Beyond the Italian Mandate For decades, the Istituto Espresso Italiano has governed the definition of coffee's most concentrated form. Their 1998 certification requires precise metrics: nine bars of pressure, specific water temperatures, and a distinct hazelnut-colored crema. However, modern brewing reality often clashes with these rigid protocols. If we strictly follow the Italian rulebook, much of what leading cafes serve today—from turbo shots to light-roast extractions—technically fails the test. This disconnect suggests that our nomenclature must evolve to match current technology and tastes. The Engineering of "Soup" Coffee A controversial style emerging in the enthusiast community is "soup" coffee, popularized by a user known as DC on Discord. To analyze this method, I modified an OXO Rapid Brewer with a custom base from S Works Design. By integrating a Smart Espresso Profiler Bluetooth transducer, I captured real-time data on a brewing style that many claim is espresso, yet others dismiss as high-strength filter coffee. Data-Driven Extraction Analysis The experiment revealed that soup coffee operates at negligible pressure levels. Even under aggressive manual force, the transducer recorded peaks of only 0.5 to 0.6 bar. This is significantly lower than the six bars used for modern turbo shots and vastly different from the nine-bar traditional standard. The flow rate remains high because the puck isn't compressed into a flow-restricting barrier. While the resulting beverage carries the strength of espresso, the physics align more closely with an accelerated gravity-fed brew. Redefining the Espresso Spectrum We need a more practical bifurcation: Traditional and Modern Espresso. Traditional shots should include anything requiring mechanical advantage—lever arms or pumps—to generate pressure between six and nine bars. Modern espresso, including "gushers," accounts for high-flow, lower-pressure extractions that still require specialized equipment. Soup sits in a unique gray area; it mimics espresso's concentration but lacks the hydraulic resistance fundamental to the name. Calling it "filter-spro" or unpressurized concentrate acknowledges its unique identity without diluting the technical meaning of espresso. Future Trends in Pressure Profiling The move away from rigid nine-bar standards allows for greater flavor clarity, especially with light roasts. As enthusiasts adopt tools like the Wacaco Picopresso and profiling transducers, the focus shifts from meeting a historical definition to maximizing extraction yield and sensory balance. The future of coffee isn't found in a 1998 certification, but in the data-backed exploration of flow and resistance.
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- Oct 29, 2025
- Aug 27, 2025