This is really cool, I have so many questions! What's interesting to me is they only replaced the hot water part of the equation, and the system still requires high pressure.
How does ultrasound affect flow rate? Do fines sink to the bottom of the puck and choke the shot?
There is a new movement happening, especially in lighter roast coffees, where we're finding that more balanced extractions (less bitterness/acidity/acridity) are happening at lower pressures, even going so far as grinding so coarse that the puck offers zero resistance - effectively making the pump the limiting factor for flow rate. Light roast coffee is much less porous and more hydrophobic.
I wonder if adding ultrasound would allow light roasts to yield more extraction in general, maybe even keeping the high temperature. Or, would adding ultrasound allow a finer grind size and more resistance without adding the harsh flavors of a high-temperature shot.
So many experiments to be done!
supertroop
This sounds awful. I’m an espresso snob and caffeine isn’t even on my list of why I love it. It’s like they complete ignored what makes a good shot and focused on one element.
show comments
jurf
> Both espresso samples were served at 22 °C to ensure a fair like-for-like comparison […]
> It is noted that espresso is normally consumed hot and has transient sensory attributes that are temperature- and time-dependent. Hence, serving espresso at 22 °C will alter its sensory characteristics.
This is a weird test, coffee get’s so much worse when cold. So people can’t distinguish between two bad coffees.
show comments
swiftcoder
Does this work with cold water? Because if so, my iced espresso drinks are crying out for it
Where's James Hoffmann when you need him?
show comments
erikgahner
What exactly is the innovation here compared to the press release from two years ago?[1]
Of all the objective and subjective metrics a home coffee drinker is trying to optimize, never once have I heard anyone care in the least about the watt-hours consumed during the brew process. "I really wish I could drink coffee at room temperature all the time and save a penny on electricity while doing it!" Someone will do the math, I'm sure it's not exactly a penny.
TL;DR: Aiming for a high-volume industrial goal, tone-deaf to coffee enthusiasts.
show comments
thomasoffinga
Someone get James Hoffmann on the line right now.
show comments
fabian2k
But people want to drink coffee/espresso hot, not room-temperature. So you have to heat the water afterward anyway. I'm not seeing that much potential for energy savings here, unless you're comparing setups with large boilers inefficiently used for small amounts of coffee.
show comments
mzitelli
75% energy save to make a room temperature expresso. I am ok spending a bit more energy to have it warm.
show comments
uberex
Awesome idea. I would love to try it. If that can also make my espresso routine easier I am up for it.
abujazar
The crema looks like terrible, more like Nespresso, and having the coffee warm is kinda important.
But perhaps this can be used in the instant coffee industry or something.
show comments
nryoo
[dead]
elAhmo
When you thought that coffee snobs couldn't get any worse...
show comments
alansaber
Not even the baristas are safe. Technology really is coming for everyone.
This is really cool, I have so many questions! What's interesting to me is they only replaced the hot water part of the equation, and the system still requires high pressure.
How does ultrasound affect flow rate? Do fines sink to the bottom of the puck and choke the shot?
There is a new movement happening, especially in lighter roast coffees, where we're finding that more balanced extractions (less bitterness/acidity/acridity) are happening at lower pressures, even going so far as grinding so coarse that the puck offers zero resistance - effectively making the pump the limiting factor for flow rate. Light roast coffee is much less porous and more hydrophobic.
I wonder if adding ultrasound would allow light roasts to yield more extraction in general, maybe even keeping the high temperature. Or, would adding ultrasound allow a finer grind size and more resistance without adding the harsh flavors of a high-temperature shot.
So many experiments to be done!
This sounds awful. I’m an espresso snob and caffeine isn’t even on my list of why I love it. It’s like they complete ignored what makes a good shot and focused on one element.
> Both espresso samples were served at 22 °C to ensure a fair like-for-like comparison […]
> It is noted that espresso is normally consumed hot and has transient sensory attributes that are temperature- and time-dependent. Hence, serving espresso at 22 °C will alter its sensory characteristics.
This is a weird test, coffee get’s so much worse when cold. So people can’t distinguish between two bad coffees.
Does this work with cold water? Because if so, my iced espresso drinks are crying out for it
Where's James Hoffmann when you need him?
What exactly is the innovation here compared to the press release from two years ago?[1]
[1]: https://www.unsw.edu.au/newsroom/news/2024/05/Ultrasonic_col...
Of all the objective and subjective metrics a home coffee drinker is trying to optimize, never once have I heard anyone care in the least about the watt-hours consumed during the brew process. "I really wish I could drink coffee at room temperature all the time and save a penny on electricity while doing it!" Someone will do the math, I'm sure it's not exactly a penny.
TL;DR: Aiming for a high-volume industrial goal, tone-deaf to coffee enthusiasts.
Someone get James Hoffmann on the line right now.
But people want to drink coffee/espresso hot, not room-temperature. So you have to heat the water afterward anyway. I'm not seeing that much potential for energy savings here, unless you're comparing setups with large boilers inefficiently used for small amounts of coffee.
75% energy save to make a room temperature expresso. I am ok spending a bit more energy to have it warm.
Awesome idea. I would love to try it. If that can also make my espresso routine easier I am up for it.
The crema looks like terrible, more like Nespresso, and having the coffee warm is kinda important.
But perhaps this can be used in the instant coffee industry or something.
[dead]
When you thought that coffee snobs couldn't get any worse...
Not even the baristas are safe. Technology really is coming for everyone.