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i use 208 degree water from the zojirushi (like i'd use for the drip coffee) and pull the shot straight into it. not sure why you'd want water from the machine to cool down, since it's the exact same temp as your espresso?
My hot water tower runs at 204 for french pressed coffee. I also pour that water into a non-pre-heated ceramic cup bringing the water temp down to about 180 depending on cup size. I always pull my espresso into a demi first as it helps to keep my shot volume consistent. I pour the espresso into the water by sort of dunking the cup into the water and letting the crema slide onto the water. Aesthetically it looks like i pulled the shot onto the water, but i don't like doing that for several reasons. One; i can't properly interpret volume, two; i don't like to pull my espresso into anything. Hot water, cold milk for iced latte's, cold water for iced americanos. It all comes across like it would either do weird things separating the shot into it's more dense and light layers or simply "shock" the espresso. Most importantly, this is the method that tastes best to me, though the differences are subtle.
BTW Jared, i'm sure you know that your finished shot isn't actually 208 degrees just because your boiler is set to 208. I have no science to back this up, but it seems like putting espresso into water that is the exact same temperature would have the least amount of detrimental effects, which is why i cool my water down a bit.
If you drink drip coffee with cream - do you pour the cream into the coffee and stir, or do you let it just swirl around while drinking? Perhaps you put the cream in the bottom of the cup firast, then pour the coffee over top of it...??? Perhaps this is a new thread called "how do you drink your drip coffee"? :-D
Chris
Crema is part of an espresso. Cream and coffee are only tangentially related, which means that your comment has nothing to do with the discussion in your own thread.
Chris Cockrell said:If you drink drip coffee with cream - do you pour the cream into the coffee and stir, or do you let it just swirl around while drinking? Perhaps you put the cream in the bottom of the cup firast, then pour the coffee over top of it...??? Perhaps this is a new thread called "how do you drink your drip coffee"? :-D
Chris
Oh well..it is my thread...my comment. Thanks for commenting on my discussion! :-D
Chris
Jason Haeger said:Crema is part of an espresso. Cream and coffee are only tangentially related, which means that your comment has nothing to do with the discussion in your own thread.
Chris Cockrell said:If you drink drip coffee with cream - do you pour the cream into the coffee and stir, or do you let it just swirl around while drinking? Perhaps you put the cream in the bottom of the cup firast, then pour the coffee over top of it...??? Perhaps this is a new thread called "how do you drink your drip coffee"? :-D
Chris
I also prefer to be a little short on the amount of water too. I like my americano strong rather than the other way around...my preference. I can't stand to get an americano out at a coffee shop and have it watered down so that it taste like stump water...baristas should be required to try what they are serving...I guess most are...
Chris
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