Coffee to slay (you and your wallet)
Truth Coffee in Cape Town is the first to use the Slayer Espresso Machine. There are only 200 units worldwide and they cost a small fortune, but they allow precise manual control to deliver a perfect espresso.
With less than 200
Slayers in existence worldwide, the Slayer Espresso Machine makes its first
appearance in South Africa at the new Truth headquarters
in Buitenkant Street, Cape Town.
For the same price as
a new family car, the Slayer is a serious commitment to achieving java nirvana
and represents the pinnacle in the quest for the ultimate coffee machine. It
seems what really has the coffee experts in a froth is the unique way the
Slayer allows one to play with the pressure, drawing out the “sweet spot” within
carefully roasted single origin coffee beans.
The fundamentals of an
espresso are disarmingly simple - hot water forced through fine coffee grains
in a filter basket at high pressure - and professional machines generally do
this automatically at a pressure of between 8 and 9 bars for about 30 seconds.
The result should be a hot, slightly viscous espresso with a blanket of crème.
The Slayer, however,
offers a barista analogue control of the pressure profile throughout the
process. It allows a low pressure pre-brew at as little as half a bar before
ramping up to full pressure to extract maximum flavour and then can slowly ease
off in pressure to enrich the texture.
“Just as a
professional race car driver is quicker with the driver aids and stability control
turned off, so too can the expert barista achieve so much more by manipulating
the wooden paddles of the Slayer, adjusting the pressure profile to stay in the
sweet spot of flavour extraction,” comments David Donde of Truth Coffee.
Watching David at
work with his new pride and joy is reminiscent of watching a tightly
choreographed dance. After a practiced performance in dosing, tamping and
loading the portafilter into the group head, David continued to slide
the wooden paddle to the left, allowing a gentle pre-infusion for the brew for
about 20 seconds before increasing the pressure to release the rich, reddish
brown nectar of the bean. Finally the paddle was slowly eased back and the
pressure reduced to avoid any sour flavours or over-extracted bitterness before
a rich crème settled to crown the creation.
“Whereas traditional
Espresso machines with a constant pressure may mask the subtle flavours that
only top quality beans provide, the Slayer leaves complete control of the
pressure profile in the hands of the barista,” remarks David, adding that, “our
quest at Truth has always been the pursuit of the perfect cup of coffee, and
now with Slayer in situ at our new headquarters we have a unique tool that
allows the coffee bean to achieve its ultimate expression.”
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