in Germany or any country. It is not making coffee with the tool, (Espresso Machine) the way it was designed to be used.
Joseph Robertson said:Ceridwen,
What????????????? Do the Germans and Italians ever talk?
What you have with those long pulls is an extreme over extraction of the coffee.
I don't care what you call the drink in Germany or any country. It is not making coffee with the tool, (Espresso Machine) the way it was designed to be used.
Remember what happened the last time Germans got chummy with Italians!
I spend a bit of time in Germany, and the Cafe Crema is pretty darned popular. Even visiting one of my mom's eighty-plus-year-old friends in a kleine stadt bei Ulm und Stuttgart, she had a lil super-auto-ish toy that she insisted I have a crema from. I think I quaffed it with the appropriate German Kaffe Klatch appreciation on my face! Yeah, it's horribly over-extracted, but if you stop serving cremas in Germany, you can close up shop. I'd be like Starbucks not serving flavoured lowfat lattes.
OTOH, most of the small shops I would go to in the morning, (trying to escape my auntie's attempts at coffee, last time I was there, it was to take mom & dad on a trip down memory lane) before taking my moms off to some other cherished memory, had no idea what a to-go cup was.
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