RECIPES

QUICK ANSWER
Pull a real espresso at home: 18g ground coffee → 36g espresso in 25–30 seconds (1:2 ratio). Fresh medium roast, fine grind, level tamp.
Time: 30 seconds · Equipment: Espresso machine · Yield: 1 double shot · Cost: ~EGP 9 per cup
✅ Tested by Amr Taha · Brew Tech Reviewer · The Corner Bundle
The cup that starts everything else. Get this right and your latte, your cappuccino, your mocha — they all get better.
Why this works
A great espresso is just three numbers in agreement: dose, time, and ratio. Hit those, taste, adjust. That’s the whole craft.
Ingredients
- 18g whole bean coffee, freshly ground (medium-roast espresso blend)
- 36g water, filtered
How to make classic espresso
- Heat your machine and portafilter for 5 minutes. Cold metal = bitter shot.
- Grind 18g into the basket. Distribute evenly with your finger. No clumps means no channeling.
- Tamp level, 15–20 lbs of pressure. A wobbly puck = channeling = sour shot.
- Lock in. Pull the shot. Aim for 36g out in 25–30 seconds.
- Stop the moment the stream goes pale. Past that point you’re adding bitterness, not flavor.
💡 Tip: If your shot pulls in under 20 seconds, your grind is too coarse — go finer. Over 35 seconds, go coarser. Adjust by tiny clicks, not big jumps.
Common questions
Why does my espresso taste sour?
Under-extraction. Either grind finer, raise water temp to 93–96°C, or extend brew time. Sour means more extraction is needed.
What grind size is best for espresso?
Fine — finer than table salt, coarser than flour. On a Baratza Encore, around setting 7. Always dial in by taste.
How do I dial in my espresso?
Pull a shot, taste it. Sour = grind finer. Bitter = grind coarser. Adjust by one click, pull again. Two or three iterations gets you dialed in.