After visiting three cafes in Taipei, I went down to Taichung to meet my friends the other day. Besides the city tour, we also went to another two cafes. I have been excited about visiting these two cafes since knowing them from Internet. How do their espressos taste? Again, I will judge their espressos based on my personal preference.
The first cafe we visited is Osir. As far as I know Osir is one of the older cafes in Taichung and people there have put in a lot of efforts populariazing specialty coffee. They have a Probat L5 for roasting coffee beans. When I got there the coffee house was filled with the aroma of freshly roasted coffee. Although the store was full of burlap bags and therefore lacks the elegant design that people seem to like for a cafe, I actually like the way it is since customers will have opportunities to know more about the whole process of making coffee.
They have a new La Marzocco GB5 and two Mazzer Roburs for making espressos so I was pretty excited. They also have two blends for espressos, one roasted light and the other dark. I ordered the espresso made with the light roasted blend. To my taste the body was light and medium sweet. I also got some citrus and the shot left a clean finish. To me that was an average shot.
I asked the barista how old the beans are and she answered that they were around three weeks old. She explained that they usually rest the beans for two weeks before putting them in the grinder. Maybe they have some reasons for resting the roasted beans for so long but according to the standard I have learned in the United States the flavor and aroma would degrade for three weeks old beans... Of course I can't judge if the flavor and body of my little cup would improve if they could have rested the beans for a shorter period of time but it is indeed interesting to know people have different perspectives about resting the beans.
The other cafe we visited in Taichung is mojocoffee. Mojocoffee is probably the cafe I would like to visit the most this time in Taiwan. They have a three-group Synesso Cyncra, a La Marzocco Swift grinder and a Mazzer Robur at store. From their website and the photo album it looks like they serve darn good espressos so I was very excited.
I asked for a double ristretto and the picture above is the result. To may taste the beans were probably roasted too dark. The cup was not bright as the acidity is muted, if not totally killed, during the roast. The shot tasted a little bit ashy, though not too overwhelming. I did get the bittersweet flavor and the cup has a medium body.
I had a chance to talk to the shop owner and he told me that he usually roast the beans past the peak of the rapid second crack (Agtron #35). I never roasted my beans such dark so it is interesting to have an espresso like the one I had at mojocoffee. On the other hand, the blend at Osir was probably roasted a little bit light (only a few snaps into the second crack) to my personal preference. I usually roast the beans to a nice rolling second but not yet the peak to have a nice balance of the varietal and roast flavors of the beans.
Even though none of the espressos I got at Osir and mojocoffee match my taste preference perfectly, I do enjoy my stay at both cafes. By trying out different espressos at different cafes I not only know my taste preference better but also have the opportunities to calibrate my roasts against the professional ones and that is fun!

They have a new La Marzocco GB5 and two Mazzer Roburs for making espressos so I was pretty excited. They also have two blends for espressos, one roasted light and the other dark. I ordered the espresso made with the light roasted blend. To my taste the body was light and medium sweet. I also got some citrus and the shot left a clean finish. To me that was an average shot.
I asked the barista how old the beans are and she answered that they were around three weeks old. She explained that they usually rest the beans for two weeks before putting them in the grinder. Maybe they have some reasons for resting the roasted beans for so long but according to the standard I have learned in the United States the flavor and aroma would degrade for three weeks old beans... Of course I can't judge if the flavor and body of my little cup would improve if they could have rested the beans for a shorter period of time but it is indeed interesting to know people have different perspectives about resting the beans.

I asked for a double ristretto and the picture above is the result. To may taste the beans were probably roasted too dark. The cup was not bright as the acidity is muted, if not totally killed, during the roast. The shot tasted a little bit ashy, though not too overwhelming. I did get the bittersweet flavor and the cup has a medium body.
I had a chance to talk to the shop owner and he told me that he usually roast the beans past the peak of the rapid second crack (Agtron #35). I never roasted my beans such dark so it is interesting to have an espresso like the one I had at mojocoffee. On the other hand, the blend at Osir was probably roasted a little bit light (only a few snaps into the second crack) to my personal preference. I usually roast the beans to a nice rolling second but not yet the peak to have a nice balance of the varietal and roast flavors of the beans.
Even though none of the espressos I got at Osir and mojocoffee match my taste preference perfectly, I do enjoy my stay at both cafes. By trying out different espressos at different cafes I not only know my taste preference better but also have the opportunities to calibrate my roasts against the professional ones and that is fun!