What is Matt Perger's extraction theory?
Matt Perger, Australian barista and founder of Barista Hustle, helped popularise the idea that coffee's resistance to water flow (not time alone) is the key variable in espresso. His 'coarse fast / fine slow' theory highlights that two espressos with identical times but different grind sizes have very different extraction profiles — invalidating purely time-based recipe thinking and orienting toward flow rate and resistance as primary parameters.
Matt Perger is one of the most influential figures in specialty coffee pedagogy since the 2010s. World Barista Champion (WBC 2012 with Sensory Lab), he founded Barista Hustle, a training and scientific analysis site that popularised rigorous extraction approaches with a global audience.
His central theoretical contribution concerns how grind is conceptualised in espresso. Traditional practice targets an extraction time of 25-30 seconds and adjusts grind until that time is reached. Perger argued this approach is misleading: time does not measure extraction, it is the result of the puck's resistance to a given water flow.
The 'coarse fast / fine slow' distinction: two espressos can have exactly the same extraction time (say 28 seconds), one with a coarse grind and high water throughput (high flow rate, more complete extraction but less concentrated), the other with a very fine grind and low throughput (low flow rate, partial extraction but very concentrated). These two espressos have radically different TDS, yields and taste profiles even though the time is identical. Concluding both are 'correct' because they took 28 seconds is therefore wrong.
Perger popularised measuring flow rate (g/s) rather than relying solely on time. He also helped democratise refractometer use and yield calculation as objective extraction metrics. His Barista Hustle courses and articles introduced brew ratio as a central parameter — the ratio between coffee mass and extracted liquid mass — and normalised precision scale use in the barista process.
His thinking also influenced the turbo shot discussion (fast extraction at coarse grind and extended ratio) that became common in specialty cafés in the 2020s. The turbo shot contradicts traditional intuition: a coarser grind with more water, extracted faster, can produce a high extraction yield (> 22%) with less bitterness — precisely because low resistance allows high flow that extracts early soluble compounds without over-extracting late-stage ones.
Coarse fast vs fine slow: theoretical comparison
| Parameter | Coarse fast | Fine slow |
|---|---|---|
| Grind | Coarse | Fine |
| Puck resistance | Low | High |
| Water flow rate (g/s) | High (~3-5 g/s) | Low (~1-2 g/s) |
| Time at identical ratio | Short | Long |
| TDS at identical time | Lower | Higher |
| Potential yield | Higher (less late bitterness) | Variable by time |
| Taste profile | Clean, fruity, less bitter | Dense, concentrated, potentially bitter |
How one Australian barista reframed extraction thinking
Matt Perger's contribution to specialty coffee theory goes beyond the Coffee Compass. As a four-time Australian Barista Champion and 2012 World Barista Championship runner-up, Perger approached coffee with a physicist's instinct for systematisation combined with a chef's sensitivity to flavour. His extraction theory, developed primarily through his work at Sensory Lab and disseminated through Barista Hustle — the online training platform he co-founded — challenged the prevailing idea that extraction is a linear process and proposed instead that different compounds extract at different rates and temperatures simultaneously.
The practical implication of Perger's multi-compound extraction model is that you cannot fully optimise espresso by dialling in a single extraction point. Early in the shot, high-temperature water in contact with the puck surface extracts volatile aromatics rapidly. As the shot progresses, pressure reduces (if the machine allows flow-rate variation), temperature at the puck surface may drop slightly, and the compounds extracted shift toward heavier, less soluble species. A 25-second shot is not a 25-second extraction of a uniform mixture; it is a time-series of different extractions stacked on top of each other. This insight is why pressure profiling — varying extraction conditions deliberately over the shot duration — became theoretically compelling once the instrumentation to implement it became commercially available.
Going deeper
Perger's Barista Hustle training materials, available online since 2016, have trained a generation of specialty baristas globally. The site's free extraction worksheet and water calculator tools have been used by thousands of home brewers to systematise their approach to dialling in. His influence on the specialty coffee educational ecosystem is comparable to Scott Rao's — both men wrote the textbooks that specialty coffee's current generation learned from. Where Rao is methodical and data-driven, Perger is more intuitive and accessible, which explains why his Coffee Compass resonated so widely with working baristas who needed a practical decision tool rather than a theoretical framework.