Today I made a brew which gave readings of: 1.36, 1.37, 1.38, 1.39, 1.40, 1.41, 1.41, 1.41. Could the change from first to last reading be change in the temperature of the sample? I gave it at least 1 minute in a cup and another minute on the VST before running it, but coming straight from the server it was perhaps it was still too hot.
I tightened the grind on the Comandante with 3 clicks, drawdown was 3:50. Assuming I performed the test correctly, could a lack of measurable and tastewise difference be attributed to technique? I was expecting a bigger difference in taste and TDS with 3 clicks finer. I though the brew had some difference to yesterday, but not significantly.
My experimentation with brewing using an AP or something similar to distribute the water over the V60 and not disturb the bed as much was encouraged by a search for better consistency. I've seen it before too, that I can end up with pretty different drawdown times and taste in the cup using the same recipe. Maybe I'm not careful enough with my technique.
Of course, one sample is far from enough to make conclusions, but every brew is a bit of experience. I might intentionally want to brew to the limits of EY just to see how it taste and if my palate can make sense of it. I find it easier finding a middle spot if I know the outliers.
I will find some articles and read up on grind size, its relation to TDS and taste. I got some holes in my understanding of coffee brewing and it would be interesting to fill some of them. I've got some material on this forum, the Barista Hustle articles and some other stuff.
I've so far been doing the testing right after brewing and since it doesn't take more than a few minutes, I still got a hot brew to enjoy. If I at some point wanted to delay the testing several hours, would the sample still be useable? Maybe I'd need a small container I can put a lid on to prevent water from evaporating? If I made two brews one day and put the first sample in a container, let it sit in a cupboard 4-5 hours, made the second brew later, also putting it in a container, then testing both samples after I was done drinking the second brew, would those tests be reliable? Maybe shake the container a bit first to swirl around any particles that might have settled on the bottom.