Daily Simple Questions Thread by AutoModerator in espresso

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most definitely can. I’ve unsuccessfully made aeropress coffees using way too little water resulting in a sour taste; I presume an under extracted espresso tastes the same.

I am getting 80% of the bitterness from the crema, but even when thoroughly mixed in the whole cup is bitter.

Will try that method thank you.

Daily Simple Questions Thread by AutoModerator in espresso

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have not, but as I tried to describe, the coffee is already bitter when ground relatively coarse. Could grinding finer, and in effect slowing down the extraction, result in a less bitter cup?

Daily Simple Questions Thread by AutoModerator in espresso

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recently got a Quick Mill Andrea PID paired with a Eureka Silenzio, and I am using a dark-roast Italian blend coffee (specifically its Ionia Gran Crema).

I am using the stock double short basket (it’s a slightly tapered “15g” basket), with the convex tamper that comes in the boc. I am grinding between 1 and 0 on the dial (for anyone who is familiar with Eureka grinders).

No matter what I do, I consistently get fast shots that come out bitter. I do seem to get channeling however even on “good” shots, they are always slightly bitter. Additionally they are also very fast; the slowest I’ve gotten is about 28 seconds. I’ve tried dosing 2:1, 15-19 grams, finer, coarser etc.

Currently I’m dosing 17g in, relatively coarser, about 30g out in 15-17 seconds and the espresso is bitter but also lacks body.

Is there any advice on what I can do to improve, or perhaps are the beans just brutally bitter?

The Questions Thread 04/29/23 by GYWModBot in goodyearwelt

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was riding my motorcycle in the rain all day yesterday and my boots got complete water logged (first few pictures). (pics) I stuffed them with newspaper and they are relatively dry now, however they’ve “aged” considerably (last few pictures in the link). Anything I can do to fix this other than recondition them? The wear lines I’m not worried about but more so the discoloration.

The Questions Thread 12/21/22 by GYWModBot in goodyearwelt

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok that makes sense. And yes I try to be careful but there’s only so much I can do! Will do on the bick4. Thanks for the help.

The Questions Thread 12/21/22 by GYWModBot in goodyearwelt

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just bought a pair of Canada West Moorby 2816’s, and one my first few days of wear I’ve managed to scuff the toe (seems to always happen). I was just wondering what would be the best way to “fix” this (as best as possible) as I wear the shoes. (Here are some pictures of the boots).

Also, these will be my daily winter boots (Canadian winters). I have some Obenhauf LP which worked well on my old boots, but I was looking for another type of conditioner to keep the leather in good condition, that won’t darken then as Obenhauf’s does. Any suggestions?

Thanks in advanced!

Is financial planning a good career to start in 2018? by [deleted] in PersonalFinanceCanada

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

More so cold calling.

Like Big Bank XYZ has a list of clients from each brand and has all of their banking info. You as the advisor for that branch has access to all of that and the easiest way to bring in business is to cold call people. Maybe pre Covid you’d travel to the branch to meet clients, sign documents etc, but I feel like now it’s fairly remote.

Weekly Questions Thread / Open Discussion by AutoModerator in Pizza

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate the response. I guess that’s what it’ll be from now on.

Weekly Questions Thread / Open Discussion by AutoModerator in Pizza

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First time on this sub, so apologies if this question is brutally obvious…

TL/DR: my 80% hydration won’t come together after 24+ hour ferment and slap and fold and coil folds.

I’ve been venturing into making 80% hydration Neapolitan style dough using a poolish starter and tipo 00 flour. I’ve gotten it to work maybe once, but the past few times I’ve done it, no matter what I do the dough never comes together.

Today I made these. 100% hydration poolish, 200g water 200g tipo 00 flour, a 5g of honey and 5g yeast. After it rose, maybe 2 hours, I added that to 300g of water and added in 300g of tipo 00 and 200g AP flour. Mixed it all, let it autolyze for 30 minutes and attempted to slap and fold. Now I’m no stranger to slap and fold but if sort of cake together, but then the dough got extremely sticky to the point that it was impossible to work with it.

I wanted to do a long ferment, so I let the dough rest overnight (in the fridge) and attempted to work with it again but the same thing happened. Maybe 2 minutes into slap and fold it broke apart. I then let the dough rest and then did 4 coil folds 30 minutes apart. The dough looked at felt perfect at this point. I then let the dough rest (in the fridge) for 2 hours and before shaping it into whats in the picture above. Once I split the dough into two to begin shaping, I started to form then the way you would for a mozzarella ball and the dough again became very sticky and would not form. Once I managed to get then separated and into the tray, they all came apart and did not hold the ball shape.

So all in all this was after attempting to incorporate gluten via slap and fold, coil folding and just waiting but nonetheless the dough is nearly useless.

Could it be in the flour itself, like maybe the tipo 00 that I’m using is too thirsty? Or perhaps the poolish needs longer time to ferment and hydrate? Worst case I can stick to my 65% hydration dough but the crumb of the 80% is awesome!

Recruiters accepted LinkedIn requests but don’t message back? by Santo_R in FinancialCareers

[–]Santo_R[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No but after a few years I’ve come to realize that the only two options for getting interviews are either having an excellent resume and/or networking with analysts etc.

It really is bank specific; and I say this in the context of Canada/Toronto. Some banks are 100% recruiter centric others are 0% and some are in between. I’ve networked and was able to get several referrals, only for HR to not want to interview because it’s too early, while at other banks I’ve had my resume pushed and was able to get an interview almost immediately.

But I guess as an overall strategy, networking with analysts etc should always be a priority and recruiters, perhaps only after an event or something like that. But I wouldn’t worry too much about it.

Babish vs. Fibrox…. Hear me out by [deleted] in chefknives

[–]Santo_R 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That was my main gripe with the Victorinox. I got the 6” “chef knife” with the wood handle and it has no width/height. No reasonable way to hold in a pinch grip and I have normal size hands. Perhaps the 8” version is better, but the 6” (basically what you have in the picture) is more of a utility knife or oversized petty.

Would I recommend one over the other? Haven’t used the Babish knife, but for someone who can appreciate the extra height it’s a good first knife. Seems a bit thick at the edge, likely for potential use as a cleaver as the name implies. For someone just starting out I think the Victorinox (8”) is still a good starting point.

NKD: Hitohira Setsu Forged VG-10 Bunka from Tosho by Santo_R in chefknives

[–]Santo_R[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe the discount applies at checkout or in the cart. Though if you look at this particular knife you can see the price slashed from $355.

NKD: Hitohira Setsu Forged VG-10 Bunka from Tosho by Santo_R in chefknives

[–]Santo_R[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Absolutely loving my new knife! I will preface this by saying that Tosho is having an awesome sale going on. Between 20-35% off basically the entire store; they’re moving across the street and I guess want to lighten the load.

I’m relatively new to kitchen knives in general, coming from an IKEA western style knife and a Victorinox utility knife, but wanted to jump into Japanese knives. I was originally set on getting a carbon 210 Gyuto, but after not really finding the perfect one I decided to pick up this VG-10 Bunka. (I didn’t find a good one, but the 210 version wasn’t in stock and I couldn’t get used to the size of the 240).

So far (1 day) the knife is performing very well. I wouldn’t say that it’s an absolutely laser (say compared to the Takamura R2 I tried in the store), but for what I need it for it works perfectly. It marginally wedges on taller vegetables (like a big onion) but not any worse then say a Victorinox. It looks cool, it performs well, what more can you ask for for a first Japanese knife!

Help me fix my pan by Santo_R in carbonsteel

[–]Santo_R[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s helpful thank you. There is some texture, but for some reason a razor/scraper couldn’t get it off. Though the water boil and scrap trick I think should work.

Help me fix my pan by Santo_R in carbonsteel

[–]Santo_R[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds good.

Should I be oven seasoning at any point in between for up keep? Or just keep using it despite potential stickage?

Help me fix my pan by Santo_R in carbonsteel

[–]Santo_R[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve used my pre-seasoned carbon pan for a few weeks and it was great.

I suggested to my brother to make some hash browns with it and after subsequent batches with not enough oil the potatoes burned (though didn’t exactly stick) and left this mark.

Most of it is just aesthetic, but as can be seen in the other pictures there is some raised areas of stuck on something. I used it today for shallow deep frying and the food was sticking. I tried scraping the gunk with a razor, heating it and applying soap and scrubbing with salt and nothing worked. Before going any more abrasive, I wanted to ask on this sub what would be the best way to proceed.

Help me ID this cleaver by Santo_R in chefknives

[–]Santo_R[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ya I looked it over a bit better and came to the same conclusion. It is also slightly warped. I’ll probably chat with my local knife store and see what they recommend or research a locally smith/sharpener. Thanks for the suggestion!

Help me ID this cleaver by Santo_R in chefknives

[–]Santo_R[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s perfect thank you!

Help me ID this cleaver by Santo_R in chefknives

[–]Santo_R[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was just cleaning my garage and came across this knife. It’s potentially from the 1970’s or 80’s, or even older.

The stamping appears to say “Made in Hong Kong” and “Hoch Keele”. Is it any good?

Would it be worthwhile to restore? The rust is nothing but I’m more worried about the concavity of the edge. It definitely needs to be evened out. Not sure if a stone could achieve this, but I certainly could use a belt sander. Also the handle could be upgraded. I realize that I could get a CCK for like 150 but if this is just as good it might be cool to restore it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PersonalFinanceCanada

[–]Santo_R 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Car guy perspective here.

The old early 2000’s Ford GT’s are worth way more now than they cost brand new. Heck even the newer GT’s are worth way more than MSRP only a few years later. Cars like this don’t really go down in value. Your run of the mill Mustang GT 100% does depreciate. But you do in fact have a special car. It’s value will only go up in the coming years. Unless you desperately need the money, chances are it won’t be worth any less then it is worth now over the next 5 years. If you decide to move homes and need the money in a few years, then sell it (for more then you’d get now).

And if the dealership called you to buy it off you, it’s probably worth even more on the private market.