This week’s coffee is a cold-ferment Typica from Finca La Soledad in Ecuador.
I paid $45 for four ounces, which works out to only $11.25 a cup (beans only). I forgot to get a picture of the roast date, but it was a March 8 roast. This means that the coffee has been resting for about two weeks, which could be a perfect amount of time.
Beans are a little more oblong than usual… lovely color and aroma. Easy to grind and not a lot of chaff.
Do you even sift, bro? It’s extremely important that you sift out your fines when making pour over. The fines will muddy everything up and ruin your beautiful cup of coffee. Set them aside!
20 grams of perfectly consistent grind after sifting. The usual recipe, 15:1 … 200-degree Fahrenheit water, 50 ml and 30 seconds to bloom, second pour of 150 ml, final pour to 300 ml total. Of course I use a hand-blown Chemex because it costs three times as much, which means it’s three times as good. It’s also important that you pronounce Chemex, “sha-may.”
Bloom pour of 50 ml.
Second pour of 100 ml to 150 ml total.
Final pour of 150 ml to 300 ml. Lovely color. Drained to drip at exactly the three minute mark.
I’ve never had a cold-fermented coffee and it is different… complex sour of course, but a stronger coffee flavor on the tongue than I like. I’ve been drinking a lot of Geisha recently so when I go back to Typica, I’m always sort of shocked by the coffee flavor up front. I’m not sure if I’m a fan of this … it may be a little bit too unusual. I’ll try it again tomorrow and post some more thoughts.
Earlier: