Ir para conteúdo

Água vs café


LUW

Postagens recomendadas

Achei um artigo bem interessante na Phys.org:

 

The science behind the perfect coffee   
Jun 05, 2014
 
2-thesciencebe.jpg
Chris Hendon and Maxwell Dashwood are heading to the World Barista Championships on 9 June

(Phys.org) —A chemist at the University of Bath has teamed up with the UK Barista Champion to find the best type of water for making coffee. The pair are heading to the World Barista Championships in Italy on 8 June to share their coffee chemistry knowledge with the rest of the world.

 

Christopher Hendon, a PhD student from the University of Bath's Centre for Sustainable Chemical Technologies, embarked on the project in his spare time with friend Maxwell Colonna-Dashwood, owner of Colonna and Small's coffee shop in Bath, after a discussion about why the taste of coffee varies so much.

Hendon used computational chemistry methods to look at how different compositions of water affect the extraction of six chemicals that contribute to the flavour of coffee, along with caffeine. The study, published in the Journal of Agricultural Food Chemistry, found that water composition can make a dramatic difference to the taste of coffee made from the same bean.

Hendon explained: "Coffee beans contain hundreds of chemicals; the precise composition depends on the type of bean and how it is roasted. The flavour of the resulting coffee is determined by how much of these chemicals are extracted by the water, which is influenced by roast time, grind, temperature, pressure and brew time.

"We've found that the water composition is key to the proportions of sugars, starches, bases and acids extracted from a particular roast."

The coffee industry uses guidelines on the ideal water for coffee extraction from the Speciality Coffee Association of Europe (SCAE), which measures ionic conductivity to quantify the total dissolved solids, however the researchers found that it was the proportions of these ions that affected the extraction and therefore the taste of the coffee.

3-thesciencebe.jpg

Hendon explained: "Hard water is generally considered to be bad for coffee, but we found it was the type of hardness that mattered – while high bicarbonate levels are bad, high magnesium ion levels increase the extraction of coffee into water and improve the taste."

The study also found that sodium rich water, such as that produced by water softeners, didn't help the taste of the coffee either.

Hendon added: "There is no one particular perfect composition of water that produces consistently flavoursome extractions from all roasted coffee. But magnesium-rich water is better at extracting coffee compounds and the resultant flavour depends on the balance between both the ions in the water and the quantity of bicarbonate present."

 

Maxwell Colonna-Dashwood, co-author on the paper, said: "Unfortunately most of the time you are limited by the source water available. Water from the tap varies regionally and from day to day depending on how much it rains – the only way you can get consistent quality is to use bottled water, but even then not all waters are the same.

"For the Championships we test the local water and then select the roast that is most suitable for that particular water. For example you could use a heavy roast with a soft water as it doesn't extract very much, but with hard water it would extract too much and give a bitter taste, so it would be better to use a lighter roast.

"Traditionally the coffee making industry is most concerned about using water that doesn't scale up their machines. But we argue that more value should be placed on the flavour of the coffee and want to use chemistry to help people make the best coffee they can with the water they have available."

Maxwell Colonna-Dashwood won the UK Barista Championship in April and will represent the UK at the World Championships in Rimini, Italy from 9 June.

The competition takes place over four days, with baristas from 50 countries vying to become World Barista Champion. Each competitor must prepare four espressos, four cappuccinos, and four original signature drinks to exacting standards in a 15-minute performance set to music. Each entry is judged on the taste of beverages served, cleanliness, creativity, technical skill, and overall presentation.

Hendon and Colonna-Dashwood are now planning to share their knowledge on the science behind making the perfect coffee in a book.

 

 

Pelo menos para o meu paladar limitado duvido que isso seja de muita utilidade, mas para quem tem um nariz muito afiado isso possa fazer diferença de sabor do café na xícara. Contudo, por mais que faça sentido o princípio todo, e como o proprio autor cita, é raro vc ter mais de uma ou duas fontes de água a disposição, portanto em termos práticos talvez não ajude muito. Mesmo assim, achei bem interessante.

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

No início da apresentação dele no mundial ele faz uma introdução sobre o assunto e ainda fez os juizes experimentarem cafés com águas diferentes. Incrível que ele comeu o tempo com isso e conseguiu terminar o resto. Mereceu mesmo ir pra final.

 

Lembro dele falar algo como: "Sempre achei que bastaria o TDS para a definição do sabor. Engano, a água é muito importante."

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Isso deve ser mais útil em máquinas com caldeira dedicada pra espresso e PID, daí até é viável. Imagina ter que fazer expurgos com água especial? Muito antieconômico.

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Gostei bastante da apresentação dele também. era um dos que eu acava que tinha muita chance de levar o caneco (tamper?).

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Oi Marcinha !

 

Esta é a do Marshall Hance, não tenho certeza que seja a melhor, estou procurando a do Paulis mas ainda não consegui achar ...

 

Here's where I'm at:

 

For 10 gallons

 

Dilute 9.5g CaCl2 in 100ml water

Dilute 1.4g NaHCO3 in 100ml water

 

Add to each gallon of distilled water 10ml from each of the two solutions.

 

That should get you 68 mg/L calcium and 10mg/L sodium

 

There's some salt, CO2, and water that come from those two ingredients mixing and I'm not sure how that all plays out in ppm, ph, etc.

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Aqui outra do Pavlis

 

A real important advantage of "created" water is that algae do not grow in it. Another is that it is so simple to do. Just mix up a 10% solution of potassium bicarbonate or a 5% solution of sodium bicarbonate and add it to high purity water. It is also particularly simple to vary bicarbonate concentration. Furthermore one can travel around and make it the same in Arica, Chile as in Nome, Alaska or Lisbon, Portugal.

 

Experimenta Marcinha, e nos conta se realmente o café fica melhor ...

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Não seja por isso ! Tem toneladas de discussões sobre água para espresso.

Se queres algo mais abrangente, este fala de quase tudo referente ao assunto :

 

http://web.archive.org/web/20080526072324/http://www.big-rick.com/coffee/waterfaq.html

 

Agora, depois de ler tudo isso, o que sobra de concreto é a receitinha de cima :-)

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

O camarada se empolgou na questão da água nesse artigo! Caramba!

Meu teste miou... não temos CaCl2 em nenhum dos laboratórios do andar  :huh:

Vou ver se alguém tem.

A segunda receita na verdade não diz o quanto colocar da solução de bicarbonato a 10% na água... 1/1000, 1/100.... Vou atrás do cloreto de cálcio.

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Talvez experimentar com sais de Mg em vez de Ca ...

Não coloca a quantidade porque recomenda utilizar várias dossagens para ver a que mais agrada, e ainda, para experimentar concentrações diferentes para grãos diferentes ...

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Visitante
Responder

×   Você colou conteúdo com formatação.   Remover formatação

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Processando...
×
×
  • Criar Novo...