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All the espresso I drank in college were bitter. I drank them to stay awake during the final weeks. Taste wasn't what I was looking for.
Since the college, and grad school, I rarely had espresso. But I would still call them bitter.
My wife decided we will brew espresso at home and got a machine. So, I've been playing with it. First few days were interesting. Weak shot will be watery and sour. Over extracted shot will be noticably bitter. And there are a lot of in between.
After over a week, I'm getting something that's not noticably sour or bitter, and leaves sweetness as an aftertaste. First impression when I sip is taste of coffee. But I still taste bitterness as the sip goes down. Finer grind only gives strong bitterness, and less fine gives watery sourness. Ton of experiments were ran. First two pounds of beans were simply wasted. Didn't have a clue what I was doing. Last pound has been little more productive.
But I still don't know what espresso supposed to be taste like. All the espresso I had at coffee shops were just bitter. Nothing ever stood out. If bitterness is what espresso is, I can do that. I read good number of articles on the web, but they don't say much. Best I'm getting out is "a good espresso is balanced". I think my shots are balanced, but I'm still getting bitterness when the sip goes down.
So what does good espresso actually taste like? Don't be too cryptic. I read it's well balanced, does that mean there's no bitterness? Or acidity counters it, but it's there and can be picked up? And what about acidity? I know watery sourness, but not noticing acidity, is it the blend I'm using? Right now I'm at the end of second can of Illy Classico whole beans. Didn't like local roaster's blend. Let me know in a way 3rd grader can understand.
Since the college, and grad school, I rarely had espresso. But I would still call them bitter.
My wife decided we will brew espresso at home and got a machine. So, I've been playing with it. First few days were interesting. Weak shot will be watery and sour. Over extracted shot will be noticably bitter. And there are a lot of in between.
After over a week, I'm getting something that's not noticably sour or bitter, and leaves sweetness as an aftertaste. First impression when I sip is taste of coffee. But I still taste bitterness as the sip goes down. Finer grind only gives strong bitterness, and less fine gives watery sourness. Ton of experiments were ran. First two pounds of beans were simply wasted. Didn't have a clue what I was doing. Last pound has been little more productive.
But I still don't know what espresso supposed to be taste like. All the espresso I had at coffee shops were just bitter. Nothing ever stood out. If bitterness is what espresso is, I can do that. I read good number of articles on the web, but they don't say much. Best I'm getting out is "a good espresso is balanced". I think my shots are balanced, but I'm still getting bitterness when the sip goes down.
So what does good espresso actually taste like? Don't be too cryptic. I read it's well balanced, does that mean there's no bitterness? Or acidity counters it, but it's there and can be picked up? And what about acidity? I know watery sourness, but not noticing acidity, is it the blend I'm using? Right now I'm at the end of second can of Illy Classico whole beans. Didn't like local roaster's blend. Let me know in a way 3rd grader can understand.