Coffee Science for CoffeePreneurs by CoffeeMind

This podcast is our playground for discussing how Coffeepreneurs can leverage scientific methods to lead successful businesses which enriches the lives of everybody involved inside and outside the business.When running a business you have a committed purpose. You need to spend your time where it matters for yourself in order to lubricate your organization to deliver the best products to your audience. If you spend time on something that slows you down or misleads you it is precious time wasted. Unfortunately the global coffee roasting education tradition is a big patchwork with more focus on storytelling than scientific simplicity. In CoffeeMind we live and breathe scientific simplicity and the founder, Morten Münchow, has a masters degree in theory of science and more than 5 years of experience teaching research design and statistics at the University of Copenhagen. CoffeeMind's approach to coffee science and sensory science builds on this solid foundation of theory of science and research design in everything we do and we focus on simple and actionable models for skills improvement in product development and quality control.This podcast for our audience who sets aside the time to hang out with us to understand our scientific approach at a deeper level and who intuitively understands that spending this extra time on understanding methodology is rewarded by you making better decisions which make you a better servant for your audience with less time wasted on things that does not matter neither to you nor your audience. We will take you behind the scene on all of the why's and how's of our scientific projects and business practices so that you can implement our way of thinking in your own organization

Coffee Science methodology Episode 13: Evidence Hierarchies - the healthy scientific dialogue and progression model

Welcome to this episode of Coffee Science for CoffeePreneurs! In today's episode, we delve into an essential concept that has been overlooked in our previous discussions on the theory of science, research design, and statistics— the "Evidence Hierarchy." I’m Morten Münchow, and I’m excited to explore how this model can transform our education systems and collaborations with research institutions in the specialty coffee business.HighlightsIntroduction to Evidence Hierarchy: Understand the rela...

06-24
01:15:49

IKAWA: Interview with Andrew Stordy

I metup with Andrew Stordy at their new office in London to see their new factory, plan our upcoming collaboration but primarily to sit down with Andrew and interview him about the IKAWA technology and business history.

03-04
01:12:53

New scientific paper: Passion and Profit in Coffee Roastery Business Models

In this episode, Morten interviews Kristina Vaarst Andersen, the senior author of our recent paper co-published in CoffeeMind. It is a paper covering the interpretation of the data we collected in a research project investigating the dynamics of business models of coffee roasteries. We started this project around eight years ago, and despite struggling with collecting enough data, we have finally gotten an excellent paper written up and published. Unfortunately, Morten did not set the microph...

09-29
29:53

Webinar recording: Acids in brewed coffees - Chemical composition and sensory threshold

In this webinar 4 of the scientists behind the surprising findings in the research project "Acids in brewed coffees: Chemical composition and sensory threshold" present and discuss the results with CoffeeMind's community.Listen toLead author Christina J. Birke RuneSenior researcher Davide GiacaloneSensory Scientist and initiator of the project Ida SteenCoffee expert Morten MünchowAs they discuss the the findings and answers questions from the community.Don't miss out on the offer bundle...

05-18
01:25:29

Why Individual Organic Acids in Coffee are irrelevant

Since 2014 we have been skeptical about the inclusion of teaching, training, and testing coffee professional in individual organic acids. This episode is the story behind how we explored this question and clarified the issue in a scientific project proving this irrelevance in sensory education systems.Ida Steens 4-week sensory training kit: https://coffee-mind.com/product/sensory-training-kit-program/ use the coupon code "podcast" and get the following bonuses for free together with the ...

03-22
27:22

Why Rate of Rise is a bad reference point for optimizing flavour in coffee roasting

As a consultant and trainer, I’m constantly confronted with the concept of Rate of Rise as a superior reference point for improving roast profiles. With our scientific background and strong commitment to only use concepts that are explicitly helpful for coffee roasters to create successful products for customers we have to speak up about the misleading nature of how Rate of Rise often is obsessed by by students all over the world. It is the single most discussed concept that I have to handle ...

01-06
43:46

Coffee Science methodology Episode 12: Peter Giulianos's feedback

In this episode I'm talking to no other than Peter Giuliano who is the Executive Director at Coffee Science Foundation which is an organization planning, organizing and executing research projects in coffee with relevance to SCA's resarch strategy.I was quite involve in both the education and research part of the SCAE and SCAA merger in 2016 but I lost a bit connection to it all in the chaos. Reconnecting with Peter was such a blast for me in this episode and the dialogue with him was a great...

06-17
01:31:20

Aillio Bullet: Interview with the inventor Jonas Lillie

In this episode we are starting a new episode series about a special kind of CoffeePreneurs which is inventors of new roasting equipment. Even though that particular field is extremely technical and involves a lot of industrial-type thinking it is clear that people succeeding with this is as passionate as any green coffee producer, importer, roaster, barista and consumer!I met with Jonas at Frederiksberg in Copenhagen to sit down and have a chat about his life, early days of making the protot...

06-17
01:06:10

Coffee Science methodology Episode 11: Wender Bredie's feedback

In this episode we get Wender Bredies feedback on the CoffeeScience Methodology podcast episode series. Wender is the supervisor of our Industrial PhD project with Ida Steen as executing scientist and we are really honoured to have Wender as a daily guide all things sensory science! I'm so excited to be able to share Wenders deep thinking and wast experience and knowledge with our audience. Wender is such an amazing person both as a sciencetist, scientific entrepreneur, organiser and communit...

06-17
01:20:38

Coffee Science methodology Episode 10: Tim Wendelboe's feedback

Today I had the pleasure to talk to Tim about the Coffee Science methodology podcast series. I have known Tim since 2004 and we have met often over many years at different events and coffee projects and the integrity of his mind and the drived business is a continous inspiration from a coffee quality, business, project/vision management and scientific perspective. Hopefully you find inspiration in how we talk about current state of affairs in the business, education systems and scientific app...

04-08
01:11:23

Coffee Science methodology Episode 9: Andrew Tolley's feedback

In this podcast episode Andrew Tolley comments on the Coffee Science methodology podcast series and offers his perspective on science and education in the coffee communityEpisode also available with video on: https://youtu.be/U1S0bSbfHdwAndrew's profile on Knowledge Hub: https://coffeeknowledgehub.com/en/member/5f0ed078ed8093314d29794c

03-06
01:33:25

Coffee Science methodology Episode 8: Samo Smrke's feedback

Samo Smrke is a well know scientist and educator in the specialty coffee business and in this episode he offers his perspective on coffee science and education and gives feedback on the coffee science methodology podcast series.This episode is also available with video on YouTube: https://youtu.be/3PCDbFH_GLQ

03-06
01:17:50

Coffee Science methodology Episode 7: The SCA Cupping form

Some calculations that shows the fundamental problems of using the SCA Cupping Form as an objective parameter estimate of 'quality'.

02-10
20:23

Coffee Science methodology Episode 6: Clean out the mess of 'subjectivity'

The term 'Subjectivity' is actually a bit problem when it comes to describing sensory methodology but it can be solved.

02-10
16:34

Coffee Science methodology Episode 5: Statistics

In this episode we will look deeper at Bayesianism which is the direction in research design handling the problem of verification and falsification is a really elegant model using probability theory. I'm explaining it using the example of a green coffee experiment.

02-10
27:06

Coffee science methodology Episode 4: Empiricism and Critical Rationalism

In this episode I zoom in on Empiricism and Critical Rationalism which I consider the most useful foundation for the concept 'objectivity'

02-04
29:58

Coffee science methodology Episode 3: Simplicity with Occam's razor

In this episode Occam's razor is introduced which is an important foundation for a good theory and examples of where this is not applied correctly is explained

02-04
11:20

Coffee science methodology Episode 2: Out of the cave with Plato

In this episode we will go all the way back to Plato to discuss what a good theory looks like if it is to serve a community and not mislead

02-04
11:57

Coffee Science methodology Episode 1: The vision

This is the first episode of a series going through theory of science and research design to support the global coffee community with solid ground when building theories and practices for education, product development and quality control. This is a pretty long and deep series of podcast and only the most patient and eager listener will stay through it all and reap the fruits of their patience. We will provide some very specific guidelines and also be completely honest when going through all ...

02-03
01:00:36

Temperature Midway Point

The Midway Temperature Point has been spreading as a concept the last couple of years and as far as I know I came up with the concept (as I mention it is so simple that it might have been 'invented' by others without me knowing it) for a specific purpose and I see it used outside this purpose which I think is misleading. This podcast sheds light of where I think the concept came from and how it is sometimes slightly misunderstood (if my understanding is correct).In the podcast I refer to this...

12-23
08:44

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