We're thinking adding grean bean espresso to the menu at our coffee shop, but need to learn more about the green beans. Has anybody know how to grind them? What kinds of green beans should be used to make green bean espresso? Any input would be greatly appreciated.
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Goes to show who retained the information after getting their food handlers card:-) At least, our locale food handlers card required for a barista same as any other food related job.
Joe Marrocco said:I can't believe we are talking about sanitizing coffee beans through an espresso machine. I cannot believe even more so that someone would think that 200 degrees and 9 bars of pressure would not kill bacteria. Even your worst bacterias die at 160-180 degrees under normal atmospheric pressure. Most die before 140 degrees.
Just saying: There are a lot better reasons to not do white coffee.
Actually from experience in another job, long,long ago- Joe is indeed right- 72 degrees C (or 161 F) is prescribed temp in NZ for killing nearly every prescribed nasty that could be in a ground up green bean.
miKe mcKoffee aka Mike McGinness said:Goes to show who retained the information after getting their food handlers card:-) At least, our locale food handlers card required for a barista same as any other food related job.
Joe Marrocco said:I can't believe we are talking about sanitizing coffee beans through an espresso machine. I cannot believe even more so that someone would think that 200 degrees and 9 bars of pressure would not kill bacteria. Even your worst bacterias die at 160-180 degrees under normal atmospheric pressure. Most die before 140 degrees.
Just saying: There are a lot better reasons to not do white coffee.
I guess there's a trend in UK to drink green coffee for health reasons. .
Working in a very busy uk cafe, I've never had anyone come in and ask if we serve green bean espresso, or ever heard of it before this thread. i think there's much more work to be done on the uk public regarding traditional espresso before anyone sticks green beans in a basket! what 'health reasons' are there here? confused!
Migle Douvia said:I guess there's a trend in UK to drink green coffee for health reasons. .
Working in a very busy uk cafe, I've never had anyone come in and ask if we serve green bean espresso, or ever heard of it before this thread. i think there's much more work to be done on the uk public regarding traditional espresso before anyone sticks green beans in a basket! what 'health reasons' are there here? confused!
There actually is a method for grinding of green coffee, to prepare it for extraction in an analytical chemistry lab. You'll just need some liquid nitrogen (fairly cheap, just the dewar will set you back). The procedure:
"Extraction of volatiles:
Green coffee beans were frozen in liquid nitrogen and finely
ground in an Olympia Express coffee grinder (at setting 5). 100 g
of ground green coffee beans were mixed with 350 mL of demineralised
and degassed water, and extracted by vacuum hydrodistillation
at ambient temperature (Θ<25–30 °C) [17,18]. During hydrodistillation
100 mL of water was added every 2 h and volatiles
were condensed in three cold traps (–196 °C). The total extraction
time was 6 h and between 250 and 300 mL of aqueous extract
were recovered. This procedure was repeated five times, yielding
a total of 1.2 L aromatic extract. Distillates were pooled and extracted
with CH2Cl2 in a Mixxor extractor (3×20 mL solvent for
250 mL aqueous extract). The organic phases were collected,
dried over Na2SO4, concentrated to 1 mL on a Widmer distillation
column, and further concentrated to 500 mg under a nitrogen gas
stream."
E. Cantergiani, et. al. "Characterisation of the aroma of green Mexican coffee
and identification of mouldy/earthy defect". Eur. Food Res. Technol. 212:648–657.
Warning: don't read this if you don't enjoy chemistry.
I've never heard of preground espresso being shipped to a commercial coffee shop before?
Paul Whitehead said:Migle Douvia said:I guess there's a trend in UK to drink green coffee for health reasons. .
Working in a very busy uk cafe, I've never had anyone come in and ask if we serve green bean espresso, or ever heard of it before this thread. i think there's much more work to be done on the uk public regarding traditional espresso before anyone sticks green beans in a basket! what 'health reasons' are there here? confused!
...?
Really?
Ever hear of either of these guys?
Illy
Lavazza
Sure the coffee sucks, but there are TONS of shops (especially if we look globally) that use preground espresso.
-bry
passamike said:
I've never heard of preground espresso being shipped to a commercial coffee shop before?
Paul Whitehead said:Migle Douvia said:I guess there's a trend in UK to drink green coffee for health reasons. .
Working in a very busy uk cafe, I've never had anyone come in and ask if we serve green bean espresso, or ever heard of it before this thread. i think there's much more work to be done on the uk public regarding traditional espresso before anyone sticks green beans in a basket! what 'health reasons' are there here? confused!
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