Aeropress! I actually just bought my brother one because he saw me making coffee one morning and gave me the π€¨ look. I told him to taste it and he exclaimed "damn, that is excellent coffee!" since he's used to pre-made stuff and Keurig pods.
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Yeah, aeropress really is the easiest to make, clean and maintain.
I have had mine and use it all the time for about 15 years now. Still works great. I just rinse the stuff off and leave it in the dish dry rack.
Yep. I love other methods too but aeropress seems to be the easiest method to get a consistently good cup of coffee. It's not the best but that's not what you're looking for everyday.
Itβs a very forgiving method, unlike the moka pot. If you use a scale, and keep all numbers reasonable, the result will be reasonably good too. Finer details donβt really matter very much unless youβre highly trained in tasting finer flavor notes. Most people canβt tell if the temperature, particle size or extraction time was a little bit off.
Moka pot is a very different beast. Itβs very easy to go from delicious coffee to bitter rat poison in a few seconds if youβre not paying attention.
I personally find the Moka pot to be more consistent for me personally, as long as you keep the temperature from getting to high and take it off the heat before the bubbly too hot water comes out it's bang on. With an Aeropress I could never figure out how to make it well consistently.
If you keep on using your moka pot that way, you can get great coffee every time. You just need to keep an eye on it. Unfortunately, itβs very easy to screw it up, whereas with the areropress screwing it up requires borderline criminal negligence. As long as you weigh the grinds and water, AP produces very consistent results for me. If you happen to be an experienced taster, you can probably notice if the grind size, temperature or extraction time is a little bit off.
Iβve tried a bunch of side-by-side comparisons and I can tell you that Iβm not quite that experienced, so I donβt need to worry about the finer details that much. As long as both weights are within a reasonable range, the coffee ends up being really good every time.
The Aeropress is dead simple: I haven't found much of a difference, taste wise, when using 14 to 18.5 grams of beans. I usually stick with 18.5g at a relatively coarse grind size (65 on my DF64 if that means anything to you, it goes from 100 which is really coarse to 1 which is extremely fine, like for Turkish Coffee, well below espresso, which is usually in the 12-15 range), grind my beans fresh, and use boiling water since I largely drink medium or light roasts. I let it brew for 2.5 minutes and it's damn good every time. I've even let it brew for like 7 minutes when I forgot to set a timer, thinking it was going to be disgusting swill and it was only a bit bolder than what I was used to. It's pretty hard to mess up an Aeropress brew IMO.
I have yet to use a Moka Pot, but I have used it's hardcore big brother, the 9Barista Espresso "machine". I don't use it often because it's a bit of a pain in the ass, it takes like 10 minutes to make a single shot of espresso since there's no moving parts (except for the valves) and you have to heat up a huge chunk of steel on a stove. My brother looked it over and said it's essentially a reverse Whiskey still.
That thing can easily go from "this is pretty good" to "OMG WTF happened?!?" pretty quickly since it's damn near impossible to standardize all the variables (temperature, brewing time, grind size, bean type, water quality, etc..). I've had it for like 2 years now and it's pretty rare for me to have a good cup of espresso from one roaster to the next. I use Trade Coffee, so my coffee roasters are different with every bag I get.
YEP.
I've tried multiple different recipes for pour overs and they always come out too acidic or "off". I can't seem to get it to brew long enough while pouring the water, it seems too delicate and easy to screw up. It's pretty hard to screw up an Aeropress brew.
I even bought one for my parents house when I stay there and visit.
I dug my aeropress out of storage not too long ago after like 5 years. it was one of my first coffee tools and I thought I moved on when I got better stuff. I gotta say it's combination of convenience and taste is still unparalleled. It still works great and immediately went back into normal rotation lol
French Press Gang!
Represent!
No filters so there's no ongoing costs and I get them tasty bean oils. Easy to clean, cheap to buy, the French Press does it all, unless you want espresso.
Am I doing something wrong. They are a pain in the ass to clean. Don't get me wrong I love my french press.
I guess it depends on your definition of clean. I use the classic Bodum French press, so your mileage may vary (some cheap presses catch more grounds in the screen area).
I wash the glass carafe like any glassware, and then simply rinse and wipe the press itself under the tap without soap throughout the week. Once every couple of weeks, I'll dismantle the plunger and thoroughly clean it with dish soap to remove any stains.
I'll be that guy. The picture shown is cold drip. Cold brew is when you mix coffee and water and left it in the fridge for x hours.
But really, among the pictures, I'd pick Napoletana simply because I've never had them.
I think they really mean cold brew. The time says 5 hours and maybe the machine is a filter thingy after they cold brew the coffee in the fridge.
Maybe, but 5 hours isnβt much time for a true cold brew. I am leaning towards cold drip, where the ice water slowly drips onto the grounds. In the right setup maybe that would take 5 hours.
Looks like you're right. Does five hours seem anywhere near enough for cold brew, though? I typically aim for around 36 hours.
Iβve never heard of it either.
https://youtu.be/mX_OrQGFio4?si=8sj_GL5sYdmlzckJ
Edit: kinda reminds me of a Vietnamese coffee maker. Just with the integrated boiler.
What's the one that looks like a blocky duck from the side?
That looks like it makes a tasty cup of coffee. Kind of like a cross between a moka pot and a Vietnamese brew.
I let my French press simmer for 20 minutes, as recommended by James Hoffman, but only when I bought properly grinded coffee.
Edit: I just saw the video again and he said 4 + 5 to 8 minutes for a 30gm of coffee and 500gm of water. I usually do the double and maybe for that I was also doubling the time? Lmao, have been so many years doing it like this that I was sure was the way he said it should be done.
Steep, surely? Simmering for 20mins would ANNIHILATE much of the flavor.
Woah wait, 20 minutes? I thought his was like... 10 minutes total afterwards. Although he did also say "you can let it go longer if you'd like" or something I think.
Is there a big difference in flavor here? I grind my own beans fairly coarsely then brew for 4-5 minutes at 200Β°F and that seems pretty ideal.
I'd worry it wouldn't be quite hot enough after waiting 10-20 minutes and the coffee tastes quite flavorful the way I do it, but I'd give it a try! What do you feel is properly grounded coffee for French Press?
What do you feel is properly grounded coffee for French Press?
"Please grind for French press" at the Starbucks barista lmao.
One of each
- Drink coffee
- Bitch about something coffee related
- Continue drinking said coffee
- Repeat tomorrow.
Just stop drinking the burnt non fun part of cocaine.
Just stop drinking the burnt non fun part of cocaine.
I think you had a Freudian slip there, my friend.
CHOOSE YOUR FIGHTER!
I think these days I'm all about (actual) cold brew, but a French press is great when the hot coffee mood strikes. Some day I'd like to have a cold drip setup like a Yama but that's at least half for it's aesthetic value as a sculpture.
I feel like moka pots take longer than 5 minutes, but I hate how they make coffee too so I'm probably not using them right.
I had to check half of these out, as I never heard about them. What's the pint of a Syphon? It just mixes hot water and coffey the same as pouring it in a cup. Seams needlessly overcomplicated.
You spelled Covfefe incorrectly
It's just another way to brew coffee. I found a Wikipedia page about and it appears to have been invented in 1830. Supposedly this method makes an exceptionally clear brew, low suspended solids. Looking at some pictures it doesn't seem that complicated though there are some more artsy versions that make it complicated. If you do pour over coffee as your norm then this is probably a half step longer, but if you just have a machine then this is way more complicated.