- Edited
LMSC I use the method Doram mentions above, an extra dot at “0” when set at 50, so you add your new number to 50 (44+50=94).
“Clarity” is too vague a term and has too many other potential confounding factors. I don’t believe conicals are not good for brewing light roasts as a blanket statement, if it is so, why do you see so many hand grinders at World Brewers Cup?
Coffee ground on the Niche is generally as nice as coffee I grind on the Wilfa flat, at equivalent settings the Wilfa can be a little more silty, the Niche a little brighter/sour (does that make the coffee clearer, or not?)
A few years back the SCAA did grinder study,160 coffee professionals served filter coffee in a double blind test test couldn’t say whether a flat or conical grinder was used. Only after knowing in further tests did they attribute drier flavours to flat and brighter flavours to conical.
Do I believe it’s possible that some grinders with certain characteristics might be able to provide unusual clarity (once the attribute is defined, at present it isn’t, much like “astringency”)? Maybe, but I’m not hunting the Loch Ness monster, or Bigfoot, I expect typical grinders to deliver acceptable results & work flow is important to me.
I tend to think that if as much naval gazing was applied to roasting as it is to grinders & water make up, we’d all be enjoying great tasting filter coffee more frequently. The last 3 bags of light filter roast I have bought were darker than some Nespresso coffee.