Hiya, just quickly wondering how people store their coffee? Mine is in a tin box I got second hand, cos I thought it looked nice. Any rules regarding storing grounded coffee? I don't store much at the time, it's just if I grind a little too much and what not. I'm assuming the general thumb rule for this is to store it in a closed container.
Feel free to share pics of your containers š»
Edit: My grinder doesn't allow for selective ground mode, but a new grinder is defo on the list! Seems like keeping them as beans for as long as possible - is the way.
Iām no coffee connoisseur- but wouldnāt storing the coffee beans in ground form be more prone to static build up, humidity, etc etc than just storing the beans in whole form?
Oxidation (and other processes) do affect coffee flavor, and grinding it up increases surface area / exposure to oxygen, speeding that up. Putting it in the fridge seems to also worsen flavor, but the freezer seems to be pretty reliable. Here's a nice video discussing this by a weird coffee person (James Hoffmann): Should you freeze coffee beans?
You literally said in your comment āIād have to assumeā
And so when someone points out that your assumption is not only false, but tries to point out that your rationale isnāt logical, you take it as a personal attackā¦
Chill out dude. Weāre talking about coffee holding techniques ffs and youāre acting like I called you a moron. I even pointed out in my comment that I wasnāt a connoisseur and posed it as a question.
You came in with a false assumption, literally just based on a stats post you likely found after googling. Talk about derailingā¦ you took a conversation that wouldāve been about the science of storing coffee and turned itā¦ into a discussion about statistics??
Hey my bad. Theres no personal attack here. I interpreted your response as rude, because your equivocation seems to ignore that I acknowledged oxidation and/or static as relevant factors like you suggested, and instead responds to a false reading of a silly position I don't hold. I just don't think they're that significant, as in, storing your leftover unused grounds in a tin for a short time after grinding too much (read: a method of controlling oxidation) probably doesn't deserve pushback.
If the majority's coffee is presumably more oxidised than OP's; I don't think it's reasonable to assume that this is simply due to their collective ignorance about oxidation. And with that context, I don't think it's reasonable to answer a question about storing ground coffee with, "don't do it". Seems very Reddit. I doubt OP is grinding more than they need on purpose. But maybe you just missed/skipped that part of my comment. Either way, I'm open to my assumption being shown as incorrect, should anyone address it.