this post was submitted on 26 Feb 2024
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Coffee
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yes, as slow feeding makes the coffee more consistent in grain size.
I cannot say for Timemore Chestnut, as I sold my C3 after I bought Turin DF64V, but after I started sprinkling water and slow feeding, I started grinding finer. I am using Gaggia Classic Pro with Gaggiuino.
My questions whether you do this with every method stems from that especially with espresso - or what I can do with an Aeropress to mimic it -, slow feeding takes significantly more time due to the fine grind size, and to my taste, the improvement is really insignificant compared to a more coarsely ground pour over. On the other hand, my espresso is little more than a concentrated regular Aeropress coffee, and the beans I have at hand for this particular variant are supermarket material, hence also less than ideal. Would be interesting to test what difference this makes with a portafilter.
To my understanding of the accompanying theory, the particle size distribution shouldn’t be as widespread on finer grind settings anyway, so that would also explain my experience.
Thanks anyway for sharing.