Tag: Food & Cooking

  • Coffee: Model Fitting Goodness

    You have seen the response function contours through the stationary point, and you have seen the 3D response function visualizations. You may recall that I have two competing models, one is derived from the experimental data design for the response surface, and the other is all that data and the screening results too. Is either…

  • Coffee: Visualizing the Response Function

    I have been calling my 3D response function a “surface”—which is linguistically feckless at best. Of course, I have some company, the immortal Box, Hunter, and Hunter call the experiment design a response surface method. So note carefully, the response function is not a surface, it completely fills a volume. Naturally, this is hard to…

  • Coffee: Analysis & Results of the Response Surface

    I have executed the experiment design discussed Coffee: Design of the Experiments (Part 2: RSO). This “response surface method” experiment design is carefully crafted to provide the data necessary to fit a formula of the form q = b0T2 + b1t2 + b2r2 + b3Tt + b4tr + b5Tr + b6T + b7t + b8r…

  • Food Storage: Bread

    My oven is gas+electric. The thermostat and ignition are electric, but the heat is from gas. In a power failure my oven would serve well as a cabinet. In the back yard, though, I can cook in a Dutch oven, just like I used to in Boy Scouts. Until last fall I had never seen…

  • Food Storage Requirements

    Storage of food and affiliated supplies could be a real hassle. It could also be expensive. However, if your plan satisfies some basic requirements it will be both serviceable to your family and economical. Possibly it will enhance your daily health…at least if you eat like me. My requirements for a food storage plan are…

  • Coffee: Considering Cold Extraction

    I won’t start the cold extraction experiments until I finish the response surface set, and possibly until I perform some local optimization using the RSO outcome. To warm up, paradoxically, here are some thoughts on cold extraction. The basic process, everywhere I’ve read about it, is to put grounds in room temperature water for a…

  • Coffee: Design of the Experiments (Part 2: RSO)

    In Review The results of my 4-trial fractional factorial experiment (main effects) showed that extraction time is the most important variable, and that temperature and C/W ratio are less important. In the interest of completeness this experiment will not simply vary extraction time, but rather seek to efficiently find the maximum. Lessons from the Screening…

  • On Food Storage

    I post this at the risk seeming paranoid, I’m not. I care deeply about my family’s welfare. Prudence, and my Boy Scout training, compel me to be prepared. Although I’m a food storage novice, I have asked questions not answered in books. My food storage series of posts is about spreading what I learned that…

  • Coffee: The Detestitron

    Please, when you are shopping for a grinder, don’t believe anything you hear (except what I tell you…). A blade grinder is probably as good a grinder as you want to afford. Don’t presume that a burr grinder will automatically produce a more consistent grind. Take, for example, my manual burr machine. Compare the grind…

  • Coffee: Analysis & Results of the Main Effects Study

    I have conducted the trials in the following table. Actual Values Statistics Jargon Trial r (g/ml) t (sec) T (F) r t T Q 1 0.035 10 205 -1 -1 +1 2.5 2 0.075 10 185 +1 -1 -1 3 3 0.035 300 185 -1 +1 -1 4 4 0.075 300 205 +1 +1 +1…