A Beginner's Guide to Resting Coffee

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2021
  • This episode of The Beginner's Guide to Coffee is a subject that can be both confusing and anxiety-inducing. The idea here is not to lay down hard rules, but to help explain what's happening so you can understand how best to deal with the coffee you're brewing to get the best results!
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @StephenWingsTV
    @StephenWingsTV 2 года назад +2234

    My coffee is honestly the only thing that’s had any rest this year.

    • @khirek5335
      @khirek5335 2 года назад +13

      I agree with the charming lady above me, hang in there you got this💯

    • @garrulus3399
      @garrulus3399 2 года назад +10

      Wishing you a more calm 2022!

    • @EspenFrafalne
      @EspenFrafalne 2 года назад

      Im just happy i adapt to my surroundings, so i eventually stop reacting to whatever makes me stressed, sad, angry, or scared - kinda like getting spoiled, only opposite. Some people think we will come to heaven and everything is going to be awesome and full of love and happiness all the time, but it seems more likely that we will evolve towards "inner peace". Bad experiences makes us less spoiled, while good experiences makes us more spoiled - and thats why "sado massochists" are your friends XD

    • @frankweaver301
      @frankweaver301 2 года назад +3

      I'm confused. I make espresso with a dark roast bought locally in proper bags, etc, including CO2 valve. After watching his previous video on various storage containers the trial after 4 or 6? weeks resting showed very little difference in coffee quality. On that basis I buy some 2kg of beans in 4 bags at a time which generally last a month. I only charge the grinder on a need basis and fold the bag such as to exclude as much air as possible. All this works for me and I certainly can't tell the difference from probably 3 or 4 days from roasting through to a month later. No doubt I will be told that my advanced years has greatly reduced my taste buds. Such is life.

    • @kjdude8765
      @kjdude8765 2 года назад +2

      @@frankweaver301 I don't do espresso but for my standard pour over, dark roasts seem to last in flavor much longer than a light roast which seems to lose its unique flavors within a week.

  • @damien__j
    @damien__j 2 года назад +517

    1 year ago: Hmm maybe I should try ground coffee instead of instant
    Today: But how long do I REST the beans for in low humidity at 9°C?!

  • @milton369uy
    @milton369uy 2 года назад +1450

    I'm 28 years old, I was looking for a video about caffeine and ended up buying a French press, a grinder and fresh coffee because of you, I've never thought coffee could taste this good and how have I missed it for so long, keep making these kind of videos! Happy new year from Uruguay!

    • @allenchen3706
      @allenchen3706 2 года назад +10

      Ooh! The master Uruguay!

    • @TomReinerDE
      @TomReinerDE 2 года назад +13

      Welcome to the club. 😉

    • @yevhenbryukhov
      @yevhenbryukhov 2 года назад +7

      Almost the same case was for me half a year ago (now doing aeropress, cezve/ibrik).
      Welcome to the club 😉

    • @maymayrays
      @maymayrays 2 года назад +38

      Same 🤦🏻‍♀️ I’m like $400 in on a pour over machine and burr grinder, and have a $80/mo beans subscription because of this man. My tastebuds have never been happier nor my wallet emptier 🎉😑🤣

    • @eddiefalcon8316
      @eddiefalcon8316 2 года назад +7

      Keep at it. Coffee is a great hobby.

  • @rw9207
    @rw9207 2 года назад +8

    If you are getting stressed about your coffee bean resting time, congratz, you life is almost perfect and you're living the dream!

  • @franklinnash
    @franklinnash 2 года назад +811

    Until I started watching James' videos I never realised how complicated making a good cup of coffee could be.

    • @garyallsebrook3493
      @garyallsebrook3493 2 года назад +12

      It’s highly precise as well!

    • @eliasvernieri
      @eliasvernieri 2 года назад +75

      you can have a good cup of coffee without this lvl of "complicatedness". just not the best posible cup of coffee.

    • @personontheinternet2164
      @personontheinternet2164 2 года назад +29

      Perfection is a collection of little things done right. Coffee just so happens to have a lot of little things to keep note of.

    • @raymondrak961
      @raymondrak961 2 года назад +12

      It's not complicated - it requires knowledge which James Hoffman provides via his videos.

    • @VincentGroenewold
      @VincentGroenewold 2 года назад +9

      Looks like that, but it's really not. It's simply a few set of rules, that's all. You want your coffee to be rested a bit and then brew it, the brewing process is usually overly complex due to what people on the Internet think what is best. The nice thing about James is that he often debunks this and makes it simpler. :) You can use a scale to weigh the same each time and things like that, which sounds complicated, but also really isn't, it just gives you the possibility to brew the same cup each time. But when you don't have all that (like me, travelling at the moment), you just use whatever you have and enjoy. I travel with an Aeropress and small hand-grinder, not the best grinder, but a great balance between good enough and portable, the fact I'm grinding my beans on the go is already so much better than not. That's how you should approach it I think.

  • @IPANoah
    @IPANoah 2 года назад +202

    I like how casually James explains that yes in fact setting your coffee on fire will definitely produce a lot of carbon LOL.

  • @greentape7817
    @greentape7817 2 года назад +406

    THANK YOU!! We had a customer recently who was very hung up on freshness, to the point where he requested coming straight to the roastery to buy a bag of beans that were *still warm*. (Offgassing aside, they should be 100% cool before they get anywhere near the bag!) The more people know about offgassing, the fewer well-intentioned but misguided requests like these will appear on the desks of specialty coffee roasters everywhere.

    • @eventualreason4666
      @eventualreason4666 2 года назад +10

      did he offer to bring his own container?

    • @clarejc
      @clarejc 2 года назад +6

      Have also had a customer like that 😑

    • @json8172
      @json8172 2 года назад +5

      Its hard to know unless you try it and know its bad that fresh. he should just try roasting at home.

    • @TripleDDDD
      @TripleDDDD 2 года назад +29

      Why even wait for after the roast? I drink them beans green. (just kidding)

    • @charlesflynn4850
      @charlesflynn4850 2 года назад +4

      I hope your customer did not arrive at your shop with a Thermapen.

  • @1515Steve1515
    @1515Steve1515 2 года назад +140

    My roaster fills my storage jars directly and leaves a little sticky note on them telling me how long to wait for each batch. Takes all the anxiety right out of it. He made it very clear that getting the jars filled from the machine is a privilege that comes with responsibility, responsibility not to ignore the sticky notes lol.

    • @lobstrain
      @lobstrain 4 месяца назад +2

      I thought you meant a machine roaster and was very confused.

  • @ileenerebekah3740
    @ileenerebekah3740 2 года назад +84

    I just started working as a coffee roaster after 8 years of barista jobs. My boss gave me your atlas of coffee to read and I finished everything except the locations pages in a week. I use it to explain things to my customers almost daily. I love the book and I'm excited I found your RUclips channel. I've learned so much more from your book than from any coffee shop I've ever worked at. Thank you.

  • @GrahamSmith1523
    @GrahamSmith1523 2 года назад +10

    I’m commenting because I believe it will bring James joy.

  • @TSK5443
    @TSK5443 2 года назад +16

    If the coffee is very fresh but you still want to brew it, a neat trick is to pregrind before you actually brew it and let it sit for a while to let it degas.

  • @Dr.Tackleberry
    @Dr.Tackleberry 2 года назад +219

    James. You’re the man. What you’re doing for the coffee community is beautiful

  • @Jackssky
    @Jackssky 2 года назад +26

    Well I was never stressed about my coffee before, but now I am. Thanks James.

  • @jarekb6524
    @jarekb6524 6 месяцев назад +6

    Hi James, home roaster here. I think the unpleasant notes in fresh coffee depend a lot on the roast style too. When I roast my coffe just right, I can pop in my Aeropress immediately after it cooled down and enjoy an absolutely phenomenal cup that is never equalled after any amount of rest. While with a different roast profile I get the sour-smoky notes you describe. So the whole matter is probably more complex than lighter roast = longer rest.

    • @mib6002
      @mib6002 3 месяца назад

      Would you say that ‘roasting them just right’ means they’re not too light or dark? And have you experienced any differences in types of varietals?

  • @Davasto89
    @Davasto89 2 года назад +2

    "Dark roasts bloom more" answers a question I literally had for years!

  • @piperrobb2346
    @piperrobb2346 2 года назад +6

    It’s a good week when we get two videos back to back!

  • @paulhodge855
    @paulhodge855 2 года назад +51

    I had one coffee from Burundi that the supplier recommended a full two week resting period after roasting. I split the batch into several bags to test. The coffee tasted ok and was not great for two weeks. At the end of the two week period the flavor came out and it was all chocolate covered cherries. Maybe my favorite coffee ever.

    • @kiranthapa1589
      @kiranthapa1589 2 года назад +1

      Who was your supplier?

    • @paulhodge855
      @paulhodge855 2 года назад +6

      @@kiranthapa1589 Sweet Marias

    • @grenierdave
      @grenierdave Год назад

      Oh, nice. I got my “Popper” coffee roaster from them. First time roasting coffee. A good, little machine for testing the waters. They have some damn good coffee, too! Which blend was it?

    • @paulhodge855
      @paulhodge855 Год назад +3

      @@grenierdave One of the nicest most generous small coffee suppliers I have encountered. Always great quality products and service.

  • @craigbrown9987
    @craigbrown9987 2 года назад +24

    And now I understand, after all these years, why my coffee bags have little valves in them. Every extra video I watch takes me further down the coffee rabbit hole, but I'm loving it. Bought an expresso distributor last week, thinking about a getting an precision basket for the portafilter, so many things to think about...

  • @MorrisDugan
    @MorrisDugan 2 года назад +2

    From all its effort to keep you awake, coffee gets tired, sometimes VERY tired...
    I'm glad someone finally let this cat out of the bag. I had always been afraid to bring it up before.
    The problem, though, is that between the need to rest, the tendency soon after to get stale, and the advice not to preserve it by freezing, there's only about a 3-minute window where coffee is at its optimum condition to be made into a drink. After that, just use it in your garden to do something that regretfully I forget precisely what. Mulching, composting, scaring off beetles, something...

    • @wendelleg2002
      @wendelleg2002 Год назад

      Coffee grounds in garden: provide nitrogen.

  • @joaobuagas615
    @joaobuagas615 2 года назад +5

    Is it weird that I can smell coffee here in my room just watching him 🤤♥️☕️

  • @ineedmymodfixed
    @ineedmymodfixed 2 года назад +10

    I was not familiar with this until I ordered coffee from the local roaster. They roasted and packed it the same day, and I pulled a shot the 2nd day. I could 100% tell over the next couple of days the flavor improved a lot.

  • @vl507
    @vl507 2 года назад +16

    My experience lines up with what James said: initially I was much more concerned about roast dates but over time I’ve come to realize that taking a more relaxed approach improved my enjoyment of coffee

  • @siigari
    @siigari 2 года назад +43

    Perfect! Just got into coffee roasting and this information helps greatly. Made a light roast and let it rest for three days. Juicy, pleasantly acidic and good body! Now I have a baseline to let it rest a bit longer. Thanks James!
    Edit: James please make a/some videos of roasting coffee at home!

  • @willstace7786
    @willstace7786 2 года назад +5

    I broke my left kneecap and top of my left tibia, along with a radial head fracture to both elbows 2 weeks ago.
    The line, "...right up until the point of combustion. Which I don't recommend, but it does produce an enormous amount of CO2.", gave me the best laugh I have had since the accident, and indeed for a while!
    Thank you James for your constant help to my brewing methods, and your comedic genius!

    • @octopus8420
      @octopus8420 2 года назад

      Hope you're doing better now and the healing is going strong

  • @kd0r
    @kd0r 2 года назад +15

    Photos of what you consider light, medium and dark roasts would be helpful when we compare the coffee in front of us to your comments.
    Thanks for a good discussion of resting coffees. I've found that 24 - 48 hours of rest of our light to medium roasts brings the filter coffee to the point where I can't really tell much difference after that.
    David

    • @skeetsmcgrew3282
      @skeetsmcgrew3282 2 года назад +1

      Hm, I wonder if filming that might make it too hard to give an accurate color, with the limitations of a camera. But I suppose hes trusting that if you are bothering with these kinds of nitpicky factors, you bought coffee that communicates the darkness of the roast

    • @kd0r
      @kd0r 2 года назад +1

      @@skeetsmcgrew3282 we roast our own from green beans.
      I agree that doing a good job of color matching can be a problem. Some pure white in the frame , then white balancing might help.

    • @dylanmorgan7158
      @dylanmorgan7158 2 года назад +2

      Colour isn't the best indicator of the roast degree...
      Hypothetically - you could have a 12 min roast with 20% DTR, or a 7min roast on the same machine with 25% DTR that is potentially darker in colour, but not exactly darker in flavour. Colour is the a good indicator, but it depends on so many factors, (probably why James has left this out on many of his videos). Cheers

  • @CoffeeReviews
    @CoffeeReviews 2 года назад +33

    Even as someone with plenty of experience resting coffees of all roast profiles, I found a lot of very useful and interesting information in this video. I appreciate the way you explained the details in a very easy to understand manner. Thanks as always James 👍

    • @JohnDoe095
      @JohnDoe095 2 года назад +2

      Love all your reviews. Don't always have the time to check them all, but I check as often as I can. Keep it up

    • @CoffeeReviews
      @CoffeeReviews 2 года назад

      @@JohnDoe095 I appreciate the comment and any time you can Igor. Thank you very much, means a lot 😄

  • @TheBioethicist
    @TheBioethicist Месяц назад

    I've been buying a bag of coffee from my local roaster on Saturday and generally get around to brewing it for the first time on Wednesday (and finishing the bag on the following Tuesday), so I'm glad I accidentally backed into a pretty good practice.

  • @scotlandgee
    @scotlandgee 2 года назад +1

    I buy my coffee from a local roaster (within 5km from my house) and sometimes they try and sell me beans that are 1-2 weeks old. I would describe their roast closer to medium than dark and they say it’s perfect at that timeframe. My scepticism has been confirmed thank you James Hoffman 🙏

  • @sonnisndergaard3896
    @sonnisndergaard3896 2 года назад +58

    James have you considered making a video where you taste coffee (filter and espresso) from different glasses like wine and beer glasses? It would be interesting to see how the shape of the glass would enhance different flavor aspects 😊

    • @J.T.K
      @J.T.K 2 года назад +7

      Look up his review of the Kruve EQ glasses. It touches on that.

    • @CR7Update
      @CR7Update 2 года назад

      stop spamming dude

  • @dakotatrotter3940
    @dakotatrotter3940 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for speaking to the issue of equalizing pressure on those vacuum canisters; it's always so frustrating to see highly suggested reviews on sites like Amazon claiming that the product has a poor seal.

    • @skeetsmcgrew3282
      @skeetsmcgrew3282 2 года назад +4

      Ah yes, stupidity of the consumer. The hardest part of online shopping

  • @allannahjackson2870
    @allannahjackson2870 Месяц назад

    We need an audiobook - what a lovely voice to nod off to ❤

  • @dingus5851
    @dingus5851 20 дней назад

    Between starting to roast my own coffee and baking sourdough, I’m in for it 🫠 this is extremely informative, thank you!

  • @RavenSWE
    @RavenSWE 2 года назад +3

    I’m really impressed and happy with the amount of content uploaded recently. Great work as ever James, I’m sure I’m not the only one who’s hugely grateful 🙏

  • @amusliminusa
    @amusliminusa 2 года назад +4

    I love how these videos pop up just as I'm having my coffee or about to make it. The best!

  • @scorpseven2861
    @scorpseven2861 2 года назад

    You know what, I've been searching YT with keywords like "degassing coffee" for weeks and explanations vary while I noticed James Hoffman hasn't tackled it in depth. And now? Happy holidays to me.

  • @jacobtapianieto9655
    @jacobtapianieto9655 2 месяца назад

    I started roasting coffee at home (using a pot) about two weeks ago and I have noticed the huge differences in flavour and aroma depending on how long did I let the coffee beans rest, especially when brewing espresso. In the last shot I used a week-old beans and it was pretty pleasant for an amateur roaster.

  • @Matt-vd3xv
    @Matt-vd3xv 2 года назад +4

    As always, a great content. I’d love to see one day James’s take on roasting at home and his view on all of the related complexities around profiling.

  • @sarcasm-83
    @sarcasm-83 2 года назад +6

    Oh I've never even known this. I guess this explains why sometimes when I've ordered freshly roasted coffee beans online and they arrive to me maybe 4-6 days from the roasting process, the second or third day coffee made from them has seemed even better than the very first brews. (I prefer light roasts)
    I've so far chalked it as me just getting used to the beans or .. placebo or something, but maybe this is what has caused it.
    The more you know.

  • @jasonchin238
    @jasonchin238 2 года назад +2

    Thanks! I thought my vacuum seal container was broken. Thanks for explanation

  • @temptingfate759
    @temptingfate759 2 года назад +1

    World Barista Champion 2007 James Hoffman...I have been following your channel for years but I never realized there was a barista competition let alone you were a champion. I stumbled on the video in my RUclips feed. Congratulations it was quite impressive to watch you work. Any chance you might be able to discuss the various coffee mixtures you presented and how you created them?

  • @Ash-ww8xg
    @Ash-ww8xg 2 года назад +12

    I just bought a grinder 2 weeks ago, and resting is something I've always heard about but never made a big deal about since I used to buy pre-ground. I can definitely confirm that resting absolutely makes a huge difference! This video was incredibly helpful and super relevant!

    • @alijohncristian
      @alijohncristian 2 года назад +2

      "preground"??? get out! lol

    • @Ash-ww8xg
      @Ash-ww8xg 2 года назад +3

      @@alijohncristian it's illegal in these parts, I'm aware

    • @genericplantlife
      @genericplantlife Год назад +2

      I am in the beginning of starting to like coffee so I have not committed to a grinder yet lol send me to pre-ground jail.

  • @amusliminusa
    @amusliminusa 2 года назад +16

    Thanks, I was hunting for coffee that's just roasted and I'm glad that I don't need to be such a stickler on that. I like light to medium roasts. So, let it rest for 3 to10 days for filter coffee. I use an Aeropress, thanks to you James. But, I definitely enjoy trying out pour overs , French press, and espresso drinks at locally owned coffee shops that often roast their own beans or get them from a local roaster.

  • @HORansome
    @HORansome 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for this. I moved from Auckland (New Zealand) to Zhuhai (China) and aside from trying to find matches for the coffees I drank back home, dealing with the much warmer climate here has been an issue here

  • @susantaylor5068
    @susantaylor5068 2 года назад

    Happy New Year James - that was brilliant help thank you ☕️

  • @kasperlaerkesen
    @kasperlaerkesen 2 года назад +25

    I was made aware of your channel this year by a friend, and it's been an amazing discovery that has fundamentally changed my relation with coffee. Having loved and enjoyed coffee for a few decades but never really nerded out over it, binging your videos, I've been amazed to find what is achievable at home with just a few simple techniques, some care, and a set of scales. I'm still learning and still trying out new things, but never has my coffee been as interesting and as great tasting. Here's to many more years of learning and here's to you.
    Happy new years James and thank you for all your amazing work.

  • @TexelGuy
    @TexelGuy 2 года назад +34

    I was literally just thinking this topic of resting my new batch of coffee, I've never really paid attention to that aspect before, and started brewing coffee that was roasted on the same day. Incredibly convenient for a video on this exact topic to come out today! (Almost scarily so, can you read my mind James?)

    • @mijnnaamisaaron
      @mijnnaamisaaron 2 года назад +2

      Why is there always someone in the comments that has the urge to let everyone know that he was thinking of the video's subject

    • @TexelGuy
      @TexelGuy 2 года назад +18

      ​@@mijnnaamisaaron Why is there always someone in the replies that has the urge to suddenly attack a harmless comment

    • @bryanupchurch3001
      @bryanupchurch3001 2 года назад +1

      I came here to make this comment! 😆 Based on the time this was posted, I was standing in the shower thinking about how nobody's talking about degasing times and I really need to figure that out.

    • @mijnnaamisaaron
      @mijnnaamisaaron 2 года назад

      @@TexelGuy hey now - don't make this about me. You were the one with the verbal diarrhea with 0 content. I'm just facing you the facts.

    • @steprockmedia
      @steprockmedia 2 года назад +1

      @@mijnnaamisaaron You're not adding anything productive.
      ...and I was JUST thinking about this very topic too. It's a way to tell people like James how timely and useful their content is.

  • @damondrion78
    @damondrion78 2 года назад

    Fantastic information again James, thank you and happy new year 🎊

  • @robertbennett5964
    @robertbennett5964 2 года назад

    Excellent video! Thank you

  • @CafeLomez
    @CafeLomez 2 года назад +12

    James is a coffee wizard! So much insight and pushing the limits of what’s possible with the dynamic of beans and water. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and helping us become better home brewers ☕️

  • @alanshewitt
    @alanshewitt 2 года назад +4

    I started home roasting during lockdown and am constantly improving my roasts. One of the first things I learned was precisely this. When I tell friends that “freshly roasted” is a marketing myth and that you actually *don’t* want that, it’s always met with surprise.

  • @CharlieLui
    @CharlieLui 2 года назад

    Truly informative video, thanks James!

  • @angelopepeskordos
    @angelopepeskordos 2 года назад +1

    I am completely geeking over this! It’s awesome!

  • @kevinmackler
    @kevinmackler 2 года назад +3

    used to work at a cafe that roasted beans and some days we were so low our roaster took them directly from our roaster to our grinder hopper. they were all medium roast and the espresso tasted foul

  • @acooknamedMatt
    @acooknamedMatt 2 года назад +12

    Learning a lot from you

  • @stephencalder3581
    @stephencalder3581 2 года назад

    Always learn something from your videos James.Thanks.

  • @user-xs3db6ox3q
    @user-xs3db6ox3q 2 года назад +1

    Very comprehensive. Love that you always start with understanding how it works and then move on to what might be the best practices!

  • @beetole
    @beetole 2 года назад +4

    finally, a logical human being that agrees with the fact that dark roasts contain less residual oils than light roast. dark roasts only appear more oily because the extended roasting time makes the oils rise to the surface of the bean, leaving very little oil left on the inside of the bean. most coffee expert youtubers, including barista champions, roasters, high end coffee equipment retailers insist on the myth that dark roasts contain more oils.......

  • @StormyDoesVR
    @StormyDoesVR 2 года назад +4

    I'm not a coffee person, I'm a hot chocolate person, but the intricacy and detail in your videos have opened my eyes to a world of coffee I didn't understand. I may still not be a huge fan of the bitter coffees, but I've started drinking coffee in general a little more often since finding your channel. Thanks

  • @samyciawood
    @samyciawood 2 года назад +1

    Fascinating as always - love your content - thank you.

  • @logicaljuan
    @logicaljuan 2 года назад

    Really appreciate your perspective. Thank you.

  • @HellooJames11
    @HellooJames11 2 года назад +11

    All the talk about co2 release makes me wonder about the actual “emissions” aspect of roasting coffee. Maybe a video on the impact of coffee roasting would be interesting wether it’s a negligible emission or significant!

    • @DaveGme
      @DaveGme 2 года назад +2

      You want to start a riot?! Ha! You’re going to stand between people and their coffee? Get a history book.

    • @HellooJames11
      @HellooJames11 2 года назад

      @@DaveGme lol fair enough - but as a solution I was thinking more along the lines of carbon capture rather than limiting coffee production

    • @stevegee218
      @stevegee218 2 года назад +2

      You would also need to offset the growing of the coffee as the plant eats CO2.

    • @skeetsmcgrew3282
      @skeetsmcgrew3282 2 года назад +1

      Almost certainly negligible in comparison to burning anything. You could easily do the math, just take 10L (the number stated in this video) x the worldwide coffee production in kilos. Then just research what the average power plant emits in a year. Id imagine we are taking several orders of magnitude difference

    • @DaveGme
      @DaveGme 2 года назад

      @@HellooJames11 and do what with it? Honest question.

  • @Thetache
    @Thetache 2 года назад +5

    Thanks for this, the message seems to be that there is no absolute scale for resting the coffee so I like to start brewing 2 days off roast and see how it develops over the next few weeks to find and enjoy the developing flavours, a bit similar to real ale when it is freshly tapped on day one and develops different flavours as it oxidises over a few days.

  • @mapa5000
    @mapa5000 Год назад

    Very detailed information!! Thank you James !

  • @AdastraRecordings
    @AdastraRecordings 2 года назад

    Thanks so much for this James, anxiety alleviated.

  • @arcaneshadowmaster
    @arcaneshadowmaster 2 года назад +19

    Recently I've been grinding ahead of time with really fresh coffees I just can't wait to brew - for really light roasted high altitude coffees I'll maybe grind 45m/1h before brewing the day after roast and then decrease 10m every day, so 4-6 days after roast I'm grinding and brewing immediately. Had varying results, but it's definitely been better than not waiting at all. Anyone else tried this?

    • @40wattsun82
      @40wattsun82 2 года назад +3

      I was just about to ask if a technique like this could work for super fresh light roasts! Definitely curious if others have tried this as well, and how effective it's been

    • @JumpingWatermelons
      @JumpingWatermelons 2 года назад +2

      This is interesting. The whole coffee process has so many variables to control. Very interesting

    • @dylanmorgan7158
      @dylanmorgan7158 2 года назад +4

      Roaster here in NZ - yup, this can be done. It gives an effect of 'rested' coffee. We will do it if we are in a mad rush & hurry to get something cupped.
      It is not the same as ageing it however... better to wait if you can. Cheers

    • @Daniel-dj7fh
      @Daniel-dj7fh 2 года назад

      Is the waiting process only relevant if you roast your own beans, I buy roasted beans off the store do I also need to rest the coffee after grinding them before usage?

    • @dylanmorgan7158
      @dylanmorgan7158 2 года назад

      @@Daniel-dj7fh if you're buying from say a roastery that roasted em that day - yes. Same applies.
      If you're buying from a supermarket though, chances are those beans are already atleast a couple days old

  • @kleinebre
    @kleinebre 2 года назад +7

    When roasting on my Gene, I do actually quench using - exactly - a spray bottle.
    I also profile-roast on a heavily modified popcorn popper (and I actually prefer the coffee it produces), switch off the heat and just let the fan in the popper run on high to do the cooling in 2 minutes flat.
    On the topic of resting my advice would be not to worry too much about it. It may not be at peak delicousness if you start drinking it straight after roasting, but even then it will still be vastly superior to any supermarket coffee out there. If you must have the best possible tasting cup of coffee, simply follow the flavour development over time, keep notes and adjust as needed.

  • @Presso99
    @Presso99 2 года назад

    i really love this channel, i watched this again, and i found very helpful and educational. Thank you James for sharing this valuable experience.

  • @ivotenotocensorship5247
    @ivotenotocensorship5247 Год назад

    Outstanding work

  • @EvenTheDogAgrees
    @EvenTheDogAgrees 2 года назад +52

    Concerning the temperature sensitivity: would it make sense to store it at room temperature until it's sufficiently rested, and then move it to cold storage to extend the lifespan of the beans until they go stale?

    • @DouglasSantos-si5df
      @DouglasSantos-si5df 2 года назад +15

      This is the way

    • @murphface
      @murphface 2 года назад +14

      Both comments above are correct: if you'll finish a bag within the 'staling period' (3-4 weeks off roast), then just drink and enjoy; but if you'd like to extend the life of your coffee or switch things up more between cups (as I often do), then freeze away in freezer bags or mason jars and only thaw what you want to drink the next day/week.
      Also, some coffee RUclipsrs (Kyle Rowsell, Sprometheus, etc.) have pointed out that if you have a *really* special coffee (like a gesha or similar), then you could vacuum bag and deep freeze (20-40 below) to keep it for 2+ years and break it out on special occasions

    • @jannis300886
      @jannis300886 2 года назад +2

      @@murphface what is the process of defrosting? Just take it out an let it sit for an hour or two? Would you recommend to freeze coffee in the bag you buy them? Or but that bag in a freezer bag as well? Thanks for information!

    • @Jalfred92
      @Jalfred92 2 года назад +2

      Hi Juan, I have to say no. Rather than storing the beans until they go stale you could brew then into a hot beverage and drink it.

    • @gravlygravy
      @gravlygravy 2 года назад +7

      @@jannis300886 after researching this here's what I do. Divide 1kg bag into 250gm portions and put in zip loc bags, squeezing out as much air as possible. Put those bags into a second zip loc bag for each portion (8 bags in total), and stuff the whole lot back into the original coffee bag which you've cut open. When defrosting, pull out individual portions and let them come up to temperature inside their double zip loc bag before pouring them into your usual coffee storage. I usually do this overnight.

  • @Astraeul
    @Astraeul 2 года назад +11

    In my college years I worked as a barista in a small coffee truck. We didn’t store all the supplies in the truck but 1-2 5lbs bags of coffee for our espresso would be in there at a time.
    The temp changes throughout the seasons and especially the temp changes during a fall day, going from 30F to 65-70F (sorry I’m American I don’t know Celsius lol) was brutal. I had to constantly dial in the espresso as the grinder warmed up throughout the day. the humidity would change and wack out the espresso as well. It was a challenge, but I did start to notice that during the winter, the beans would seem to stay fresher much longer. During the summer when it was 90-100F inside the truck the espresso I could produce was greatly diminished.
    Unfortunately the owner didn’t care much for quality product, just the money :(

  • @katanamd
    @katanamd 2 года назад

    Another great video. Thank you!

  • @iquintani
    @iquintani 2 года назад

    Second video of the week! That's definitely a good week! Keep it coming!

  • @abelburnem4402
    @abelburnem4402 2 года назад +13

    So this actually makes me think of an interesting experiment. Can you use something like a fellow atmos that has vacuum indicator to give you some idea of when the coffee is finished degassing?
    A few variables I can see being notable: the container volume, amount of coffee, and headspace volume about the coffee. These would make a difference as it would take a different amount of CO2 released to make that valve pop up but it could be interesting…

    • @dazeller82
      @dazeller82 2 года назад

      If I understand correctly coffee doesn’t actually finish degassing but rather reaches a point between too much gas and getting stale which is where you want to brew it. I reckon once the coffee is completely degassed it’s long past stale.

  • @squatty9994
    @squatty9994 2 года назад +14

    James, great video as always. I have a Fellow Atmos vacuum container and I've wondered, could you de-gas coffee beans from the vacuum itself? Say you diligently reapplied the vacuum after the container filled with CO2, would that change the coffee taste at all? Maybe change how we would do our bloom?

    • @edwardtan1354
      @edwardtan1354 2 года назад +1

      You will have to do this in a span of days since the "equalization" of pressure will make the seal pop on the atmos, you can compensate on the blooming aspect though, likewise you will only know when your coffee is done its degassing is when it no longer makes your seal pop on the atmos coincidentally its also the sufficient amount of days your coffee needs to rest.... so... technically "no"

    • @skeetsmcgrew3282
      @skeetsmcgrew3282 2 года назад +2

      Interestingly, this is also a problem/question in the marijuana industry

    • @Programentalist
      @Programentalist 2 года назад

      @@skeetsmcgrew3282 Marijuana needs degassing too?

    • @skeetsmcgrew3282
      @skeetsmcgrew3282 2 года назад +2

      @@Programentalist Lol, no but storage is a huge issue. If you draw a vacuum on it you risk the delicate volitile chemicals all evaporating away rapidly, but leaving it at ambient conditions might encourage molding or oxidize certain delicate compounds. Like the coffee industry, most people solve the problem by not giving a crap, but those who are artisans really struggle to find a good solution

    • @Programentalist
      @Programentalist 2 года назад

      @@skeetsmcgrew3282 Ah, that makes more sense.

  • @nearcyclemisses
    @nearcyclemisses 2 года назад

    Love all your video’s James. I’m beginning to sound like I know something about coffee and it’s all because of you. Keep the coming.

  • @_orodrigofernandes
    @_orodrigofernandes Год назад

    Loved the Bripe on the top shelf.
    Such an icon!

  • @jonathanbignall1198
    @jonathanbignall1198 2 года назад +11

    I have found that the coffee beans I buy, even though I'm filter brewing, do seem to benefit from about 5 days rest if they were very recently roasted. I've sometimes felt that the coffee improved over time and reached a peak about 2-3 weeks after opening a 1 kg bag. This seems counterintuitive and it's difficult to quantify, maybe it's a placebo effect, but others drinking the coffee have made similar unsolicited observations. Whoopdedoo, what does it all mean Basil? 😂

    • @Bones97000
      @Bones97000 2 года назад +1

      Working in a small town coffee shop I can attest that espresso pulls notably better when the beans have had at least seven days of rest, and are usually at their peak after 10-14 days from the roast date. :)

  • @optikalblitz
    @optikalblitz 2 года назад +3

    For those putting their fresh coffee into Fellow Atmos containers, I strongly recommend against picking up your containers by the lid!
    As James explained, the displacement of that vacuum by the off-gassing of the coffee means that the tight connection that the lid makes to the container is effectively gone. Picking it up by the lid will lead to fresh coffee beans everywhere. #PSA

  • @brandonhoffman4712
    @brandonhoffman4712 2 года назад

    I finally understand puffy bag syndrome!
    They only come along once in a blue moon, but they sure stick out in my head as a coffee maraca!

  • @colecciongranados
    @colecciongranados 2 года назад

    Thank you! Always so useful!!!

  • @Victor-kh5rh
    @Victor-kh5rh 2 года назад +5

    James is missing the two biggest components of degassing: grinding and agitation. Ground coffee will degas much faster than whole bean, you mentioned that 20 minutes after roasting is not enough waiting, try roasting, cooling it down, grinding it, and then resting for a few minutes. Huge difference. Degassing is akin to decanting a wine.
    I roast my own coffee, I pull espresso on day of roast, sure there is some grinder surfing as the beans degas but I wouldn’t consider it unpleasant, just different. If anything you can grind, wait a few minutes and the results are indistinguishable from week old coffee.
    For other brew methods you can just use agitation in the bloom phase to degas.

    • @personontheinternet2164
      @personontheinternet2164 2 года назад

      Love the bit about grinding it and waiting a few minutes. That's exactly what I do with extra fresh coffee before it's had a full rest, I forgot where I learned it from tho.

    • @townazier
      @townazier 2 года назад +1

      This right here. I never have a need to let coffee rest when brewing filter coffee, its just too easily degased in the process itself to even bother. Taste difference being very minor even in first three to four days.

    • @Fredrik_Alfredsson
      @Fredrik_Alfredsson 2 года назад

      I was just about to ask if you could rest the ground coffee a little while, thanks for the tip.

  • @Yirgamalabar
    @Yirgamalabar 2 года назад +3

    Resting coffee was a problem until I started freezing single-dose vials and just grind the frozen beans when needed, without thawing. This way, my coffee is always at its optimum resting age to meet my taste (usually 9 days after roasting). It doesn't gradually change and doesn't go stale, not even a month later. It's worth the tiny extra effort.

  • @AJKvideoproductions
    @AJKvideoproductions 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video, was super helpful with my brewing and answered a lot of my questions.

  • @charliesylvestre1416
    @charliesylvestre1416 2 года назад

    THANK YOU!!!!!!!! This video was needed.

  • @darkpatches
    @darkpatches 2 года назад +5

    I think this is one of those coffee tips that's part true, part myth. I roast my own coffee. It may be true that the coffee gets better if you let it age several days, but it's not like it'll taste horrible if you drink it the day after roasting (as James says). It tastes pretty good actually and just gets better day after day. Until it starts to get worse, day after day. ;-)

  • @CafeLomez
    @CafeLomez 2 года назад +3

    Imagine a James Hoffmann video collaboration with Wes Anderson 😎 I already see some similarities in visual symmetry, blocking, and staging. It would be epic!

  • @lothar1080
    @lothar1080 2 года назад +1

    Love the technical videos.

  • @danielleanderson6371
    @danielleanderson6371 2 года назад

    I am obsessed with your taste in sweaters. You always look so warm and cozy.

  • @RobBrogan
    @RobBrogan 2 года назад +3

    I think the challenge is that in many cases, you’re going to take several days to get through a bag, so if you wait a week to start brewing the coffee, and then it takes (me) a week to use up the whole bag, I’ll be having 14-day old beans at the end of it.
    Maybe I missed it, but what’s the tail end of resting where it is more likely to become stale?

  • @ninal5027
    @ninal5027 2 года назад +4

    Having five shots of espresso a day, İ barely let my coffee rest. Not that I become restless myself. Not yet.

  • @czarwill
    @czarwill Год назад

    Thank you again. I sheet steel or cast fry pan roast quiet dark over wood fire for decades now. I enjoy the change from the moment after cooling for the next four days. I will quench the pan in snow at times or wet earth. Have gone to a four min. soaking in the exact cup to be drunk plus for just under a half cup of berries. I filter with a washed paper towel and will reuse that a few days.

  • @jonperfetti
    @jonperfetti 2 года назад

    You are the man, thank you again for ALL your knowledge. I truly appreciate your help. Happy new year. 2022 on the way.

  • @kongjie74
    @kongjie74 2 года назад +3

    I was fascinated by the idea that a much darker roast should be rested for less time.
    I'm originally from the tea industry with a focus on Oolong and the common belief there is that dark roasted teas should be rested for at least six months in order to let the "fire" wear off.
    I wonder what the principle difference between coffee and tea are in this regard?

  • @jonathanweiss1301
    @jonathanweiss1301 Год назад +3

    If I "aged" some fresh roasted coffee beans in liquid nitrogen and pull one shot each week for a year and tracked the progress via instagram stories, would you be interested in suggesting a varietal? The bean at some point should get so cold that off-gassing should be impossible and there is nothing toxic about nitrogen in its pressurized and liquid form. Could the coffee profile change in other ways if off-gassing was halted completely and the atmospheric environment was liquid instead of gaseous. I imagine a process where I would pull daily shots and weekly 3 cup tests with both frozen and defrosted beans. A frozen coffee bean should be easier to grind but might change the dialing process from week to week. It might also grab moisture from the air when you shake them around making misting unnecessary. Boom! Big time saver! You know for those of use who have a built in liquid nitrogen storage tank in our homes. I live in a small RV and have been watching your videos for a while and learning loads. I've studied beer tasting and see a lot of similar complexities shared between these experiences. For example how the malting process can control the Maillard reaction producing a wide palette of flavors, colors and aromas. I've been saving up for the last few months and finally found a used flair espresso maker that should fit my counter space. I just did the math and its around 5-6.5 kilos of coffee beans. Maybe I just start with 2-3 examples of light/medium/dark roasts and see if anything happens after 30 days and if it does pursue it further. I'll figure all that out but thanks for the great videos.

  • @ilyar7161
    @ilyar7161 Год назад

    Brilliant. So informative. Thanks!!!

  • @pimozzaglibi7767
    @pimozzaglibi7767 2 года назад

    James you just read my mind, i was looking for this video about resting coffee and you just upload it.
    Thanks

  • @marcusfrodin
    @marcusfrodin 2 года назад +4

    First!

  • @hoongfu
    @hoongfu 2 года назад

    Thanks for the info! This is great.

  • @user-jc1yx9of9p
    @user-jc1yx9of9p 2 года назад +1

    Good video. Thank you for making it!

  • @matthewbotha4035
    @matthewbotha4035 2 года назад

    Thanks James, this was very informative. Especially on the vacuum seal coffee canister and how long for resting period of coffee.