Mittwoch, 21. November 2007
Yemen Matari
A few days ago I had a small surprise in the post - Walter kindly sent me some of his Yemen Matari Mokka - both roasted and unroasted. Thank you Walter, this is so kind and I still can't believe it.
Before my machine was up to temperature I couldn't wait and aeropress'd a cup of it: don't do that at home kids, this coffee is purely for your espresso machine. Really.
The bag is nearly finished now and I fear I can't replicate these intense nice tastes when I roast it on my own: It makes a very thick syrupy espresso, dense body and a very intensive mouthfeel. Tastes of (don't laugh) toasted wood in syrup-shape, with a nice acidity lingering on the tongue. And it's sweetness reminds me of liquorice - a little weird and very surprising taste experience. Thick, dense, sweet and full of body. It works best for me dosing low, grinding fine and doing a ristretto-type extraction. I can't say much about the aroma (catched a cold and can't really smell, I'm glad that I still can taste).
This coffee is just plain different from everything I've had before and seeing the greens, I see why Steve (and Walter probably too) have problems sourcing a good Yemen - they look a bit ugly and chaffy and not really consistent. But the taste is overwhelming and this Yemen really is fantastic.
Kommentare
Lukas schrieb am Donnerstag, 22. November 2007 um 23:05 Uhr:
I think so too, Walter. Yesterday I roasted the batch of greens but I ejected them a bit too early; I tried to replicate your roast as much as possible but I guess that's just not possible with the stove-top roaster. Anyway, it's a bit lighter (quite a bit, 20 seconds or so into second crack with a roast of 19 minutes) but still tastes really really nice. When it's rested a bit I'll write another short review :)



Walter schrieb am Donnerstag, 22. November 2007 um 20:25 Uhr:
You're very welcome, Lukas, and I'm really happy you like my Matari (it's one of my favourites too, this year). Judging from the picture at Steve's website, I presume our Mataris have the same source...
Cheers, Walter
Oh, and beware of the chaff, when you roast it... ;)