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Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
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DavecUK
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Posted Sat Jun 28, 2008, 4:42am
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

GC7 Said:

Dave

I do not see the logic in your conclusion regarding rigid canisters.  In fact, your two statements seem contradictory.

A vacuum is simply the absence of oxygen or other gasses within a space.  Your beans in the bags could in fact be exposed to far MORE oxygen then a cansiter that has a better vacuum and seals to maintain it. The space above the beans is meaningless it seems to be if there is little to no oxygen.

Your second statement that you are not sure how good a pressure drop is for coffee is the definition of vacuum it seems to me.  If there is less of a pressure drop in the bags it means there is MORE air or oxygen.

I'd really like to hear a coffee experts take on the vacuum issue.

Posted June 16, 2008 link

Each point in order

OK well that's up to you

Thanks for that bit of information about the nature of a vacuum...but you need to do a little more physics

Again need more Physics, in a canister your not changing the volume of the storage container...in a flexible bag you are!

Good luck, because the explanations for the whole degassing thing seem a little confused, so I don't know how useful their take on vacuum packing is going to be

A I always say...no one has to vacuum pack coffee in flexible bags straight after roasting, or at any other time...you clearly don't want to do this and that's your right. I and quite a few other people find it makes a huge difference if it's done correctly and the coffee is handles correctly. It's not about keeping it longer, but keeping it better. So even though your not convinced (and I don't really care that your not), hopefully people will spend a few dollars trying it. If it works, then they have gained more than they spent, if it doesn't work for them, the amount of money invested is very small.

P.S What would happen to a sealed balloon in a rigid canister as opposed to a flexible vacuum bag as you removed the air?
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JVBorella
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Posted Sat Jun 28, 2008, 8:15am
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

christiang Said:

But here's my question. I'm wondering what people think about this for roasted coffee, especially coffee I'm not roasting myself?  

What I've been doing is bagging up small portions of coffee 2-3 days out from the roaster when I first get it. I'm the only drinker in my house and I usually only go through about half a pound every two weeks (not considering company).  So my theory was that I could preserve the freshness so that by the end of a couple of weeks, I might have coffee closer to a few days out rather than 2 weeks out.  I've been thinking about doing the same with modified canisters - a series of small canisters with valves - preferably glass so I can avoid having all that plastic touching my coffee. I've also been vacuum bagging up small single doses and popping them in the freezer ala George Howell - (http://www.terroircoffee.com/content/view/217/) and Ken Fox (http://www.home-barista.com/store-coffee-in-freezer.html).

Posted June 27, 2008 link

Thats exactly what I have been doing since last fall using a Foodsaver. You can make the bags any size you want using the heat strip & I now bag up my Espresso in 34g increments so any bag opened is used up that day.

 
John
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GC7
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Posted Sat Jun 28, 2008, 2:20pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

DavecUK Said:

Each point in order

OK well that's up to you

Thanks for that bit of information about the nature of a vacuum...but you need to do a little more physics

Again need more Physics, in a canister your not changing the volume of the storage container...in a flexible bag you are!

Good luck, because the explanations for the whole degassing thing seem a little confused, so I don't know how useful their take on vacuum packing is going to be

A I always say...no one has to vacuum pack coffee in flexible bags straight after roasting, or at any other time...you clearly don't want to do this and that's your right. I and quite a few other people find it makes a huge difference if it's done correctly and the coffee is handles correctly. It's not about keeping it longer, but keeping it better. So even though your not convinced (and I don't really care that your not), hopefully people will spend a few dollars trying it. If it works, then they have gained more than they spent, if it doesn't work for them, the amount of money invested is very small.

P.S What would happen to a sealed balloon in a rigid canister as opposed to a flexible vacuum bag as you removed the air?

Posted June 28, 2008 link

Dave

I don't understand your argument about VOLUME.  Volume is meaningless in a vacuum.  It is the absence of oxygen that is important in preservation (the prevention of oxidation). Crushing your beans together in a bag will do nothing to keep your beans BETTER.
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raisin
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Posted Sun Jun 29, 2008, 7:03pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

Vacuuming lessens the amount of O2 available to react with your food product, but consumer grade appliances are not powerful enough to totally remove all the air.

That said, the better units can slow degradation of the bean for certain purposes. Green beans benefit most from this packaging for long terrm storage. Think those beans might be around for a couple of months? Vacuum pack in roast size lots and you won't be dissapointed by musty beans and dull roasts.

Once the beans are roasted there are more considerations to take into account. Yes, vacuum packing will hold the flavors in place. However, there is a small (very small lol) outgassing loss and a more appreciable (6-12%) gradual oxidation loss due to exposure to residual air trapped in the package AND the product structure.

Also, vacuuming does arrest the CO2 outgassing that normally progresses during the first few days of air exposure, so this will all proceed as new once opened. This means that you need to plan ahead, and "decant" the vacuumed beans before consumption to optimise extraction.

Roasted beans that will not be consumed within the considered optimum range 1-2 weeks might be best preserved by vacuum packaging, as will beans that need to travel under trying circumstances (heat, altitude, time). Otherwise, the expense and time involved seems somewhat excessive - so just drink faster! :)
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Posted Mon Jun 30, 2008, 3:21pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

raisin Said:

Also, vacuuming does arrest the CO2 outgassing that normally progresses during the first few days of air exposure, so this will all proceed as new once opened. This means that you need to plan ahead, and "decant" the vacuumed beans before consumption to optimise extraction.

Posted June 29, 2008 link

I understand the oxidation and aging considerations but I'm not so clear how vacumn packing slows down the outgassing. Seems to me the opposite would be the case, don't freshly roasted beans when vacumn packed in bags actually re-inflate the bag? And wouldn't this happen faster in a vacumn? Unless the outgassing is dependant on oxygen (like combustion which produces CO2) and is slowed by it's reduction in the vacumn packed bag.

Anybody understand the science behind this? And just what does happen to freshly roasted beans when they are vacumn packed? Do they stay vacumn packed or does the bag puff up again? And if so does it happen faster or slower than when in just a normal ziplock with a bit of air left in? Who's made that observation?

Conrad
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GC7
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Posted Mon Jun 30, 2008, 4:32pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

Conrad

Those are very good and in my opinion important questions you raised.

It was my impression that the CO2 released by newly roasted beans was "trapped" in the beans and accumulated as a result of chemical reactions that took place during the roasting process.  If that is true (and I hope someone can answer) then the CO2 will continue to be released in the vacuum environment.

I have noticed that there is considerably more bloom from my vacuum stored beans then those stored in bags. Does that mean the CO2 is released more slowly?  I don't really know.  Like you I would think that the vacuum environment would "suck out" so to speak the gas from the beans producing faster outgassing unless it is an ongoing chemical process.

I hope someone can clarify so I don't have to search the internet for answers about the chemistry of roasting and storing coffee beans :-)
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GC7
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Posted Mon Jun 30, 2008, 4:40pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

I got a bit curious and quickly found this link

http://www.teaandcoffee.net/0806/coffee.htm

"The first expansion of the bean occurs when free water driven off as steam, expands the beans and causes a distinctive crackling noise. However, most occurs during pyrolysis at 140-160°C, when the temperature inside the bean approaches 200°C. Coffee beans break open violently -- like pop-corn -- and swells, causing the silverskin to fly off as chaff.

At this point, the gas -- mostly in the form of carbon dioxide -- has been generated by oxidation of carbohydrates. About half is retained inside the beans, causing high pressure and the beans to double in size. Entrapped carbon dioxide is very important in maintaining storage life of roasted coffee, because under normal circumstances un-ground, roasted coffee beans would be very susceptible to oxidation. The protective cushion of carbon dioxide is largely liberated during grinding, and is the chief cause of ground coffee losing its pleasing aroma and flavor. "

I'll try to find more but it seems from this that it is trapped CO2 as a result of the roasting process and it is not produced post-roasting.
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DavecUK
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Posted Mon Jun 30, 2008, 6:11pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

GC7 Said:

At this point, the gas -- mostly in the form of carbon dioxide -- has been generated by oxidation of carbohydrates. About half is retained inside the beans, causing high pressure and the beans to double in size. Entrapped carbon dioxide is very important in maintaining storage life of roasted coffee, because under normal circumstances un-ground, roasted coffee beans would be very susceptible to oxidation. The protective cushion of carbon dioxide is largely liberated during grinding, and is the chief cause of ground coffee losing its pleasing aroma and flavor. "

I'll try to find more but it seems from this that it is trapped CO2 as a result of the roasting process and it is not produced post-roasting.

Posted June 30, 2008 link

The explanations of "degassing" (a word I don't like to use)  continue to mystify me as they don't seem to make any logical scientific sense. Just some thoughts, which cast some considerable doubt on the above.

  1. Why does ground coffee still "degass", there was a roaster I knew packing coffee in portions and he used to have to leave the beans a week before he could grind and pack them. If the CO2 was held pressurised in a bean, grinding should liberate all this "trapped" CO2

  2. If the CO2 was somehow "trapped" within the bean...then storage in a low pressure environment (vacuum) should make it "degass" faster...but it doesn't?

  3. Why does vacuum packed coffee stop producing CO2 for a few days, then on exposure to Oxygen, it starts producing CO2 again...doesn't make sense if all this CO2 is "trapped" as a result of roasting.

  4. Why if you freeze coffee doesn't it "degass"?
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christiang
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Posted Tue Jul 1, 2008, 9:37am
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

Hmmm. I hadn't thought about the idea of a vacuum accelerating the extraction of gasses from the beans. Is this why a lot of roasters flush their containers with inert gasses? It keeps the air pressure up, keeping the CO2 in the bean, but removes the oxygen.  

I guess the question is whether 1) beans do actually degass faster in a vacuum, 2) whether that makes a difference if you grind the beans immediately after removing them from the vacuum, and 3) how much degassing them actually matters.  

I think for 3) clearly it does make some difference whether you're talking about espresso or brewed coffee, right? Brewed coffee can often be great when extremely fresh whereas espresso often is best several days out from the roast.  Of course, this is a generalization: what may be good for one bean won't be good for another.
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Posted Tue Jul 1, 2008, 3:39pm
Subject: Re: Anybody use the Reynolds Handi-Vac for storing roasted coffee?
 

cv Said:

I'm not so clear how vacumn packing slows down the outgassing. Seems to me the opposite would be the case, don't freshly roasted beans when vacumn packed in bags actually re-inflate the bag?

Posted June 30, 2008 link

Yes indeed, the beans keep gassing in a vacuum. I vacuum pack in bags and in jars both, still trying to decide which if either is better. after about a day, there is enough pressure in the jar to hiss when you loosen the lid, and the bag has inflated. I keep re-vacuuming until no more gas is released. Usually at least 3 or 4 days.

I understand the idea that there is more residual oxygen in the jar than in the bag, due to the volume of the jar. However, I may be wrong, but I believe that after a couple days of co2 build up and vacuum out, that the amount of remaining oxygen will be very small, and maybe smaller than in the bag, because you have to open the bag and allow a certain amount of air back in to re-vacuum it. You can re-vacuum the canning jar without exposing it to more air.

just my 2¢
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