The Sulotco has had 24 hours to rest now, so time to do a bit of cupping.
It’s easy to worry too much about doing cupping “properly”. At its heart, cupping offers a method of preparing and trying coffee that allows someone to explore the flavours and components of a particular bean as fully as possible. Cupping is about maximalism in coffee exploration.
There are ways to do it that have evolved – largely because there are situations when you want to have a consistent method. If you are trying 10 coffees that are about to go through an auction, you want to have a like-with-like approach so that you can decide what to buy. If you are judging competition coffee, you need a like-for-like approach. But it’s really about enjoying coffee, so if technique gets in the way — just do it!
Word of warning: Try and get some good coffee for this. You won’t taste what isn’t there. If you’ve never tried a really, really good Kenyan, now is the time to try. A lot of people have no idea that there is anything interesting to taste in a cup of coffee precisely because all the coffee they’ve ever drunk never had anything interesting to taste in it!
Here’s the idea.
So how did it go. Well: Here’s the cupping table set up:
3 coffees to try. The Sulotco I’ve just roasted. Some Kalosi (the previous Indonesian I used to buy, which I’m trying to improve upon). And some Tesco Finest* Java Beans that someone gave me – also Indonesian. Nice to have 3 to try. I’m not expecting the Tesco to taste as good because it would have been roasted months not days ago, but we’ll see what we find.
| Tesco Finest | Kalosi | Sulotco | |
|---|---|---|---|
| |
|
|
|
| Smell of Dry Grounds | Sweet | Sweet, Aromatic, Spicy | Spicy |
| Breaking the crust | Rubber, Aromatic, Clove Oil | Fresh, Aromatic, Pungent | Very Sweet, Fruity |
| Acidity / Liveliness | Totally flat. Lifeless (0/10) | Smooth (8/10) | Winey (8/10) |
| Body | Medium (5/10) | Full-bodied (10/10) | Rich (8/10) |
| Flavour | Bitter. Carbon. Undrinkable! (0/10) | Bitter tones and sweet tones. Aromatic flavours. Malty as it cooled (6/10) | Bit of caramel. BUTTER BUTTER BUTTER. Winey. On cooling developed fruit tones: Grapefruit / Blackcurrant (9/10) |
| Finish | Burnt. Bitter (0/10) | Silky. Bitter (4/10) | Bitter, but less so than the Kalosi. Dry. (8/10) |
| Total score (max 40) | 5 | 28 | 33 |
Conclusions:
I didn’t expect the Tesco to rival freshly roasted beans chosen from many alternatives by a micro-roaster who knows what he’s doing. But I didn’t expect the contrast to be that stark! The wierd thing is that the smell was OK.
The butter and the fruit in the Sulotco was just gorgeous. I’ll be buying more of this – it really can handle a dark roast and still leave some creamy, caramely tastes in the cup. It’s just what I’m after.
Steve – put 2kg back for me – I’ll be ordering some of that just as soon as I’ve decided what else to buy at the same time!
Now it’s over to you…
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