That Breville Dual Boiler and the Smart Grinder Pro is a fantastic combination and a great coffee machine. It is definitely comparable with a $3000 Italian machine. I've had this combination since Xmas last year and it has been flawless. I usually make 4 coffees every day with it. I love my $6.50 shop coffees made at home. Always use fresh roasted beans, between 7 days till 30 days old. I Love the Yahava Espresso blend and my recipe is 19g in and 38g out in 25 to 30 seconds. Every new bag requires dialing in again and I've found that fine grind adjustments are usually required as the beans age to keep the same consistency.
Great explanation. I’m day 2 with my breville touch and coming out like water. I did get a scale and some better tools but one thing for sure is I need to increase the dose. It’s definitely an art and I’m enjoying it.
The Breville Dual Boiler and Grinder Pro is Fantastic...had my eye on the BEZZERA DUO but have not upgraded as the Dual Boiler does all i need.... FYI you can adjust the burr collar on the Grinder to give you more adustments when you runout too.... Happy with the set-up and advise anyone to get one if they have been look for a well price Manual Coffee set-up. Nice Video
This was very helpful as I’ve struggled with flow rates while most videos assume the viewer doesn’t have this problem. Maybe now I can start to dial in my espresso
this ginder has 12 settings accesable by opening the hopper and altering the burrs. so there is WAY more adjustment left before you have an issue. i have mine set on 5 on the burr, 1 finer than factory setting, and 2 on the display anything less and the water just falls through (wega mininova classic VST 18g with 19g dose )
Many are trying to dial in with a naked portafilter to learn to prevent channeling and have good extraction. Maybe can suggest to show with a naked one next time
That will not extract properly without an additional step. Think of the coffee grounds as a sponge. You want the sponge to absorb the water so that the soluble contents inside contact the water, then squeeze out the sponge, just like a dishwashing sponge and soap. If you make the yield too low, and go to a high pressure fast, you have not done an extraction. That is also why you want to briefly saturate the entire puck with water at low pressure before going to high pressure. As long as you do this what the setting of the high pressure is is not so important as long as it is high enough to compress the coffee and gives a sensible extraction time.
We have a restaurant that sells a low volume of coffee. We use traditional 6oz size cups for our cappuccino and lattés. When we make a single coffee using the single basket the puck is muddy and hard to clean out of the handle. If I increase the grind amount it ends up being way more than is really required. Why doesn't anyone make a basket for single shots that is the same design as a double shot basket but just less shallow? Why do single shot baskets have that funnel design? Am I missing something or are manufacturers missing something?
You need to get two different sizes of baskets and two separate portafilters and two separate grinders since you likely won't be able to use the same grind setting for both a double and a single. Or just make every drink a double and have one portal filter and one grinder. I would say a double is around 18g - 22g. Traditionally a single is 7g and a double is 14g, but I've tried it and it's difficult to get everything you want out of a 7g shot.
I have wondered the same thing, and tried most baskets out there without success. Maybe the stress on a basket of that shape is too much? I now just follow Lance's suggestion of using an 18g basket, and dealing with the excess coffee however I want.
I have a breville barista touch without pre infusion, I get the ratio I want from it in 25 to 30 seconds. I am using scale for the dose and yield. However the first drop of espresso always comes at 4 to 5 seconds. I have tryed finer grind, same grind more dose nothing makes it come in 8 to 12 seconds for the first drop of espresso, what can I do without affecting the extraction time?
Other factors would be channeling and age of the coffee. Use a WDT to ensure the water isn’t escaping quickly and evenly saturated the coffee. Also ensure your coffee is within 1-3 weeks from its roast date. Older than this and it won’t be absorbent. Let me know if this helps.
Awesome video guys! Love the setup too Do you know id the dual bouler got a price increase? Its around 1.7k AUD everywhere now and it was 1.2k a few weeks ago 😞
I wonder if you've gone a bit too basic with this, surely it is better to control the dose, time and output more? So manually dose 18g for a 2:1 36g in 25 secs, play with grind size until you get there?
That is a way better option, however we’re well aware how many people don’t even understand what you just said, they don’t really care for recipes, they don’t own scales (and won’t buy them) but they still deserve to not totally suck at making coffee. Hopefully once they try this they’ll get hooked and keep learning like you have. Thanks for watching.
That twisting with the tamper, if done with any force, can create a horizontal shear in the grounds near the bottom. When the extraction is done, the water finds the shear and moves to the sides, causing side extraction. The net effect is that there is less extraction for the amount of coffee used, and the used coffee puck can split apart at the shear when knocked out. I prefer to just leave the few loose grounds at the top, which has no chance of any detrimental effect.
Thank you, finally someone has articulated this so well 👏🏼 we’ll keep this in my for our technique. I think I’ll keep (polishing) the top with a spin but I’ll be sure to not add any pressure. Thanks!
Measuring the coffee in the portafilter takes time, but a lot less skill. What you did took experience knowing what the coffee looks like when extracting which a person without experience wouldn't have. Having a recipe and then grinding to get a rough time while tasting the coffee will get a person experience. If it's sour grind finer or use more coffee if it's bitter grind courser or use less coffee. If it's sour and bitter, watery, and very hot the puck prep might be a problem, or the coffee is too fine and there is channeling.
We have so much content saying exactly what you said. There is so many people that can’t even comprehend what you said trying to make coffee at home. Hopefully this video gets them started and they then learn the next steps as you’ve mentioned.
A question please i dont use a coffe machine simonelli musica so much time and use cafiza clean the tank but i feel a flavor different i dont know what more to do can help me?
@@ArtistiCoffeeRoasters thnks so much is like the flavor of coffe is like when you drink is like feel and other flavor i dont know if put more cafiza a backflush again , im scare can damage the machine or my health i put all the tank of water to and pass water to times and i dont know what more to do
@@rolandocalderonguerra2346 I still have no idea what you are trying to say. Perhaps Google translate or another translate would help? Cleaning a coffee machine and then flushing out all the cleaner takes a long time. Follow the instructions for your machine and you can't go wrong. I just bought and used food safe citric acid and it was so easy since it's food safe I could just taste the water coming out to know if it's still needs flushing or not.
Sorta depends on roast. For me, those were thin and water, no body. Taste was OK ish. My current beans are ground at 8. That might change with the next bag...
Love your videos....but should not advocate such coffee wastage as it is not necessary. Coffee is not cheap these day. Food wastage is never good! Beginner's set up should include a scale. A Breville double basket easily packs in 22 -22.5 g coffee. You can measure coffee into portafilter instead of throwing away
At the end of the day, learning anything creates waste. Maybe there's more and less efficient ways but I wouldn't get so worked up over a few grams of coffee. Bigger things to worry about in the world today lol.
Totally agree, coffee shouldn’t be wasted and as you learn to make it better, they is very little waste. However, this video is aimed at beginners without scales and the knowledge of their equipment you have. All our content uses scales, just not this video as I wanted to ensure it was more accessible. Thanks for watching
That Breville Dual Boiler and the Smart Grinder Pro is a fantastic combination and a great coffee machine. It is definitely comparable with a $3000 Italian machine.
I've had this combination since Xmas last year and it has been flawless. I usually make 4 coffees every day with it. I love my $6.50 shop coffees made at home.
Always use fresh roasted beans, between 7 days till 30 days old. I Love the Yahava Espresso blend and my recipe is 19g in and 38g out in 25 to 30 seconds.
Every new bag requires dialing in again and I've found that fine grind adjustments are usually required as the beans age to keep the same consistency.
Great explanation. I’m day 2 with my breville touch and coming out like water. I did get a scale and some better tools but one thing for sure is I need to increase the dose. It’s definitely an art and I’m enjoying it.
The Breville Dual Boiler and Grinder Pro is Fantastic...had my eye on the BEZZERA DUO but have not upgraded as the Dual Boiler does all i need.... FYI you can adjust the burr collar on the Grinder to give you more adustments when you runout too.... Happy with the set-up and advise anyone to get one if they have been look for a well price Manual Coffee set-up. Nice Video
This was very helpful as I’ve struggled with flow rates while most videos assume the viewer doesn’t have this problem. Maybe now I can start to dial in my espresso
Awesome 🙌🏼
Great video, make it look easy.
You too can make coffee that easy after doing it for 20 years 😅
this ginder has 12 settings accesable by opening the hopper and altering the burrs. so there is WAY more adjustment left before you have an issue. i have mine set on 5 on the burr, 1 finer than factory setting, and 2 on the display anything less and the water just falls through (wega mininova classic VST 18g with 19g dose )
Thanks for the tip!
Many are trying to dial in with a naked portafilter to learn to prevent channeling and have good extraction. Maybe can suggest to show with a naked one next time
Sure can do
Love it! Cheers guys
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks for sharing!!!
No problem 😊 did you find this helpful? Anything in particular?
More of this! What about an extraction that has pressure above 9 Bar but low yield/ratio e.g. 1:1.3
That will not extract properly without an additional step.
Think of the coffee grounds as a sponge. You want the sponge to absorb the water so that the soluble contents inside contact the water, then squeeze out the sponge, just like a dishwashing sponge and soap.
If you make the yield too low, and go to a high pressure fast, you have not done an extraction.
That is also why you want to briefly saturate the entire puck with water at low pressure before going to high pressure.
As long as you do this what the setting of the high pressure is is not so important as long as it is high enough to compress the coffee and gives a sensible extraction time.
What he said 😂
We have a restaurant that sells a low volume of coffee. We use traditional 6oz size cups for our cappuccino and lattés. When we make a single coffee using the single basket the puck is muddy and hard to clean out of the handle. If I increase the grind amount it ends up being way more than is really required. Why doesn't anyone make a basket for single shots that is the same design as a double shot basket but just less shallow? Why do single shot baskets have that funnel design? Am I missing something or are manufacturers missing something?
Vst baskets make this full range with a stranded flow rate for all the baskets. Very cool
You need to get two different sizes of baskets and two separate portafilters and two separate grinders since you likely won't be able to use the same grind setting for both a double and a single.
Or just make every drink a double and have one portal filter and one grinder. I would say a double is around 18g - 22g.
Traditionally a single is 7g and a double is 14g, but I've tried it and it's difficult to get everything you want out of a 7g shot.
I have wondered the same thing, and tried most baskets out there without success.
Maybe the stress on a basket of that shape is too much?
I now just follow Lance's suggestion of using an 18g basket, and dealing with the excess coffee however I want.
I have a breville barista touch without pre infusion, I get the ratio I want from it in 25 to 30 seconds. I am using scale for the dose and yield. However the first drop of espresso always comes at 4 to 5 seconds. I have tryed finer grind, same grind more dose nothing makes it come in 8 to 12 seconds for the first drop of espresso, what can I do without affecting the extraction time?
Other factors would be channeling and age of the coffee. Use a WDT to ensure the water isn’t escaping quickly and evenly saturated the coffee.
Also ensure your coffee is within 1-3 weeks from its roast date. Older than this and it won’t be absorbent.
Let me know if this helps.
I have a Breville Express model , grinder built in
When you changed your grind settings did you go coarser or finer?
My machine starts out very dark
Grind finer and you will get less yield.
Awesome video guys! Love the setup too
Do you know id the dual bouler got a price increase? Its around 1.7k AUD everywhere now and it was 1.2k a few weeks ago 😞
I got mine before last Xmas for a bargain $925 from Hardly Normal. I waited for a good deal.
I wonder if you've gone a bit too basic with this, surely it is better to control the dose, time and output more? So manually dose 18g for a 2:1 36g in 25 secs, play with grind size until you get there?
That is a way better option, however we’re well aware how many people don’t even understand what you just said, they don’t really care for recipes, they don’t own scales (and won’t buy them) but they still deserve to not totally suck at making coffee.
Hopefully once they try this they’ll get hooked and keep learning like you have.
Thanks for watching.
2:45 Oops, the sound of a plastic grinder and its varying speed. 😬🙉
😬
Interesting the heap was smaller for the finer grind even with a longer grind time.
2 things here. Less coffee will pass through the burrs because the gap is smaller. Plus the particle size means they compact down more.
That twisting with the tamper, if done with any force, can create a horizontal shear in the grounds near the bottom.
When the extraction is done, the water finds the shear and moves to the sides, causing side extraction.
The net effect is that there is less extraction for the amount of coffee used,
and the used coffee puck can split apart at the shear when knocked out.
I prefer to just leave the few loose grounds at the top, which has no chance of any detrimental effect.
Thank you, finally someone has articulated this so well 👏🏼 we’ll keep this in my for our technique.
I think I’ll keep (polishing) the top with a spin but I’ll be sure to not add any pressure.
Thanks!
Measuring the coffee in the portafilter takes time, but a lot less skill. What you did took experience knowing what the coffee looks like when extracting which a person without experience wouldn't have.
Having a recipe and then grinding to get a rough time while tasting the coffee will get a person experience. If it's sour grind finer or use more coffee if it's bitter grind courser or use less coffee. If it's sour and bitter, watery, and very hot the puck prep might be a problem, or the coffee is too fine and there is channeling.
Yep, part of the fun also 😊
We have so much content saying exactly what you said.
There is so many people that can’t even comprehend what you said trying to make coffee at home. Hopefully this video gets them started and they then learn the next steps as you’ve mentioned.
💯
Too many people just put up with whatever the output is without trying to make a nice coffee.
A question please i dont use a coffe machine simonelli musica so much time and use cafiza clean the tank but i feel a flavor different i dont know what more to do can help me?
What is the problem exactly? Flavour after cleaning? Or the coffee?
@@ArtistiCoffeeRoasters thnks so much is like the flavor of coffe is like when you drink is like feel and other flavor i dont know if put more cafiza a backflush again , im scare can damage the machine or my health i put all the tank of water to and pass water to times and i dont know what more to do
@@rolandocalderonguerra2346 I still have no idea what you are trying to say. Perhaps Google translate or another translate would help?
Cleaning a coffee machine and then flushing out all the cleaner takes a long time. Follow the instructions for your machine and you can't go wrong. I just bought and used food safe citric acid and it was so easy since it's food safe I could just taste the water coming out to know if it's still needs flushing or not.
Jesus christ Jimmy did you grind the first shot with a hammer mate? 😂
Shocker hey 😂
grind finer and/or measure how much grams grinded coffee you have before brewing
For the Breville/Sage grinder, grind size of 12-14, worked well
Sorta depends on roast. For me, those were thin and water, no body. Taste was OK ish. My current beans are ground at 8. That might change with the next bag...
👌🏼
👍🏻
Sorry, but the audio in this video _perfectly_ matches this first shot…
No problem for me
Thanks for the feedback.
Love your videos....but should not advocate such coffee wastage as it is not necessary. Coffee is not cheap these day. Food wastage is never good! Beginner's set up should include a scale. A Breville double basket easily packs in 22 -22.5 g coffee. You can measure coffee into portafilter instead of throwing away
At the end of the day, learning anything creates waste. Maybe there's more and less efficient ways but I wouldn't get so worked up over a few grams of coffee. Bigger things to worry about in the world today lol.
Totally agree, coffee shouldn’t be wasted and as you learn to make it better, they is very little waste. However, this video is aimed at beginners without scales and the knowledge of their equipment you have. All our content uses scales, just not this video as I wanted to ensure it was more accessible.
Thanks for watching
👌🏼
Lol
There's always one that has to have a moan at you 😄 @@ArtistiCoffeeRoasters