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Hi-- Kevin, explain what you mean by "rest." Don't most roasters ship out beans as soon as they are packed? I have always had better luck, i.e., produced the nicest, longest lasting crema, within 0-1 days of roasting. My shop orders from out of town, so our beans are usually 2 days old when they arrive, and sometimes 4 or 5 days old by the time we get to the newest batch. I find the 4-5 day wait to be problematic, producing very little, short-lived crema. One day, my supplier drove fresh beans down to the shop on the day they were roasted (they had missed our order that week), and I drew the most beautiful shots I'd ever gotten out of their espresso that day. You should know, these are vac-packed plastic bags with the one-way valve that should allow gases out, but no oxygen in.
Maybe I should ask my roaster how long the beans sit before they are shipped... I could be wrong about how recently the beans have been roasted once they arrive.
I have never seen espresso pull a good shot 0-1 days after roasting. All I've ever seen that close to roast date is huge bubbles followed by rapidly dissipating crema. If your bags from roaster don't include a roasted on date, it's something you might want to ask about. What I mean by rest is degassing, which is "ususally" a "recommended" 72hrs. Everythings open to interpretation though... My guess is Dales problem lies in the machine or grinder.
George F. said:Hi-- Kevin, explain what you mean by "rest." Don't most roasters ship out beans as soon as they are packed? I have always had better luck, i.e., produced the nicest, longest lasting crema, within 0-1 days of roasting. My shop orders from out of town, so our beans are usually 2 days old when they arrive, and sometimes 4 or 5 days old by the time we get to the newest batch. I find the 4-5 day wait to be problematic, producing very little, short-lived crema. One day, my supplier drove fresh beans down to the shop on the day they were roasted (they had missed our order that week), and I drew the most beautiful shots I'd ever gotten out of their espresso that day. You should know, these are vac-packed plastic bags with the one-way valve that should allow gases out, but no oxygen in.
Maybe I should ask my roaster how long the beans sit before they are shipped... I could be wrong about how recently the beans have been roasted once they arrive.
Ah, thanks Kevin-- I will definitely ask them about roast dates from now on. I tend to think (oh, and sorry if I'm hijacking your question here, Dale) that a lot of my crema issues are also due to the grinder or machine. Are there any reliable espresso "tests"...
coffee is packed in one way valve bags which i believe to increase required degassing period - therefore opened bag on saturday to use on monday with result of tragic crema
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