Making great-tasting espresso shot after shot is within grasp, thanks to new findings by an international team of scientists that includes University of Oregon chemist Christopher Hendon.
To get that done, however, home connoisseurs and professional baristas will need to experiment with their own equipment to find their own sweet spot of taste, but the researchers have provided a roadmap in the journal Matter.
The key to the approach? Use less coffee at a coarser grind than traditional wisdom has been saying, said Hendon, a computational chemist in the UO’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. The formula also gets the espresso made faster and with less water than usual.
“We want to extract more from the coffee to save money, and be sustainable, but we also want it to taste delicious, not burnt or bitter,” he said. “Our method allows us to accomplish that.”
The method, the research team concluded, could deliver an economic savings of $1.1 billion a year for U.S. coffee shops by allowing them to trim 13 cents from each of the 124 million espresso-based drinks they produce each day. The new approach also would raise the extraction yield of each bag of coffee beans above the current 18 percent to 22 percent.
“For the local shop owner, this is an opportunity to save a lot of money without sacrificing quality,” Hendon said. “For the roaster, this is an opportunity to reflect on the approach to roasting and how people are brewing their coffee. For the producer, this just means there is a need to continue to produce high-quality coffee that can earn them the most money.”
Chemists, mathematicians and coffee professionals from five countries collaborated on the project. They analyzed grind size, water pressure, flow rate, amount of coffee and extraction kinetics to seek an optimum extraction yield, or the percentage of coffee that gets into a drink.
Their work drew on electrochemistry, likening how caffeine and other molecules dissolve out of coffee grounds to how lithium ions move through the electrodes of a battery. Borrowing modeling methodologies from battery work led to a rigorous coffee extraction model capable of making powerful and testable predictions.
Initial experiments were done in Brisbane, Australia, with final implementation completed at Tailored Coffee Roasters in Eugene.
“The real impact of this paper is that the most reproducible thing you can do is use less coffee,” Hendon said. “If you use 15 grams instead of 20 grams of coffee and grind your beans coarser, you end up with a shot that runs really fast but tastes great. Instead of taking 25 seconds, it could run in 7 to 14 seconds. But you end up extracting more positive flavors from the beans, so the strength of the cup is not dramatically reduced. Bitter, off-tasting flavors never have a chance to make their way into the cup.”
Finding the right coarse grind that allows water to flow through correctly will need individual experimentation to make the team’s formula work. Coarser doesn’t mean simply changing a grinder setting from fine to course, Hendon said. The coarse grind chosen as effective in the study produced variably sized particles but still fit into what is considered a fine grind. Bur grinders, he added, provide the best means for fine-tuning a workable fine grind.
“A good espresso beverage can be made in a multitude of ways,” he said. “The point of this paper was to give people a map for making an espresso beverage that they like and then be able to make it 100 times in a row.”
Barista Technology and Acaia Corp. donated equipment for the project. Computations were done collaboratively via the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment, a virtual system of shared computing resources, data and expertise supported by the National Science Foundation.
By Jim Barlow
This content was originally posted by the University of Oregon.