@Taweret Be sure to spend all your gold before doing that as the king will take half of it.
Had some thoughts on practical mitigations for a common Typica feature request that I've resisted trying to implement on account of it generally not being possible and in some cases veering into the territory of unreliable and unsafe. Still not 100% on the UI for this but I've put some thoughts on the roadmap because I think I can do something useful on that front which will be better than just ignoring the problem.
@mhoye This reminds me of my grandfather. He kept a Coleco Adam running well into the 1990s (it did everything he wanted a computer to do) until he couldn't find more machines to scavenge replacement parts from. My uncle passed along an already obsolete DOS PC as a replacement which he did not get along with at all, at which point my family got him an iMac which he did better with, but the existence of hidden files had him perpetually convinced the thing was stuffed full of viruses.
Auto drip was not one of the recommended brewing methods for the coffee so I'll probably use the last of it on an aeropress which is on the recommended brewing method list.
As an auto drip brew, there's some unpleasant mustiness to it and an overall deficiency in intensity, but as the coffee cools the more positive attributes become easier to pick out and match the description on the bag. Personally, I'd probably roast this a little darker and change up the profile timing to make the stuff I like about the coffee more obvious, though I get the sense that the machine this was roasted on has less of an ability to use unorthodox profiles this coffee would benefit from
Continuing to taste production test batches. The new coffee from Java is right on the edge between what I'd consider medium and dark roasts. I'll label it as a dark roast because the sensory cue I use to make that determination is present, but it's present at a low enough intensity that someone not sensitive to that could easily miss it. That's also the safer call because I do skew darker than a lot of places. Nice body, slightly sweet, probably a good blender.
Tasting the lighter of the two roasts now, this is really a pretty interesting coffee. Conventional wisdom is that the lighter you roast a coffee the more you're tasting origin character rather than tasting the roast and the opposite as you go darker. While I've never subscribed to that line of thinking, this coffee is really a direct refutation. The darker you go, the more it tastes like what you'd expect from the origin/drying.
Shop Internet is back up. They did some line checking stuff and replaced an ancient modem (that was old enough that they didn't even know what it was) with something newer, one of their cables is a centimeter or two shorter now and has a new connector on the end of it. As soon as they had the new thing in all of my stuff noticed and popped right back online.
Author of Typica software for coffee roasters.