What is Channeling in Espresso – and why does it occur?
If someone asks me why two seemingly identically prepared espressos can taste completely different, my answer is almost always: channeling.
Channeling is one of the most common causes of fluctuating espresso quality, yet it is often underestimated. Many baristas intensely focus on grind size, brewing temperature, or extraction time, while the actual cause is often already hidden within the coffee puck.
What does Channeling mean?
Channeling refers to when the water, during extraction, does not flow evenly through the entire coffee bed but instead forms preferred paths or channels.
Water always seeks the path of least resistance. If there is an area of lower density or a small void within the puck, more water will flow through that exact spot than through the other areas.
The result: A portion of the coffee is over-extracted, while other areas are barely extracted.
Why does Channeling occur?
The causes are diverse. In practice, however, I consistently observe the same triggers:
- Uneven grind distribution
- Clumping in the grinds
- Uneven tamping
- Ill-fitting tamper size
- Inhomogeneous particle distribution
- Errors in puck preparation
- Unfavorable basket geometries
Modern precision baskets, in particular, react significantly more sensitively to such errors than classic standard baskets.
How to recognize Channeling?
With a naked portafilter, channeling can often be observed directly.
Typical signs include:
- Water jets emerging from the sides
- Splashes during extraction
- Uneven start of extraction
- Uneven flow
- Widely fluctuating shot times
However, even without a naked portafilter, there are indications:
- Suddenly sour shots
- Changing taste profiles
- Same settings, different results
Why is Channeling becoming more important with modern setups?
The more precise grinders, baskets, and machines become, the more visible errors in preparation become.
A modern IMS or VST basket can deliver excellent results, but at the same time, it demands significantly higher accuracy in puck preparation.
While older systems concealed some errors, modern precision components ruthlessly expose every weakness in the workflow.
How can Channeling be reduced?
From my experience, the following measures are particularly effective:
- Use a high-quality coffee grinder
- Minimize clumping
- Intentionally use WDT
- Choose the appropriate tamper size
- Tamp straight and reproducibly
- Develop a consistent workflow
Furthermore, modern developments are increasingly concerned with homogenizing the coffee bed itself. Ultimately, it is not only the density of the puck but also the distribution of individual coffee particles that determines the later water flow.
My Conclusion
Anyone who wants to permanently improve their espresso quality should learn to understand channeling. In most cases, the cause is not the machine but small irregularities within the coffee bed.
The more homogeneously the particles are distributed, the more evenly the water can extract. From my perspective, this is where the future of espresso preparation begins.