From a few months back (for those who don't frequent Home-Barista) Interesting discussion on H-B here
First Post of discussion thread :
It's holy writ: espresso grinders need to be adjusted frequently and precisely. Holy writ is wrong; instead, you only need to adjust the grinder when you change the dose, the blend, or the style of shot (e.g. from ristretto to normale). All other grinder adjustments are a sign of sub-par technique.
How can this be? We all know that a grinder with too few grind settings will produce inconsistent shots, and we all know any cafe where grind adjustments are not allowed will have espresso that sucks. It turns out that frequent grinder adjustment is what economists and engineers call a 2nd best solution, something you do when the best solution is unavailable:
As the weather changes, as the coffee ages, as the static charges on the grinder wax and wane, the ground coffee becomes fluffier or less fluffy, and also more or less compressible.
These changes affect the density of the prepared puck.
So, if you dose by volume, it will vary the weight of coffee you use from shot to shot.
But the flow rate depends almost entirely on the weight of coffee.
So if you dose by volume, you will see frequent changes in the shot's flow, and have to make frequent grind adjustments.
Since these grind adjustments are retrospective and cannot anticipate how the ground coffee characteristics will change for the next shot; volume dosing will always be jittery, both in shot by shot flow rates, and in the compensating grind adjustments.
If you dose by weight, the jitters go away. Instead, the same dose from the same blend will always get you the same flow. Call this the principle of grind-weight invariance.
How do I know this? I first noticed it when I was doing the TGP. I could pencil in the grind settings on the grinders, come back to them four to five days later, and still be perfectly dialed in. You have to be more precise on the weight and the grind adjustment for smaller burrs or flats than for larger burrs or conical ones; but the principle of grind-weight invariance holds. Since then, for the past two years, I've been weighing doses. I've found, without exception, that when dosing by weight, once a blend is dialed in, it stays dialed in.
Consequently, I believe that the overwhelming reason for inconsistent shots in high end cafes is dosing by volume or grind time. Once they find a way to routinely dose by weight, the consistency of the shots will improve tremendously.
Jim Schulman
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Joshua Taves said:maybe future grinders will be able to weigh as they grind. that would be neat
They already do. The higher-end doserless grinders come with some pretty trick features these days...
...Our dosing by volume or time is a compromise - necessary though it is. If someone could figure out how to make a durably quality grinder that did this, wouldn't you have one?
Some say it can't be done. Others find a way and make it happen.
For those that like to poo-poo Home-Barista.com and some of it's regulars you'd best think again. Who do you think invented the Scace Thermofilter? And invented the espresso machine torture test used to certify competition machines including up to the WBC? Wasn't one of the "big boys", nope, a lowly "home barista". Who do you think had WORKING variable pre-infusion and full variable profile pressure control espresso machines BEFORE Slayer or Strada even prototyped? Again a Home Barista. The technology readily exists to build a grinder that doses by weight. A grinder with virtually zero "throat grind hang". Coffee (and countless other comodities) packaging machines do much the same task everyday. It's a matter of either one of the "stuck in the grinder stone ages" manufacturers investing the R&D to make it happen or a new comer to the market. But it won't happen if there's not a perceived demand. Out of hand discounting the concept most certainly won't help make it happen.
Yes Brady, I've mentioned within .5g dose accuracy training. Timed grinding helps, but is a 2nd best solution. It is not as good (accurate) as a dose by weight grinder "could" be.
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