Coffee Tasting And Coffee Matching Masterclass

Slurping your food and drink loudly is seen as rude in some cultures but in tasting beverages like wine, tea and coffee, it’s quite essential as the oxygenation releases the flavours and aromas. Up to this point, I have never had much of an occassion to taste more than one coffee at a time and this would be a great tasting lesson.

At a recent Coffee Tasting Masterclass with Cafe Direct,  we were taught about the fine details of tasting coffee with coffee expert Thierry.

As part of the coffee matching, there was a mini competition to make a dessert to match one the 4  coffees, Kilimanjaro, Mayan Palenque, Machu Picchu or Cloud Forest.  Each coffee has its own distinct flavour and characteristics as coffees are much like wine, the flavours are influenced by terroir.

How to Taste Coffee, also called “Cupping”

There are 3 steps to tasting coffee:

When tasting we are looking for these characteristics, fragrance, aroma, acidity, body, flavour, balance, aftertaste.

Fragrance : Firstly, we had to smell each of the 3 ground coffees.

Aroma: This is what we get after adding water to the coffee. Each cup was left to brew for 4 minutes for the aroma to develop. We then had to use a spoon and scoop the liquid away from you and then inhale.

Coffee Tasting Matching

Tasting: Using 2 spoons, we scooped around the edges of the cup to remove the foam that has formed and then had to slurp the coffee to aerate it allowing us to discern more of the characteristics of each coffee. Unforunately, my tastebuds are so insensitive that it was hard to get more than bland, bitter, too strong.  Each coffee was quite different when tasted in succession and surprisingly, the flavour profiles changed a lot when we tasted the coffees at a cooler temperature.

coffee tasting

We also learnt that different coffees should be drunk at different times of the day, like the Kilimanjaro blend is perfect for a breakfast coffee as it warms your tastebuds.

On the the baking competition

I paired up with the delightful Gill from Tales of Pigling Bland where we attempted a Flourless Chocolate Cake recipe from Ferran Adria’s new cookbook, The Family Meal. Our dessert was chosen to match the Machu Picchu coffee from Peru, which has a nutty and chocolatey flavour.  We were given a bag of ingredients to create our dessert.

Coffee Tasting Matching

The recipe is actually really easy and we were all quite anxious to see how it would turn out as there were so few ingredients and steps. The result was surprisingly superb, the recipe yielded a light, spongy and super chocolatey cake. Since we had a bit more time and ingredients, we made some nut brittle to go with the cake and did some fancy plating up, as seen in the picture.

Unfortunately, our dessert didn’t win the competition and the winner was a spiced honey cake made by Team April (aka Rhubarbandrose and 21stCentury Housewife)

 

Ferran Adria Flourless Chocolate Cake

Rating: 51

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 12 minutes

Total Time: 32 minutes

6 small cakes

Ferran Adria Flourless Chocolate Cake

Ingredients

  • 175g Dark Chocolate 60% cocoa
  • 90g Butter at room temperature
  • 4 Egg whites
  • 2 tbsp sugar
  • 1 1/2 egg yolks

Instructions

  1. This recipe makes 6 cakes
  2. Half fill a saucepan with water and bring to boil. Put the chocolate in a metal or glass bowl and place over pan to melt. Leave the chocolate to melt slowly, stirring occasionally with a spatula until smooth. Remove the pan from heat.
  3. Cut the butter into cubes and add into the chocolate. Stir in the butter to melt into the chocolate.
  4. Put the egg whites into a large bowl, then add the sugar. Use a balloon whisk or electric beater to whip the whites and sugar into a soft meringue. Do not allow the mixture to stiffen.
  5. Preheat the oven to 200 C / 400 F/ Gas Mark 6.
  6. In a separate bowl, whisk the egg yolks for a few seconds.
  7. Pour the yolks over the meringue mixture, then fold together using a spatula or whisk.
  8. Tip the meringue mixture into the buttery chocolate.
  9. Fold everything together carefully with a spatula until even.
  10. Spoon the cake mixture inot a piping bag and snip off the end. If you don't have a piping bag, use 2 teaspoons instead.
  11. Pipe of carefully spoon the mixture into circular silicone moulds about 12 cm across and 4cm deep. If you don't have silicone moulds you can use metal ones but make sure you grease well with butter.
  12. Bake in the oven for 12mins or until risen and shrinking away from the edes of the moulds.
  13. Leave to cool before removing from moulds.
  14. Serve the cake warm.
http://www.eatcookexplore.com/coffee-tasting-and-coffee-matching-masterclass/

You can read my review of The Family Meal here and buy the book at Amazon.

Ferran Adria's The Family Meal Cookbook

The Family Meal: Home Cooking with Ferran Adria

You can win a cookery master class at L’Atelier des Chefs by submitting a dessert to match one of their coffees. Details here

Cafe Direct buys their coffee directly from traders and not via Fairtrade or the non Fairtrade register. All the coffees are single estate blends. The coffees are available from leading supermarkets.

Ferran Adria’s Book Launch At Google London

A few days ago, I was invited to the Google London HQ to sample some dishes from Ferran Adria’s new cookbook, The Family Meal. For a foodie is also a bit of a geek, this was heaven. Lunch was really chaotic as we were in one of their many staff canteens and had to join the massive queue for food. The Google Canteen was a really apt place for the lunch since the new cook book is derived from recipes from the El Bulli staff canteen.

A nice bonus after lunch, Niamh from @EatLikeAGirl and I had an exclusive interview with Ferran via his interpreter. He had been doing back to back talks and interviews for 15 hours a day for a few days and he was still very happy to chat to us about his book, why he wrote it, the future and what plans he had next. You can watch the interview below.  (There is another version of this video with a different view on Niamh’s blog)

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OK1TBJX0eh0

Google holds talks at their offices as part of their “Author At ” series and on this occassion they invited the esteemed chef to be their guest. The talk was open to Google employees and some invited guests and was held in yet another Google Canteen in another building.

Ferran Adria's Talk at Google

Having Ferran speak at Google was a stroke of genius as the man is not only a very talented chef but he is a creative genius who has embraced technology and wants to explore ways to use technology to further experiment and push the boundaries with food.

There are several (quite shaky) videos of his talk and the first one is here:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiVT6Hgtpt0

In Part 2 of the videos, Ferran talks about the evolution of culinary creativity and how El Bulli encourages this and is responsible for up to 80% of creativity in the last year.

Book Review of The Family Meal by Ferran Adria

Ferran Adria's The Family Meal Cookbook

The Family Meal: Home Cooking with Ferran Adria

Firstly, this massive cookbook is not about molecular gastronomy and more about simple home cooking. Ferran despairs that even though there are more food programmes and food blogs now, there aren’t more people are not cooking at home. He wants to simplify cooking and to encourage more people to cook, so this book wil be a good guide to beginner cooks and advanced cooks will learn a few new tricks and recipes too.

The recipes in the book are the recipes that have been created and thoroughly tested in the El Bulli Kitchens for the daily staff meals for the 75 staff who worked there. The whole El Bulli team used to sit down for a family meal at 6pm every day and they spent as much time and effort in preparing this meal.

The team had produced detailed production sheets for each of the meals with a list of proven procedures that ensure that each meal is cooked in exactly the same way.

Included in The Family Meal cook book are a list of basic kitchen equipment you will need to a list of the basic ingredients that you should keep in your kitchen. Sections of the book cover “How to cook meat” to “How to cook eggs”. The rest if the book is organised into 31 three course menus with dishes that show culinary inspiration from not just Spanish but Italian, Japanese and other cuisines too.

All the recipes are aimed at the average person who make less than €1,500 a month. The claims are that each meal can be made in 45 minutes for less than €3 per head. I really like the fact that there are step by step pictures to accompany each recipe.

An average 3 course men look like this:

  • Chickpeas with spinach and eggs
  • Glazed teriyaki pork belly
  • Sweet potato with honey and cream

 

When we spoke to Ferran, he said that the recipes in this book has been written for 2 people up to 75 people as he wanted this to be easy for the people who will tend to buy a takeaway instead of cooking. He said that most cookbooks write recipes for 4 people but most average households have 2 people.

The book has step by step recipes on making simple sauces like tomato sauce, barbecue sauce to romesco sauce. It also has a very  handy section on making stock, nice to see it including all the basics which are assumed knowledge in other cook books.

You might need a little bit of cooking experience for some of the recipes but most of them are quite easy to do without too many cheffy touches, no tricky molecular gastronomy cooking techniques required.

This book would be a great addition to anyone who likes to cook as a reference for making basic sauces to cooking the more adventurous recipes like the Watermolon with menthol sweets.

You can buy The Family Meal: Home Cooking with Ferran Adria on Amazon.