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Some of those are included in my "Fundamentals" course, and the rest (sans milk seasonal variations) is pretty well covered in the "Advanced" course, which is intended to equip in-house trainers to fulfill their role.Some topics that I'd maybe want to see you cover (or have previously covered) if I were signed up:
Advanced machine maintenance - anatomy plus manager-level PM and repair stuff.
Dialing in, level 2 - manipulating temperature, updosing, preinfusion, etc to highlight different flavor aspects of the blend.
Extraction troubleshooting - the taste, the crema, the puck, using the naked.
Milk - chemistry, processing, seasonal variations, etc.
Blending for espresso
Drink development
Latte art, since this is becoming a requirement of an advanced barista.
What about a "train the trainer" section. Since the advanced barista is probably going to be in a training or managerial role at their shop, this could be useful. Effective training needs to be taught too... its harder than it looks :)
You might also consider covering other brew methods. After all, we expect a barista to be an expert of coffee, not just espresso.
How about covering differences in growing conditions, region, varietal, processing, and roasting and the effect on the cup?
Haven't been through or taught anything past hands-on 101, so this is all just kinda musing. This is an interesting discussion. Good luck.
one thing i did was split the shot into 3 parts - ex. for a 24 sec. shot the first 8sec. in one cup, the next 8 in another ect. - then we tasted each as separate. very interesting. also we play myth busters.- ex. what happens if you pour a shot over ice directly compared to one into water and ice for an iced americano? - or what happens if you tamp 60 or 80 lbs... etc whatever you have been told, you can give it a shot and see if what everyone is saying is really truth. good not only for the trainee, but the trainer too. you can have them get together a set of myths they would like to bust.
I agree with all. I will add this. The thing I find in training that helps the most is not to tell them why, but to show them why. Like breaking the shot up and tasting it, or making under/over extracted shots and having them taste it. It really reinforces why it's so important. Also, make sure they understand you value their position, and pay and respect accordingly. It can go a long way to helping empower them to become better.
mike cubbage said:one thing i did was split the shot into 3 parts - ex. for a 24 sec. shot the first 8sec. in one cup, the next 8 in another ect. - then we tasted each as separate. very interesting. also we play myth busters.- ex. what happens if you pour a shot over ice directly compared to one into water and ice for an iced americano? - or what happens if you tamp 60 or 80 lbs... etc whatever you have been told, you can give it a shot and see if what everyone is saying is really truth. good not only for the trainee, but the trainer too. you can have them get together a set of myths they would like to bust.
Agreed. This is an interesting conversation. Being relatively new to studying the science aspect of espresso, but having a background in education I will say this:
THE MOST IMPORTANT THING YOU CAN DO WHEN TEACHING ANYONE ANYTHING IS TO ASK QUESTIONS!
Don't leave it up for a noob or even someone in my position to ask you the right questions. It won't happen. But, if you teach more like you remember middle school being, a person will learn a lot more. If you can arrange your more advanced sessions to be a series of questions whereafter each the trainee is able to find the answer by doing, you will have created a really awesome learning experience. Furthermore, the challenge of discovery will separate the wheat from the chaff as it pertains to those with passion vs those who just want to know "how to ___."
Jason Dominy said:I agree with all. I will add this. The thing I find in training that helps the most is not to tell them why, but to show them why. Like breaking the shot up and tasting it, or making under/over extracted shots and having them taste it. It really reinforces why it's so important. Also, make sure they understand you value their position, and pay and respect accordingly. It can go a long way to helping empower them to become better.
mike cubbage said:one thing i did was split the shot into 3 parts - ex. for a 24 sec. shot the first 8sec. in one cup, the next 8 in another ect. - then we tasted each as separate. very interesting. also we play myth busters.- ex. what happens if you pour a shot over ice directly compared to one into water and ice for an iced americano? - or what happens if you tamp 60 or 80 lbs... etc whatever you have been told, you can give it a shot and see if what everyone is saying is really truth. good not only for the trainee, but the trainer too. you can have them get together a set of myths they would like to bust.
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