The Flaw in Conventional Brewing Logic Many coffee enthusiasts struggle with inconsistency despite following rigid recipes. They grind finer, use boiling water, and push for high ratios, yet end up with a bitter, astringent mess. This frustration stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of fluid dynamics within a dripper. Even Matt Winton, the 2021 World Brewers Cup champion, admitted to facing these hurdles. The problem isn't just the coffee; it's how the water interacts with the filter and the brewer's walls. The Theory of Contact Points Water flow in a pour-over isn't uniform. The concept of **contact points** explains that water travels most efficiently where the filter touches the brewer's surface and then immediately breaks away. Purely flat surfaces cause the paper to seal, choking flow. Conversely, total lack of contact slows movement. The sweet spot exists in the capillary flow created by ridges or mesh. In a Kono dripper, the flat upper walls prevent bypass while the bottom ridges create specific contact points to drive extraction. This "touching, not touching" rhythm dictates the speed and evenness of your brew. Engineering Evenness: The Booster To solve the issue of clogging and channeling, Winton collaborated with Sibarist to create the Booster. This device introduces hundreds of micro-contact points at the base of the brewer. By preventing the paper from sealing against the flat bottom of drippers like the Orea, it ensures water moves vertically through the entire coffee bed rather than searching for a single exit hole. The result is a more transparent flavor profile and a significant reduction in the harshness often found in uneven extractions. Tailoring Extraction to Processing Understanding flow dynamics allows for strategic brewing. For clean, washed coffees, a high-extraction approach works wonders: 98°C water, fine grinds, and a 1:17 ratio with a Booster to maintain flow. However, natural or anaerobically processed coffees require restraint. Pushing these to 22% extraction often mutes their complexity. For these, Winton suggests a lower extraction (18-19%) to preserve sweetness and prevent the "muddy" profile that plagues over-processed beans. Practical Implications for the Home Barista While high-end gear like the XBloom provides automation, the core lesson is manual. You don't necessarily need expensive accessories; even a simple metal mesh at the bottom of a flat-bed brewer can drastically improve consistency. By manipulating contact points, you reclaim control over the draw-down time and flavor clarity. The goal isn't just a high extraction—it's a deliberate one.
Matt Winton
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TL;DR
Lance Hedrick (3 mentions) features Winton in technical tutorials like "Brew Coffee Like a World Brewer's Champ Matt Winton" and utilizes Winton's professional experience as a benchmark for evaluating high-end coffee grinders.
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