NERD'S GUIDE TO BUYING GREAT COFFEE
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- Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
- I hope this video was helpful! Let me know below! My intent was for it to be a helpful guidance for best practices while also being educational.
Thanks for the support!
Link to Paper Mentioned:
www.researchgate.net/publicat...
James Hoffmann Video on Buying Coffee:
• A Beginner's Guide To ...
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TIME CUES
0:00- What is Specialty Coffee?
1:47- 1) Origin
4:47- 2) Variety
9:54- Aside on Pricing Transparency
10:13- 3) Processing
16:15- 4) Roast Level
20:13- 5) Roast Date
24:00- 6) Harvest Date
26:08- Bonus a) Taste Notes
28:13- Bonus b) Filter vs Espresso - Розваги
Make sure to hit the like button if you enjoyed the content! Let me know if you have any questions! Hoping this serves as a guide to best practices and a good educational resource when approaching buying coffees in this evolving world of a multiplicity of options!
Cheers
I really need help finding a medium (ish) roast that has a nutty flavor that will work well for lattes..I just received my Eclipse from Onyx and I really do love it and will order it again,but every since I tried this malawi peaberry (is all I can remember about it) awhile back I cant stop trying to find something similar..If it helps I use a Vario W and Rancilio Silvia and only drink lattes..Really wanting to hear some suggestions!
-Big trouble from counter culture coffee. Really consistent
Any recommendations for roasters in the EU to check out?
G’day Lance. could you please share a link to the roaster in Japan that you mentioned. I’d love to give their beans a whirl. This is an awesome vid with tons of info. Love ya work mate
Give us a try Lance! Great video :) 🥰
I'd really encourage people starting out with specialty to seek out local roasters first. Not in order to get the absolute freshest roasts, like Lance said, that isn't so much the concern. But along with supporting local businesses, it really helps you to connect with the coffee community around you. Most local roasters also operate a café, where you can meet them, ask about the coffees, about the roast. I guarantee they'll be hyped to talk to you. They might organize cuppings and competitions. And you might be surprised with the quality. I visited local roasters in some pretty small towns that made incredible coffee, that you'd never find on the internet.
Definitely agree. And the best thing about having a cafe in these roasters is that people can try before buying what they might or might not enjoy!
Definitely agree, also - they're much cheaper as they haven't been imported, and its also so much better for the environment!
Yup. Being in the Capitol of California and Bay Area, I'm fortunate to have SO many roasters. Some are better than others. Enjoy.
Man, I feel so validated. I have always felt like I was doing something wrong because all of my favourite roasts for espresso have said they were for filter.
I've been drinking coffee--mostly espresso--for about 60 years, starting in Berkeley, CA, during high school. When Al Peet started Peet's Coffee in 1967, I started buying from him, even carrying it to Florida when I was in grad school (what a revelation to folks there!).
I did my research in Central America where, among other things, I visited a coffee finca in Guatemala. My memory of the processing was that they pulped the cherries and put them into a large "swimming pool" (that size, anyway) to ferment. I don't know if this was a "washed" process or something different. The coffee was quite good.
I also had a chance to try some 30+ year old Guatemalan coffee in Seattle. It had been stored green in what were probably 1/4 kilo, sealed aluminum containers. I roasted it in a cast-iron frying pan (following instructions from a then-pretty-new Starbuck's in downtown), ground it in a hand grinder, and prepared it (probably in a Melitta filter, but that was almost 50 years ago). It was still quite drinkable. Acid was low, like a cold-brew, but I don't remember any off-notes. Just...faded.
Your video was an excellent "introduction" for an old coffee drinker to the newer innovations. I still tend to prefer darker roasts, usually ground in my Baratza Sette 270 and made in my La Pavoni Europiccola. But this helps me make some sense of other possibilities, including what my local coffee shops serve (I'm lucky to live in an area where you couldn't swing a cat without hitting a coffee shop)(which would probably be a little hard on the cat).
Random third party interlocutor here, but I quite enjoyed reading your comment. Wow, you've seen a ton, and that's if we're ignoring all the non-coffee events and changes in your life! Thanks for sharing!
I'm in Sacramento and commute to the Bay Area regularly so my choices of roasters are nearly infinite. I'd make a list but have forgotten more than I'll remember. A novice for sure but visiting these roasters and drinking their coffee at the shop has given me wisdom in selecting coffees and it's that experience which has lead me towards buying a nice set up this Christmas. I have to be careful on hobbies which take years to see if I like it. If I do then I pull the trigger. Looking forward to a spectacular retirement with a new set up.
Ah, I want La Pavoni so bad, even though I am a light drinker, one cup a day.
Lance please , can you make a turkish coffee video. I really love your explanation process and science based info. Ibrik is kinda mystical in every UA-cam video and i want just pure cold science
I will work on it! I've never really gotten into Ibrik. Maybe i'll try to get Aga in a video with me to do one!
I second the request. Even better if in there or in a separate video you could cover the type of coffee I associate with ibrik, namely light roasted robusta, a very caramelly/vegetal profile
@@LanceHedrick
Uh, thats incredibly cool, thank you, Lance. I have been interested in it for a while but as I don't have enough time to really experiment right now, the lack of reliable information from someone who is into speciality coffee has been holding me of it.
The Ethiopian and arabic coffee preparations / ceremonies might also be an interesting topic.
@@LanceHedrickThere is speciaty Turkish ibrik gear out there.
Looking forward to it!
Standart's latest Orange Wush Wush from duck-rabbit was my 1st introduction to crazy natural flavours
Awesome video Lance, thanks!
Such a great video, thanks Lance!
Awesome video Lance, absolutely loved it!!
So generous of you to share your knowledge. Thanks again!
This was a fantastic video, thanks Lance!
Appreciate the effort and detailed explanation!
Thank you Lance for this great video!! 🙏
Super video ! You keep knocking these out the park man.
I really LOVE LOVE LOVE and LOVE these videos from you! You are gold Lance!
Nice job Lance. Thank you for the knowledge.
This was extremely helpful, thank you Lance!!
This was very informative! Thanks!
Wow, this video is packed with userful infomation! Thanks!
Thank you Lance.
Very helpful. Thank you, Lance.
definitely learned sooo much from this video. thank you for all the information!
Your best video yet! 👌👌👌
fantastic fantastic fantastic video! I learned a lot! thank you so much!
woo for showing the back of the Apollon's Gold bag! TFW you buy Apollon's Gold and you can't even touch it for 2 months 🙃
So helpful! Thanks! Always come to you for Coffee knowledge.
Thank you for such a valuable resource! This is fantastic information.
This is the video I've been waiting for a long time, Lance! 🙌 very much appreciated. This is one of those I'll be coming back to a lot of times.
Excellent content! Thank you
Awesome video! Going to need to watch this one at least a couple more times. Thanks Lance!
Fantastic! I learn so much from watching your videos. Given a lot of this information is available online, but it’s the way you deliver this information, your humor and sincerity. It’s unmatched. You deserve to be in schools and university curriculum and teach about espresso machines, grinder, beans and roasting. I can watch your videos for days. Well done Lance and thank you for taking the time to create these videos. Legend!
Genuinely the best video on this topic I've seen. Well done! Impressed how you managed to squeeze all that info in there
Lance, Thank you for a most informative video. This is one of your best videos so far.
EXCELLENT video! Liked, subscribed, and saved this one to send to any fellow nerds looking to get a grounding in coffee!
I love how you cut right through the marketing speak and real world it for all of us Lance. As always, great job!
This will become sort of a reference video for me that I will watch time and time again for the years to come!! Great video Lance! Thanks for making this. :)
Having watched the Hoff’s video and been in the coffee world for quite a while still learned some new things and refreshed some old things with this video. Very great work putting this altogether!
Dont have time to wacht right now but already 'liked'. Going to watch as soon as possible and this is the type of content that I really want from you and miss on UA-cam generally!
Not gonna lie, this a damn college course on coffee! I’m trying to wash dishes and listen and it’s not enough. I’ll have to go back over this and take notes. I don’t buy already roasted anymore, I buy green and roast my own, but this is still so helpful.
based fellow hazel subscriber
Imagine a course with lectures with all about coffee. Going from the plant biology, farm ecology and sustainability practices to the economics, social sustainability, culture and even the physics and chemistry of growing coffee. Would be so interesting
awesome vid! big thanks - truly enjoyable and helpful :)
Super useful video (as always!)
Great vid Lance - especially liked the discussion on freshness and resting. As always, quite a bit of nuance in there that I hadnt necessarily heard before, so thanks!
This is great, and some info on sourcing a roaster would be great too!
That... Was.... Awesome! the part about processing was mind boggling, the bonus parts are important and are essential in this video. Thank you Lance, brewing something tasty right now
This was so helpful!
Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us today... I enjoyed this video and I believe I learned several things from your comments.
You really have an incredible depth of knowledge on the subject, it reflects countless hours of study and experimentation I'm sure.
Super awesome and informative video especially to folks newer to the real coffee scene! I have just started making pour over coffee at home and researching all of these things. Just wanted to say kudos to you and thank you for putting out videos like this!
Lance, you just have made a classic.. Congratulations for the video. From now on, if anybody asks me, I will share this video to them. Congrats.!!!
Thanks Lance, looks like you have some really great coffees there. Processing is huge!
Very well explained, and with classic Lance flair! Especially liked how you say go ahead use filter roasts for espresso and vice versa....will be keeping that in mind. Thank you.
this is amazingly helpfull...I have been going through several origins very blindly from a single coffee roaster.. This made me realize that the beans that I have liked the most have been neutral processed..seems like light roast is preferred but i really liked an anaerobic neutral medium roasted Nicaragua. from alle the sampled coffee I like coffee with "fun" notes in the aftertaste the most with some acidity.
Great shirt!
As easy as it seems the choice of coffee is something a lot of people underestimate... Great video!
Fantastic video! I would love to see a video solely going over all the different processes, what they are, and their characteristics; especially more modern fermenty processes.
Exactly this, I know james hofmann has a book and everything but a video ould be nice during travels
Same here, I’m a big nerd for that stuff.
I don't know how i got down the coffe rabit hole, but I'm into it. So many things to learn about coffee
The video I needed ❤
This is such valuable content. I would really love to see more content discussing regions, yearly harvests, varietals, etc. I love gear reviews, but this is more likely to produce better coffee experiences than a new grinder (even if I love watching every single grinder video haha). Specialty coffee buying is really opaque from a consumer standpoint.
Very good video. Thank you
Finally coffee man talks about coffee, awesome!
excellent video!!
thanks this was very informative.
great info.. thank you!
Saw a coffee a bit ago that said the process was "multi-day wine barrel ferment." It was super berries - loved it
I wish all things we buy had a qr code to scan where it came from, how it was made, how much they pay the people and overall just how ethical and ecological the practices are. Coffee is so much ahead in this sense as you can know the person who owns the farm and everything they do to the coffee AND how much they are paid.
"Buy it, boom, no." 😅
Lance, this was super helpful. Love your content; I've learned so much from it!
needed this
Love the new hairstyle 😊
Lance! Another great, and very helpful guide!
The only other thing I can think of that might be a factor (for me at least as a home roaster and someone who also buys from specialty roasters - what can I say, I love coffee and drink a lot) is : The roaster - themselves and the machine used to roast, say the difference between an experienced roaster on a drum-roaster like a Probat or a less experienced roaster using an air-roaster like a Loring, yes you won't find this information on a bag - however a quick chat with the person selling the beans and they should have those answers.
I also like to consider altitude, which affects bean size and density and has a huge effect on how to approach the roast itself (I can tell from personal experience) which can easily trip up inexperienced roasters - I had a local roaster botch up some smaller sized Ethiopian that you could tell was out of their comfort zone.
Keep on trucking Lance!
This is awesome Lance! It is a privilege to work with producers like Pepe Jijon and we appreciate your work in making specialty coffee more accessible. Legend!
So cool to see @BluebirdCoffeeRoastery featured!
@@jurgensdelange9589 🤍🤍🤍
Well done sir. I enjoyed this video a lot. I’m sipping on a nice Ethiopian somewhat light roast from Kyle Rowsell’s Roastery called September. Definitely worth a try if you haven’t tried it yet. Be well.
This was extremely helpful. I will refer to this while I explore varieties. Gonna drop by Tim Wendelboe the upcoming week and test it out.
Thank you, a very clear overview that helped organise / consolidate my haphazard experiences and lucky accidents :-)
Nice to see the Manhattan coffee. I work at the State Library Victoria, Melbourne and was lucky enough to get served coffee by Ben Morrow on my lunch breaks!
Super helpful video, please do more of this! Any more you can say on why farmers pick varietals or processing would be great! What are the gimmicky processes vs those that delivered more defined flavours?
Ham video
Big nordic representation too. Feel lucky to be in an area with such a wide selection of creative roasters.
Hey, Lance thank you for this video and you’re detailed manner of speaking. I was wondering if you could do a guide on finding specialty coffee shops worldwide. I’m going on a long trip to europe soon and i’m worried I might miss out on some crazy shops just bc of a cultural barrier. Again Thank You For Your Passion!
Another great video by Lance. I would like to see you discuss organic bean farmers who refrain from using insecticides, and even comparing organic and non organic beans for evidence of insecticide residue. Pubmed has some studies but would love to hear Lance's take.
I am quite late to the party here. Super helpful video. Thanks so much!
Great video as always Lance! Have you considered doing more content on roasting as opposed to brewing and equipment? There are a lot of home roasters out here (myself included with the Aillio Bullet). Would be interesting to hear roasting approaches to all these experimental processing methods.
Thx for the video . I know most of the roasters whose packs you showed in this video . Consequently, It would be really useful If you could point out 3 to 5 of your favorite roasters . Personally, I buy mostly from friedhats, dak, apollon’s gold , substance and nomad .
Thanks!
I loved this- I’m not at all new to buying coffee but I definitely learned a lot. I used to solely buy single origin coffee but recently I’ve been exploring (and enjoying) blends and I wondered if you (or fellow commentators) had some thoughts on that? I don’t think the bags I have are always specific about what origins they’re mixing to make the blend.
Never settle for specialty arabica, if you can have fine robusta at a better price point :p Amazing how much content you got in this video!
I keep switching between specialty and old school italian roasts because both have great taste to me
Last year's geisha from Takesi is my favourite coffee of all time. And it was so exciting when I saw that Kian competed with it and you were coaching - and Marianna was even present for it. I even was lucky enough to meet her and show her around our bakery when she and her mother came to Copenhagen this summer. Such amazing people!
A medium roasted Bourbon Pointu from Lake Itasy région in Madagascar. Really nice coffee.
Lol was not expecting to hear Scott Labs mentioned here. I'm used to hearing about them in the beer brewing realm
@Lance thanks for the great informative video. It's funny I just tested roughly 10 different beans / roasters the last months and my favorite coffee came from one where the roast date was 1,5 months old :D
Just have to try them and see what you like.
Love the content and long format which includes some really great nuggets of wisdom. Can you please review some unusual yummy green or roasted coffees? For example, I stumbled upon Edwin Norena coffees that are processed via experimental methods and have some really wild flavors. I’m a huge fan of his IPA/hops infused fermented ones. Thx
Brilliant
THANKS!
Thank you
Would love to see your thoughts on exciting new roasters around the world and why!
I gonna watch this again
Lance might not push Onyx coffee but I will xD. Coffee from Onyx is always exceptional and I really like the transparency grade of each coffee.
But support your local roaster too!
Agree I buy from them and good stuff
Illustrating your point with tattoos is surely the future of education
Super informative video Lance! Noticed you have quite a bit of coffee there, wouldnt mind helping you test out if theyre peaking after a month post roast 😏
Awesome as usual. Any first impressions on the Vectis I can see your setup for the past weeks ? Thanks !
Excellent once again.
Found myself mouth wide open, hanging off your words of wisdom.
Thank you for all the work you do, to help mere mortals like me choose.
From France
Thanks for the thorough overview! Do you have a roaster list that you would be able to share? Would love to check out the sites for all the coffees you have on your table.