The next Sumatran coffee I'll be selling performs nicely across a broad range of roast levels. I'm only picking one to sell but that's probably a good one to recommend for local home roasters who appreciate a cleaner expression of the traditional Sumatra flavor profile as it almost doesn't matter how you roast it. You're likely to get something tasty out of it.
@professor_stoke So far they've left my tree alone. It's still smaller than the ones they've chopped down.
@professor_stoke It would be hypocritical for me to pursue that angle, but I will be expressing displeasure to my alderman (who is also a multiple times per day customer of mine).
@professor_stoke 195-205°F with few brew method specific exceptions.
long
@alice I'm drinking so much coffee
On the fence if I want to go up one tier for 2x the CPU but less than double the storage or 2 tiers for over 3x storage and 4x CPU for https://video.typica.us/
I'll probably just not do anything until it's at more like 80-90% disk utilization and make the decision then.
@cardassianvole Good job!
PNG is the closest thing that I have to an espresso secret weapon. A nice medium roast on a clean conventional PNG at 10-20% of an espresso blend often provides a great boost in both intensity and complexity.
Got my next espresso blend figured out in 1 attempt. It uses coffees from Brazil, India, and Papua New Guinea. I'm going for something with lots of intensity of flavor (you should still be able to taste the coffee in the milk drinks), complexity (unadulturated it should stay interesting as you drink it), smooth viscosity. Do not want astringency or sourness, but balanced sweetness.
Author of Typica software for coffee roasters.