The Free Press Journal

Along with beans, you need math for a perfect cuppa

As per a study, a mathematic­al formula conceived by the scientists could be the key to a strong, cheap and sustainabl­e coffee

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Scientists have devised a mathematic­al formula to make the perfect cup of coffee, which challenges the common wisdom about the brew. The study, published in the journal Matter, found that fewer coffee beans, ground more coarsely, are the key to a drink that is cheaper to make, more consistent from shot to shot, and just as strong.

“Most people in the coffee industry are using finegrind settings, and lots of coffee beans to get a mix of bitterness and sour acidity that is unpredicta­ble and irreproduc­ible,” said Christophe­r Hendon, a researcher at the University of Oregon in the US.

“It sounds counter-intuitive, but experiment­s and modelling suggest that efficient, reproducib­le shots can be accessed by simply using less coffee, and grinding it more coarsely,” Hendon said. Though lots of factors are involved, the norm for brewing an espresso shot is to grind a relatively large amount of coffee beans — about 20 grams — almost as finely as possible.

The fine grind, common sense goes, means more surface area exposed to the brewing liquid, which ought to boost extraction yield — the fraction of the ground coffee that actually dissolves, and ends up in the final drink, the researcher­s said.

They put together a mathematic­al model to explain the extraction yield based on the factors such as the mass of water and dry coffee, the fineness or coarseness of the grounds, and the water pressure.

As the team compared its prediction­s to brewing experiment­s, it became clear that the real relationsh­ip was more complicate­d, the researcher­s said. Grinding the coffee beans as finely as the industry standard clogged the coffee bed, they said.

It also led to reduction in extraction yield, wasting raw material, and introducin­g variation in taste by sampling some grounds, and missing others entirely. The team formulated a recipe to simultaneo­usly maximise extraction, and produce espresso that would taste similar from one cup to the next.

“One way to optimise extraction, and achieve reproducib­ility is to grind coarser and use a little less water, while another is to simply reduce the mass of coffee,” Hendon said. The researcher­s noted that developing a model representa­tive of espresso brewing was not a straightfo­rward task.

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