If you treated yourself to an espresso machine, good on you. There’s no self-love quite like coffee-based self-love. Now, let’s make sure you’re using it properly so those home-brewed shots taste like the ones you had in Naples.
You don’t need a fancy, commercial-grade machine to pull excellent shots since espresso is all about technique. With the right moves and measurements, you can brew cafe-quality espresso with even a basic model.
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As a budding coffee connoisseur with a thirst to advance my skills, I turned to an expert for help. Kaleena Teoh, co-founder of Coffee Project New York, shared the four most important considerations for brewing espresso shots at home.
But first…
The basics of espresso
“The word ‘espresso’ itself is not just a drink, it’s actually a brewing method that involves pushing hot water through a compacted puck of coffee,” Teoh said, which can be accomplished through a machine with a boiler, or manually, as in a stovetop espresso pot. It requires a specific pressure and temperature calibration, but a high-end machine isn’t necessary.
“The two most important things are the machine’s ability to maintain pressure and temperature as you pull the shot,” she said. In most home-use models, you may not be able to make any adjustments, but gauges or displays that indicate pressure and temperature can be reassuring.
Read more: I Tried a $140 Espresso Machine That Pulls Creamy Shots and Is Slimmer Than a Blender
Ensure you’re closely following the manufacturer’s process, which may include preheating the water before brewing. Ensuring that your espresso machine is clean is also essential for quality control, as regularly brushing grounds from the portafilter loading point and periodically flushing with hot water are crucial steps to maintain optimal performance.
1. Mind the grind size
Because espresso is a process, not a drink, there’s really no such thing as espresso beans, and you can choose a provenance and a roast that suits you for espresso, even a light one. The grind of any beans you choose significantly affects the outcome of the shot you pull.
“The grind size should be around the range of fine sand,” said Teoh, which is smaller than that used for drip coffee, French press or pour-over, but not as fine as the powder used for unfiltered brews such as Turkish coffee. This element makes it all the more important to have a grinder that lets you fine-tune the grind size with a dial, rather than just a few predetermined settings that may not provide the necessary nuance.
More so than the coffee machine itself, Teoh recommends another crucial piece of equipment for the best home-brewed espresso. “If you have a basic machine that can maintain pressure and temperature, that’s good enough, but if I have extra budget, I would spend it on a grinder,” Teoh said. “Having a good grinder, especially a good burr grinder, is very, very important for espresso.”
Teoh also naturally recommends the freshest coffee beans for the best espresso. Grinding to order is great, but you’re also looking for beans that have been as recently roasted as possible, ideally within a matter of weeks.
2. Nail the coffee-to-water ratio
The “golden ratio” differs for espresso compared to drip coffee, French press or pour-over, as you generally have limited control over the amount of water that goes into the brew. Instead, you’re looking for a specific ratio between the amount of grounds and the amount of liquid coffee that comes out at the end, and yes, professional baristas weigh finished espresso to ensure quality.
“The coffee to water ratio is between 1 to 1.5 and 1 to 2.5, meaning that, for every one gram of ground coffee we put in there, we want to yield between one-and-a-half to two-and-a-half grams of liquid espresso in the cup,” Teoh said. “That ratio usually gives you a pretty good, what we call ‘strength.’ It wouldn’t be too intense. It also wouldn’t be too watery.”
For the sake of easy calculations while you’re experimenting with these ratios, 1-to-2 is an average range to aim for. The smaller the ratio between grounds and liquid espresso, the stronger the coffee.
If your espresso machine has controls to adjust coffee strength, experiment with them. If not, other factors that you can control, which can affect the outcome in terms of the ideal ratio, are the grind size, consistency, and pressure of the puck.
3. Properly prepare the puck
After measuring your grounds into the portafilter, based on its size and the manufacturer’s recommended measurement for a single or double shot, level it before tamping. “Use your fingers to ensure that it is distributed evenly before you tamp down,” Teoh said, so you don’t end up with an uneven puck.
She said that water will always look for the path of least resistance between the tank and your cup, so if there’s an area in the portafilter that contains a smaller or less pressurized volume of grounds because it was uneven to begin with, that’s where the water is going to primarily go, resulting in an improper extraction.
A heavy, high-quality tamp should be applied, sized correctly for your portafilter. Portafilters come in various sizes, typically 51 or 54 millimeters in diameter for home espresso machines. You’ll want to upgrade if your machine didn’t include a tamper or went with a lightweight, plastic one.
Tamping the puck doesn’t involve applying extreme force, but “you will want to push down to a point where you feel like it’s pushing back,” Teoh said. “You’re not using your whole body weight on it, but it’s also not like stamping a card. You want to push down and create a dense, tightly packed puck.”
If you want to be precise about pressure, some guidance suggests applying between 20 and 30 pounds. Teoh also notes that spring-loaded tampers are available, making it easier and more consistent to apply adequate pressure.
4. Taste and adjust
It’s your espresso, so it’s your palate that matters most for the outcome. Slight variations in the freshness and roast of the coffee, grind size, measurement of the grounds, tamping pressure and consistency, and temperature — to the degree that you can control it — will all affect different outcomes.
Experiment with the above adjustments to achieve a balanced brew with a nice mouthfeel and length to its flavor, until it suits you.
“You might not be experienced making espresso, but you’re experienced as a consumer,” Teoh said, “so you know what you should be tasting in your cup, and if it’s not right for you, then you know that something needs adjustment.”
Given all the possible variables above, hopefully it’s just a matter of tweaking a few things rather than needing a whole new system.
How important is crema?
The crema, or foam layer on top of your shot, may be desirable. Still, it isn’t necessarily an indicator of a correctly pulled shot, nor does it significantly affect the flavor.
Teoh said that carbon dioxide is trapped in coffee beans during roasting, then released during brewing, creating the foamy crema. However, it isn’t the puck’s density that determines whether it appears during brewing.
“Your crema is not just CO2, but it’s also oils and insoluble matter in coffee,” Teoh said. “There are a lot of aromatic compounds in there, but the actual flavor of your coffee lies in the darker liquid at the bottom. The crema doesn’t really carry a lot of flavor, per se, but it does help with mouthfeel.”
The absence of crema may have less to do with the mechanics of the shot and more to do with the roast itself. “The freshness of the coffee makes a difference,” Teoh said, “and some coffee, if it’s roasted really lightly, will also not have a lot of crema.”
To maximize your crema potential, you’re looking for beans from a darker roast that were roasted recently.
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