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he does freeze the greens, but what does he say about roasted coffee? This isn't an argument, it's a question.
Freezing causes the destruction of the wonderful properties of the bean??? Such as???
As an operator with, in conjunction with one of our roasters, nearly ten years experience with freezing coffees, statements such as the one above are complete bollocks. Freezing will not destroy your coffee. Nor will it cause the crystallization of water in the bean to destroy the structure. Nor will it impart off-flavors as it would under refrigeration.
I don't argue with the position that it's best to use only fresh coffee. In fact, if you've got your operations to a point where your supply is perfectly timed to receive and use your coffee within X days out of the roaster then all the better. However, we don't always have things timed perfectly and, sometimes, a case is made for frozen coffees.
Frozen coffees will hold your coffee at whatever stage it was at freezing. Coffee needs five days post roast when you deep froze it after two days? Then six months later when you pull it from storage, it's gonna need another two days to reach its' peak.
Condensation from thawing? It's really not happening. At least not as it would had you pulled a steak from the freezer. Quite simply, the water content in coffee is too low (about .03%).
And speaking of steak, I'll take that frozen rib eye from my local farm over that "fresh" cut corn-fed USDA prime angus you bought at the store anyday - and I'll guarantee that the flavor of my frozen will blow away that piece of meat I wouldn't feed to my dog.
"For longer term storage beyond four or five days after opening, place the coffee in the freezer either packaged as described above, or, better, repackaged into zip-locked one-day portions. This way no condensation will occur as you pull out only what you need."
Link to his roasted storage article here.
Jesse -D-> said:he does freeze the greens, but what does he say about roasted coffee? This isn't an argument, it's a question.
Joe-
As you've already clued in on, I'm not against fresh. In fact, I'm an advocate for fresh products. However, situations may present themselves where storage is a necessary alternative. In those circumstances, I recommend freezing as the solution which will best preserve the flavor of the coffee without serious compromise to the coffee.
Many reasons offered against freezing coffee just do not hold under scrutiny. Some may say that freezing seriously compromises the flavor but our experiments have not demonstrated those theories. One argument against freezing is back to the structure of the coffee and its' supposed destruction by freezing. As a corollary, freezing a tomato has devastating effects on the structure of the vegetable due to its' extremely high water content. Roasted coffee has less than one percent water content and freezing does not compromise its' structure nor has it had a tremendous impact on the coffees' flavor.
One thing to note is that I mention that it does not have "a tremendous impact" on flavor because I've found it nearly impossible to know for sure. The green coffee is a constant state of change, forcing minute to significant changes in roasting as the coffee matures, which means that the coffee is in a constant state of flux. Today's coffee sample that we're freezing will not be the same as the same lot of coffee freshly roasted three months from now as a test.
To my mind, the one true measure is the taste in the cup. Whether it comes straight from the roaster or straight from the freezer, how does the coffee taste? Is the quality up to scratch? The bottom line is our guarantee of quality. That guarantee that we're going to serve you something we think is delicious. This is our promise to our customers and this is what we strive to deliver on a daily basis.
Quite frankly, I don't think there's a need for concession. Some, like yourselves, will take the hardline of "no freezing" and that's fine. One thing you should have realized by now about me is that, unlike many people we know in the business, agreement is not a prerequisite for me. I don't think we disagree on terms of fresh coffee. Our difference lies in the possibility of using freezing as an alternative storage method for coffee.
Another note on the steak thing - as a lover of grass fed beef yourself, I presume you can tell the difference in flavor between grass and corn fed beef. With that in mind, would you choose frozen grass fed beef over fresh, corn fed beef? If corn, why?
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