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thanks for your reply , and i asked that question because i see some barista dont tamp the portafilter and got great espresso
i found that words :
Adequate tamp
While some people claim tamping your espresso ground coffee isn't necessary - let the dispersion screen (that screen in your brewhead of your machine) do the tamping - I say this is false and bad advice. So do most modern day espresso experts - tamping is a variable you must control on your own to get consistently great shots. Don't give up the variable. One noted expert, David Schomer, recommends a 30 pound tamp. The book Espresso Chemistry, by Andrea Illy, also recommends a suitable (and heavy) tamping for proper brewing controls.
How do you know what 30 pounds of pressure is? Take your tamper and portafilter to the bathroom, and tamp on the scale - see what 30 lbs of pressure is like. Why tamp at 30 pounds? 20lbs or less allows too much water to find a "path of least resistance" around your grinds, instead of fully saturating it. The result is less extraction from your grounds. More than 30 pounds shouldn't be necessary, unless you're compromising for a coarse grind (see below). Note, Schomer's commentary is based on commercial grade machines, but is a good rule for home machines as well.
Could the baristas that you've observed been using one of those machines?
There are automatic machines that grind, tamp, and brew the espresso, and all the barista has to do is push a button.
I have found the actual tamp pressure to be less important than simply being consistent with your tamping. Try to keep all variables as consistent as possible and make changes with the grinder and/or dose. I will tamp less if I can feel the coffee is a bit too fine, but if too coarse no amount of added tamp pressure is going to compact the puck enough to slow the flow down within reason.
I personally would never let the screen do the tamping for me as you need a bit of head space for puck expansion and proper water flow for total puck saturation.