Everyday Beans Podcast - Mostly About Coffee and Other Stuff

Are You Brewing or Just Measuring?


Listen Later

Send a text

In this episode, I dive deep into the paradox of precision in coffee brewing and question whether my obsession with exactness has actually robbed me of the joy I once felt. I reflect on my journey from the simplicity of the French press—just ground coffee, water, and time—to the world of scales, refractometers, temperature-controlled kettles, and my Timemore Sculptor 78SS grinder. I talk about how precision tools like scales and kettles transformed my brewing from experimentation into science, allowing me to replicate good cups and eliminate bad ones. But somewhere along the way, I realized I stopped trusting my palate and started trusting the numbers instead. If the extraction wasn't "perfect" according to the tools, I questioned myself, the coffee, or the brewer—never the possibility that precision might be getting in the way of presence.

I explore this tension between being an engineer who cares about repeatability and being a coffee lover who just wants to enjoy the moment. While I acknowledge I'll never abandon my tools completely, I'm challenging myself to loosen up, to remember that my palate and taste are what matter most. By listening to this episode, you'll gain insight into how precision can both enhance and complicate your coffee experience, and you'll learn why being present with your brew—smelling the beans, feeling the steam, truly tasting the coffee—might be more valuable than any refractometer reading. You'll walk away questioning whether you need that next precision tool or whether you already have everything you need: good coffee, a few reliable tools, and your own unique palate.

Support the show

For good tasty coffee, check us out at: everydaybeans.com

For tips, tricks and still trying to figure it out: https://www.youtube.com/@everyday-beans

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Everyday Beans Podcast - Mostly About Coffee and Other StuffBy Oaks, the coffee guy