{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/63caccebebbb6700114b75d8/63caccf0b2acc30010087ff1?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"#5: To Be or Not To Be A Q-Grader","description":"<p>What is a Q Grader?<br/><br/>In the coffee industry the Q Grader license is often compared to the sommelier exam in wine—this is a shorthand that can be useful to provide some vague ballpark approximation, but over the next 2 podcast episodes we will see how different these tests are.<br/><br/>When I started to get serious about working in the coffee industry I was looking for ways to deepen my knowledge and the Q Grader license seemed like a good place to start. If I wanted to use fermentation techniques to improve coffee quality I would need to learn what the industry considered to be high quality.<br/><br/>Because how can we agree on what is coffee quality, without speaking the same sensory language? <br/>To move the conversation of quality forward, I needed to differentiate between preference (coffees people like) and quality (agreed upon criteria that are independent of preference).<br/><br/>I have definitely scored high quality coffees that were not in my preferred flavor profile—conversely just liking a coffee is not enough to qualify it as a good coffee. It needs to meet quality standards of acidity, structure, body, sweetness and balance. I believe it is important to be able to put our personal preferences in context when evaluating a coffee. <br/><br/>Join me on today&apos;s episode as I share my experience with the Q Grader license. <br/><br/>To take a sensory class from Alexandre Schmitt: <a href='https://www.wineandflavors.com/en/'>https://www.wineandflavors.com/en/</a><br/><br/>Maybe we can revive the hashtag: #letcoffeebecoffee</p>","author_name":"Lucia"}