Consistency... I can pull a thousand shots in a row and recreate each shot before it. How do I know? I've done it... daily... in my own shop... for paying customers. Have you? So does that make me the antithesis of antithesis of antithesis of what baristas should strive for?
You are casually throwing out the professional barista card and professional standards, I forget, but you can remind me... exactly how many years have you worked in a demanding retail coffee environment driving a three group? Don't play the consistency card with me dude, I've paid dues you will never pay.
The growth of espresso as a drink and as an industry capable of more has been primarily due to visionaries, seekers, explorers, mad scientists, expanders, dreamers, and people unhappy with the status quo. Espresso of today and espresso of 8yrs ago is very, very different due to many factors including higher quality greens standards and blending techniques.
You and I do have different standards. It's called evolution.
Yeah Shaun, it was avant-garde baristas like you that drove the success of coffee for the past 30 years, not Starbuck's marketing skill. I'll admit there's a huge void between what they sell and the best we strive for. But to almost all of the known espresso market, people like you aren't even a pimple on the butt of a good cappuccino.
So, work on your skills and try to impress a select panel of coffee mavens? Who cares?
If what you do can't be translated into teaching points for the benefit of all baristas willing to learn new skills, what's the point? You're making espresso so esoteric that you're running the risk of becoming irrelevant to the mainstream.
You were calling me out on my consistency skills, I retorted, with facts. Here's your chance to impress your facts upon me with the factual account of the largest amount of consistent shots you've pulled in a day __________, in a week ____________, in a year __________? What's that, did I just hear crickets over there, is that silence? Silence on your consistency position? Call me out and you're gonna get a reply and that reply won't let you off the hook for the nonsense you've been scribbling out. I think the difference between us might be that I'll admit when I'm guessing, or when I just don't know.
Since it seems you carefully choose to sidestep your own nonsense when you are called on it, I'll get on to your most recent nonsense in this post...
This debate wasn't about the success of coffee, that growth curve started back around WWII with freeze dried. But that was a pretty slick (not) attempt at redirecting things again, because of course I claimed the success of coffee is because of guys like me and my 3 x t-shirts that say "I'm an avant-garde barista", I know I claimed that, wait I'm going back through the thread... uhmmm, huh, it's not there anymore, I'm sure I claimed the success of coffee is directly related to my efforts. Hey, maybe you could take a look and let me know where it went. Get back to me on that one. Really, get back to me, or I can wait for the crickets again.
"So, work on your skills and try to impress a select panel of coffee mavens? Who cares?" I explain what I do. I explain what the current industry does. I explain when someone is spouting nonsense. Maybe you forgot to put in an order for a coffee maven t-shirt and apparently you don't care, maybe that's it.
"If what you do can't be translated into teaching points for the benefit of all baristas willing to learn new skills, what's the point?" Interesting approach, quite a diversion from only a page ago where your main teaching point was... everything has to stay the same, except the grind - only ever change the grind. You need some new strawman skills because what you've got going is so predictable bad that it's boring having to keep wading through it. The same old attempt at making statements as if they are factual and then throwing enough huffing and puffing behind it that somehow it might gain traction, it's Comedy Central when reading back through some of the things you have stated as fact about espresso. But since it appears you are hesitant to move away from your predictable (and boring a long time ago) tactic of writing carefully crafted sentences to appear factual I will yet again retort with actual facts... What I do can and has been translated into teaching points, for the benefits of baristas WILLING TO LEARN new skills. Those aren't secret abilities by the way, in fact today my son taught me how to turn some lego into a laser blaster, a machinist taught me how to approach a particular problem via several different paths and I'm hoping to teach someone to stop writing opinion as fact.
"You're making espresso so esoteric that you're running the risk of becoming irrelevant to the mainstream." About that esoteric statement, that could have some factual weight to it as I do adjust more things than just my grind - like a lot of professionals and passionate amateurs do, all over the world. Is that what you mean by esoteric, and what risk am I'm running again?
Edited - for spelling.