
Enter that percentage of dissolved solids from the refractometer, as well as the weight of water and beans you used, into an iPhone app called MoJoToGo to calculate the extraction percent.
In an article for Gizmodo, Matt Buchanan describes his quest to brew a cup of coffee with the extraction percentage sweet spot of 19%:
I tear through a $16.50 one-pound bag of coffee in about three days, making coffee over and over again, seeking the mythical number 19. I use a version of the French Press technique from Everything But Espresso. Start the kettle. Weigh the beans. Grind the beans. Wait for the water to reach 206 degrees. Pour 400g of the heated water onto the grounds. Start the timer. Pat the coffee bloom. Dunk the coffee bloom. Wait 4-5 minutes. Plunge. Pour. Check result in MoJoToGo. Curse.
The most frustrating part isn't the resulting Ahab-like hunt for the ever-elusive 19 percent. It's the revelation of how imprecise my methods are. The 18.3 percent cup that sends me into a delirious orbit before I even taste it is quickly followed by one that measures 16 percent (and tastes like it). I'm all over the map. It drives me insane. And to Amazon, to buy more precise equipment.
Brewing the perfect cup of coffee by hand is messy, imprecise and frustrating. Enter the Trifecta MB, a new machine made by Bunn to bring reproducibility to coffee brewing, one cup at a time.
It’s the home version of a commercial machine with 10 programmable functions, including water temperature, the brew time and the amount of stirring from air bubbles, to precisely control brew conditions to highlight the best flavors in the beans. Watch the commercial version in action:
Portola Coffee Lab in Costa Mesa, CA has several Trifectas in their shop. Owner Jeff Duggan
writes on the shop blog that he typically spends hours developing a unique brewing program for a new coffee.
"This machine has become the clearest example of our brewing standards," he says. “It uses technology to put us more in touch with coffee rather than neuter it and make it into a new version of a vending machine.”
Armed with Portola’s program, a bag of their beans and your own Trifecta, you could brew coffee at home that tastes just like what they brew in the shop. Some roasters post their optimized programs on Trifecta's website so anyone can brew a tasty batch of their coffee.
Technology advances the artistry of coffee, for what really matters is taste. Gadgets, apps and machines help coffee connoisseurs find conditions that brew the best coffee according to their tastebuds, whatever that extraction percentage or brew time may be.