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The work done by the committee included "the first chemical a.n.a.lysis of brewed coffee on record", a study of grindings, and a comparison of the results of four brewing methods. Its conclusions and recommendations were embodied in a booklet published by the National Coffee Roasters a.s.sociation, ent.i.tled _From Tree to Cup with Coffee_, and were as follows:
ROASTING
The Roaster or "Coffee Chef" is the only cook necessary to a good cup of coffee. He sends it to the consumer a completely cooked product.
In the roasting process the berries swell up by the liberation of gases within their substance. The aromatic oils contained in the cells are sufficiently developed or "cooked", and made ready for instantaneous solution with boiling water, when the cells are thoroughly opened by grinding.
The roasting principles of different green coffees vary. Trained study and a nice science in timing the roast and manipulating the fire is necessary to a perfect development of aroma and flavor.
The drinking quality is largely dependent upon the experienced knowledge of the coffee roaster and his scientific methods and modern machinery, by which the coffee is not only roasted, but cleaned, milled and completely manufactured to a high point of perfection.
In their National a.s.sociation work, the wholesale roasters are giving the public new facts and valuable information, from scientific researches, investigations, etc.
GRINDING. The roasted berry is constructed of fibrous tissues formed into tiny cells visible only under the microscope, which are the "packages" wherein are stored the whole value of coffee, the aromatic oils. Like cutting open an orange, the grinding of coffee is the opening of surrounding tissue and pulp, and the finer it is cut the more easily are the "juices" released.
The fibrous tissue itself is waste material, yielding, by boiling or too long percolations, a coffee colored liquid which is fibrous and tw.a.n.gy in taste, has no aromatic character, and contains undesirable elements.
The true strength and flavor of roasted coffee is ground out, not boiled out. The finer coffee is ground, the more thoroughly are the cells opened, the surfaces multiplied, and the aromatic oils made ready for separation from their husks. Hence it follows that:
Coa.r.s.e ground coffee is unopened coffee--coffee thrown away.
The finer the grind, the better and greater the yield. With pulverized coffee (fine as corn meal) the fully released aromatic oils are instantaneously soluble with boiling water.
In ground coffee the oils are standing in "open packages," escaping into the air and absorbing moisture, etc., necessitating quick use or confinement in air proof and moisture proof protection.
BREWING. From scientific researches by the National Coffee Roasters' a.s.sociation, including the first chemical a.n.a.lysis on record of brewed coffee, produced by various brewing methods, the fundamental principles of coffee making have been clearly established. These principles are simple, and when once understood equip any person to intelligently judge the merits and defects of the various coffee making devices on the market. They const.i.tute the law of coffee brewing, and may be stated as follows:
Correct brewing is not "cooking." It is a process of extraction of the already cooked aromatic oils from the surrounding fibrous tissue, which has no drinkable value. Boiling or stewing cooks in the fibre, which should be wholly discarded as dregs, and damages the flavor and purity of the liquid. Boiling coffee and water together is ruin and waste.
The aromatic oils, const.i.tuting the whole true flavor, are extracted instantly by boiling water when the cells are thoroughly opened by fine grinding. The undesirable elements, being less quickly soluble, are left in the grounds in a quick contact of water and coffee. The coa.r.s.er the grind the less accessible are the oils to the water, thus the inability to get out the strength from coffee not finely enough ground.
Too long contact of water and coffee causes tw.a.n.g and bitterness, and the finer the grind the less the contact should be. The infusion, when brewed, is injured by being boiled or overheated. It is also damaged by being chilled, which breaks the fusion of oils and water. It should be served immediately, or kept hot, as in a double boiler.
Tests show that water under the boiling point, 212, is inefficient for coffee brewing, and does not extract the aromatic oils[378]. Used under this temperature, it is a sure cause of weak and insipid flavor. The effort to make up this deficiency by longer contact of coffee and water, or repeated pouring through, results in no extraction of the oils, but draws out undesirable elements, such as coffee-tannin, which is soluble in water at any temperature and is governed by the time of contact.
Coffee-tannin, which is not the commercial tannic acid, is eliminated to practically nothing in the quick brewing methods.
The chemical a.n.a.lysis of brewed coffee shows the following:
Coffee Tannin Comparative per Cup Proportions
Percolator method,[379] fine gran. 2.90 grains -------- 5 minutes' steeping
Boiling Method, medium " 2.35 " ------
Steeping Method, " " 2.31 " -----
Filtration (or Drip) Method } 0.29 " - Pulverized }
Brewing is the final manufacturing process of coffee. All previous perfection is dependent upon it. Like food products which lose nutritive value by bad cooking, coffee loses its best values by wrong brewing. Brewed by the very simple correct methods, it is an unfailingly clear, fragrant, taste-charming beverage, universally loved and scientifically approved.
The committee made a further report in 1914, and some of the findings were subsequently published in an a.s.sociation booklet called _The Coffee Book_, used in connection with the second National Coffee Week campaign in 1915. In it were these:
GRINDING DEFINITIONS
_Powdered_ _Pulverized_ Like--flour. Like--not coa.r.s.er than fine corn meal.
_Very Fine and Fine_ _Medium_ Like--from corn meal to Like--coa.r.s.e granulated fine granulated sugar. sugar.
Also, the committee emphasized its previous findings, particularly this one: "Filter bags should be kept in cold water when not in use. Drying causes decomposition. Keeps sweet if kept wet. Use muslin for filter bag and pulverized granulation."
The a.s.sociation brought out this same year, on recommendation of the committee, its Home coffee mill, an "ideal and standard coffee mill for home use." It was a wall mill equipped with a gla.s.s-front metal hopper and employing a ratchet spring-lock nut and double-action grinders. The mill was later improved with an all-gla.s.s hopper and a tumbler bracket.
More than 20,000 of these mills have been sold.
At the suggestion of the author, the efficiency of nine different coffee-making devices (including boiling and drip pots, pumping percolators, cloth and paper filters) was investigated in the laboratories of the Mellon Inst.i.tute of Industrial Research of the University of Pittsburgh in 1915; and Dr. Raymond F. Bacon submitted a report that showed that the boiling method produced the highest percentage of caffetannic acid and caffein; the French drip process the lowest. The investigation disclosed also a more palatable brew at 195 to 200 F. than at the boiling point.
Another notable contribution to the science of coffee brewing was made by the Home Economics Laboratories of the University of Kansas in 1916.
The experiments extended over one year. They showed that strength and color in coffee brews are independent of blend and price and are most fully obtained by pulverized granulation, which was found to be the most efficient; that the consumer pays for flavor and that filtration yielded the best brew. The French drip, or true percolator, did not figure in these experiments.
At the 1915 convention of the National Coffee Roasters a.s.sociation, Mr.
Aborn reported that 4,000 copies of the committee's findings on grinding and brewing had been given away: and the facts were further circulated in 2,000,000 booklets issued during two years. He told of tests which showed that while there might be reasons of commercial expediency for packing ground coffee, it could not be defended as a quality principle; also that plate-grinders produced a more efficient drawing granulation than roller grinders, and that the idea that the steel-cut process eliminates dirt was an absurdity, as "the finest ground coffee is not dirt but coffee in its most efficient drawing condition." He added, "I have paid no attention to chaff removal in these tests as the uselessness of such removal has been repeatedly shown up." The reference here was to his 1914 and 1913 reports, in which it was stated that "removing the chaff in the steel-cut process does not remove any of the tannin, and for this purpose the steel-cut process is wholely futile, and a wasteful and unnecessary tax upon cost", and that "the removal of the chaff appreciably affects the flavor and depreciates the cup value."
This report repeated previous findings against the pumping percolator as producing an inefficient brew and being a very faulty utensil. Mr.
Aborn concluded his report by saying:
The old time boiling method has fewer and fewer defenders and holds its own only as a superst.i.tion. I therefore pa.s.s it over as a discarded issue.... It is but repet.i.tion of former reports for me to say that pulverized granulation is the most efficient granulation; that it a.s.sures the highest quality of brew and the lowest proportion of coffee to a given strength; that it is the most saving and most satisfying grinding for all to use; that it (the coffee) must be fresh ground; that the filtration method is the most correct in fundamental principles and that used with a muslin bag it a.s.sures the consumer coffee of the purest, finest flavored quality, highest health value and sure economy.
The campaign of education was continued during 1916, producing encouraging results among schools, colleges, the medical fraternity, newspapers, with the trade and the consumer. It marked the first big constructive work combining the practical and scientific phases of grinding and brewing methods. In his report at the 1916 convention of the National Coffee Roasters a.s.sociation, Mr. Aborn reviewed the four years work, and pointed out what had been accomplished. He told of a new booklet, to be called the _True Book on Coffee Grinding and Brewing_, and an educational exhibit box for schools about to be issued. Due to opposition which developed from trade interests that were putting out steel-cut and other grinds of coffee not favored by the committee, and also because many members thought the a.s.sociation should not exploit any particular method of grinding or brewing, it was decided to make no further publication of the coffee grinding and brewing conclusions of the committee until they had been confirmed by laboratory research.
Boiling and filtration tests in the mountains of the Yellowstone Park by W.H. Aborn in 1916 showed that the limit of coffee brewing was reached at an alt.i.tude of nine thousand feet.
At the 1916 meeting, Dr. Floyd W. Robison of the Detroit Testing Laboratories, read a notable paper ent.i.tled "What do we know about coffee?," which hailed coffee as a food product, warned the roasters to beware of half-facts, and urged the importance of a research laboratory.
It was published and given distribution by the a.s.sociation.
The educational exhibit box showing samples of coffee from plantation to cup, including five different grinds, was issued in 1917, and sold for one dollar.
The Better Coffee Making Committee also published in this year a booklet ent.i.tled _Coffee Grinding and Brewing_ in which it summarized its work to date, and presented its special plea for cotton-cloth filters as the ideal coffee-making device.
This booklet aroused considerable discussion, particularly between those who favored the paper filter and those who, with Mr. Aborn, believed cotton cloth, such as muslin, to be the most efficient strainer.
"Cotton", argued Mr. Aborn, "is an ideal sanitary strainer because it contains no chemical or questionable manufacturing element."
It was pointed out by Dr. Floyd W. Robison that while cotton cloth, such as muslin, does give a fairly clear coffee, it is not so clear as by the methods where a filter paper is used. He said:
Both methods have serious objectionable features. The muslin bag, particularly, is decidedly unsanitary, especially when used in restaurants and hotels. It is rarely kept clean, and one who has frequented restaurants and many hotel kitchens knows that it lends itself to very unclean and unsightly methods of handling. The food inspector has to check this up perhaps as often as any one feature about a restaurant.
The objection to the filter paper is not at all on the ground of sanitation. It is ideal in this respect. The claim is made, and at least, in part, substantiated, that it does hold back valuable features of the brew.
There are many points about the filter that have not been considered at all. Mr. Calkin believes that the very best type of filter is a bed of coffee itself, and I must say this has the sanction of good laboratory experience.