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Tips & Tricks: Tamping

July 14th, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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tamping-and-tamper
Part of the joy of making espresso is the interaction between the barista and the bean. Tamping by hand is one such way a barista can ‘stamp their authority’ on their coffee so to speak. At Bang, we use a specially designed coffee tamper to exert around 10 kilograms of perfectly straight downward pressure onto the ground coffee. This process compacts the ground coffee evenly ensuring that there is no ‘path of least resistance’ for the brewing water to pass through ensuring an even and full-flavoured espresso extraction. Given that a barista at a good cafe will potentially make hundreds of coffees a day, tamping becomes a consistent and almost mechanical action. There are many variables in any given day that will require some action be taken by the barista to ensure the quality of each espresso extraction. A consistent tamp enables the barista to concentrate on grinder adjustment to address these variables, confident in the knowledge that his or her tamping pressure is always spot on.

Get the low-down on decaf

July 10th, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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Often considered a four-letter word amongst Baristas and patrons alike, decaf has had a bad rap for a long time. For the most part, its poor reputation has been deserved however this is slowly changing. For a while now there has been a chemical-free method to remove the caffeine from the green beans. This method originated in Switzerland in the 1930’s and is aptly called ‘The Swiss-Water Decaffeination Process’. In a nutshell, the process goes like this…

A batch of green (unroasted) beans is soaked in hot water, releasing caffeine. When all the caffeine and coffee solids are released into the water, the beans are discarded and the water is passed through a carbon filter that traps caffeine but lets the coffee solids pass through. The resulting solution, called “flavour-charged” water is then put into a similar filtration device, and new coffee beans are added. Since the flavour-charged water cannot remove any of the coffee solids from the new beans, only the caffeine is released. The process repeats, filtering out all the caffeine until the beans are 99.9% caffeine free. These beans are removed and dried, and manage to retain most if not all of their flavour and smell. In fact the only change in flavour is due to the absence of the caffeine which has a natural bitter flavour.

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Cairns Regional Barista Competition

July 10th, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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The Inaugural Cairns Regional Barista Competition will be held this year at the Cairns Show from the 15th to the 17th of July. This is a huge deal for the talented Baristas of Cairns as it will be fully endorsed by the Australasian Specialty Coffee Association (AASCA) and adjudicated by a certified World Barista Championship judge. Like any competition environment, a barista competition allows its competitors to showcase their passion, skill and attention to detail. It provides an opportunity for skilled baristas to be recognised amongst their peers, customers and industry professionals for all the hard work and dedication they put into their craft.

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Roasting coffee – where art meets science

June 2nd, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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Roasting coffee at first seems deceptively easy. Pop some raw, green beans into an oven and in a little while, take them out all brown and roasted. In fact, roasting coffee is a developing science and far more complex than it first appears.

The aim of a Master Roaster is to produce coffee that has been roasted to an ideal flavour point. This is a point at which the flavour has developed sufficiently to create a complex balance of body and intensity with a bittersweet chocolaty character. It’s a tricky undertaking and requires that the roaster taste the coffee constantly. Too light a roast and the coffee will taste grassy and hemp-like. Too dark and it begins to lose its natural sweetness as the sugars are caramelized. If it is roasted even darker still, it actually turns the natural wood-fibre in the beans (cellulose) into charcoal. This results in a charred, ashy and very unpleasant espresso.

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Coffee from crop to cup

May 19th, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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The smooth, sweet and syrupy elixir that we know as espresso is actually the end result of a long and complex journey from crop to cup. There are two main species of coffee tree – Arabica and Robusta. Arabica is grown in higher altitude regions and makes up about 70% of the worlds production, while the under-rated Robusta is more commonly used as a booster for some espresso blends or for making instant coffee. It is the cherries from these trees that provide the stepping off point for our journey.

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Tips & Tricks: Extraction

April 22nd, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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coffee-extraction

One of the great things about our job is that we never tire of watching the perfect espresso extraction – rich and caramel brown, flowing like warm honey and finishing in the cup with a thick crema that is slow to dissipate. There are a number of equally important elements that go into perfecting that extraction, two of which are bean selection and the freshness of the roast.

A well constructed blend will manage to showcase the natural sweetness of the beans whilst delivering warm savoury overtones. It should have good body with a silky mouth-feel and a pleasant lingering aftertaste. As far as freshness goes, oxygen is arguably the biggest single factor in the degradation of a roasted bean. Whole roasted beans will start to go stale within 3 hours of exposure to oxygen while ground coffee will take as little as five minutes. At Bang we grind on demand for each and every individual coffee.

We never stop learning at Bang

March 15th, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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Did we mention that the Bang team had a training session with world barista championship judge Emily Oak? Click on the image below to find out more…

Article-March-14-2009

Bang gets the thumbs up from Cairns Eye

February 27th, 2009 | Posted in Blog | Comments Off
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We’re always happy to hear that people have enjoyed themselves at Bang Espresso. Click on the image below to read the Cairns Eye review…

Cairns-Eye-Review-Feb-09