Why high extraction can still taste flat
A closer look at contact time, resistance, and the point where more yield no longer improves clarity.
Read →BarFlow gives coffee teams a disciplined way to set dose, beverage weight, water input, and extraction target before service starts. The calculator is designed for batch brew, pour-over, and training sessions where loose estimates create expensive drift.
A 3 g dosing error at a 1:15 recipe can move beverage strength enough to change perceived sweetness. Teams that log the ratio first usually waste less coffee during dial-in.
Use this for filter recipes, brew bar SOPs, and staff calibration sheets.
A short routine keeps recipe decisions consistent across shifts.
Choose a ratio based on the roast and service format before the first grinder adjustment. This prevents taste goals from moving every ten minutes.
Dose, water input, beverage yield, and expected strength are calculated together so the brew card reflects what the bar actually needs.
New staff learn faster when recipe language is objective. Trainers can compare cup quality against fixed inputs instead of memory.
Technical reading for brew leads, trainers, and owners.
A closer look at contact time, resistance, and the point where more yield no longer improves clarity.
Read →Workflow standards matter because one sloppy distribution step can ripple through an entire service period.
Read →Separate decisions create false confidence. Pairing them gives a cleaner and more stable dial-in process.
Read →BarFlow is used in training rooms, QC tables, and on service floors.
We replaced a handwritten ratio sheet that varied by shift. After six weeks, our batch brew wastage dropped from 8.4% to 5.9% because everyone worked from the same starting number.
Helen DraperThe value is not novelty. It is discipline. The calculator gives junior staff a clean framework, and that shows up in fewer avoidable remakes during breakfast trade.
Marcus FieldOur roasting team uses BarFlow during wholesale onboarding. The tool turns sensory language into practical recipe numbers that wholesale partners can follow on day one.
Priya SantosAnswers based on café operations rather than theory alone.
Yes. Use the same ratio logic, then compare the predicted beverage yield against your actual drawdown and retention pattern.
Coffee grounds hold liquid. Ignoring that variable makes expected beverage weight look better on paper than it does in the cup.
You can. Teams often use it to map dose-per-litre figures before building a cupping table or educational tasting flight.
Usually, yes. Lighter coffees often reward lower strength with more clarity, while darker coffees may need careful restraint to avoid heaviness.
Yes. Many cafés transfer the output directly into brew cards, laminated prep sheets, and staff induction notes.
No. It gives you a disciplined starting point so tasting can focus on refinement rather than guesswork.