This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
AeroPress
Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
In 2012 I got the aeropress after learning about it on the subreddit. Little did I know that it would spark not only a passion for coffee, but a span of memories. Today, those memories came flooding back.
When I was in a deep dark depression, my buddy in college came down to my room and asked me what this thing called the aeropress was. I taught him how to use it and he pulled me out of it that day. We shared a cup of coffee.
When I broke up with my ex, she had an aeropress and we deliberated over which plunger was ours. I still think we swapped.
When my brother came over with artificially flavored Christmas coffee, I hid my dissatisfaction when he asked me to make it with the aeropress. I think I turned him off Christmas coffee.
Today, I put my AeroPress in my luggage, and upon opening it up a crack deeming it useless was staring me right in the face. Goodbye longtime friend, you served me well. On to the clear one with new memories and fresh coffee.
Here's to you ol friend. Thanks for the memories. ☕️
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
This is just another aeropress appreciation thread.
Roughly 11 years ago, I finished high school and moved in to the city to start university. I was mentioning to my sisters husband, who was a chef and had introduced me to high quality coffee, that I was thinking I would get an aeropress as it seemed like a great choice for a student living on their own. He responded by gifting me his old aeropress, as he had just ordered a V60. I'm not sure how long he had used it before giving it to me, but it was quite discolored (this was one of the earlier ones with clear plastic), and was clearly a bit worn. I didn't mind, it worked great and I got it for free! I've used that aeropress probably two times a day on average for the last 11 years. Well, a few weeks back it happened, it finally broke. The flared base of the plunger broke of. Not fully mind you, so I can still technically use it, but it is a bit annyoing to unplunge now.
Well, I happened to be turning 30 and my wife was hinting I should put something a bit decadent on my wish list. So I pulled the trigger and wished for a brand new aeropress, which I got. For some reasons, I didn't have a chance to use it before to day, but now it is official - long live the new aeropress! Might it also last me more than a decade and thousand upon thousands of lovely cups of coffee, just like its predecessor.
Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
As mentioned in , Ep4 of the AeroPress series will cover accessories as well as alternative filtration options (metal, cloth etc) and be out early next week.
The series will end with Episode 5, in which I hope to answer the last of the urgent questions people have. So ask away!
What would really help me is if you upvote similar questions to the one you want to be answered (otherwise it could get messy and I can't see what the broader group want as clearly).
Go for it: what do you want to know about the AeroPress that I haven't answered yet?
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
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Normal/Inverted - Any, normal preferred.
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Preheat - No, not necessary.
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Rinse Filter - yes, not necessary. rinsing is necessary with brewing inverted, to make the paper stay in place.
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Roast - any, but grind size and brew-time changes accordingly.
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GrindSize - Fine.
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Ratio - 12:200.
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Water Temp - 80 or 100, prefer 100.
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Bloom - no, not necessary.
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Stirring - Swirl before press. (Necessary for coarser brews).
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Settle Bed - yes, 30 Sec before press.
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Brew-time - 120s / 240s / 480s - directly proportional to grind size. The longer steep the better.
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Press - press gently.
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Hiss - press through it, will yield a little more coffee.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
I’m a regional AeroPress 2nd place holder (losing against the three time current regional champion), and lost in the first round against our current national AeroPress champion in the national championship. When I’ve spoken about my experience it had some interest, so I thought it might be a good thing to write a little summary of my findings.
An AeroPress Championship is a competition in which you brew a coffee with an AeroPress, normally at the same time as two other competitors, which then normally three judges taste, without communicating with each other, and then choose the best-tasting one, by pointing to the winning cup. The name of the contestant is written under the cup, and switched places before the judges taste them, so there should be no way of knowing who’s cup is which.
There are three rules that must be observed:
You can’t use more than 18 grams of ground coffee. You must present a coffee of at least 150ml. You have to brew and present it within 5 minutes. You can grind and heat your water before the timer starts. The beans for the competition will normally be ones from the organizers or sponsors of the competitions. They are the same for everyone. They will be made available for the participants 10 days before the competition, either for pick-up or by sending them to you. You’ll get one bag of 250 grams of beans, and another bag of the same size the day of the competition.
In those 10 days, you can experiment with the beans all you want. Keep in mind that if you use 18 grams of beans each time, you can only brew 13 cups, so be mindful of how you use the beans.
For me, the best strategy was first picking up a well-renowned good water for coffee in my country. You can try different waters and do a cupping first if you really want to nail the water first, but it takes a lot of effort (you have to brew each water independently), and I don’t think you get much out of it in the beginning.
From there use a well-known to you recipe that you normally use for the AeroPress. For me, it was the James Hoffman Method:
12g beans 200ml water 100º C water 2:00 shake, 2:30-3:00 press. Now you have a baseline for what it tastes like, and you can experiment. The good thing is that all variables are defined and there is somewhat of a golden zone.
Water: You should look for a well-renowned water for being good for coffee in your country. Other than that, I know that Calcium, Magnesium, and alcalinity are important for coffee extraction, but not enough to tell you the exact proportions, sorry. You can go as deep on this as want. You can use a Britta or BWT Filter, you can buy water packets from specialty coffee vendors, or you can create your own with distilled water, and then calculate the quantities of sodium bicarbonate and magnesium sulfate you need to add to get the quality in the water that you want. This will give you very marginal gains in terms of taste, much much less than having a good recipe, so I’d say that unless you know what you are doing, at most buy a few easily available and well regarded waters, and with your recipe determined, try which one tastes best.
Temperature: Most recipes recommend brewing between 80º C to 100ºC, so try 3 brews changing only temperature, 90ºC, 80ºC, and 100ºC. I recommend trying with 90ºC first because it is more likely to being close to optimal, so you’ll have a decent reference to start from. The generally accepted wisdom is that darker roasted coffee is preferably brewed at a lower temperature, and lighter roasts at almost boiling temperatures. I’d say lately the lighter roasts being better at boiling points affirmation has been more in contention, especially with experimental fermentation coffee. In any case, taste is king.
Brew time: Most recipes start from at least 1 minute. Since you have a 5-minute time limit to make and serve the coffee, I would recommend not brewing more than for 4 minutes. Keep in mind that you’ll also have to prepare the AeroPress, pour the water, and cool down the coffee in that time. Technically the longer you brew it, the sweeter the coffee will be, but extraction can be sped up with stirring. Stirring is less likely to be consistent brew to brew so be wary of that, since you’ll be going round through round with the same recipe, and its a good thing to be consistent.
Grind size: Start with the grind size recommended for the AeroPress for your grinder, and go finer until you notice astringency (it dries out your mouth) and go one step coarser. That’ll be the perfect grind setting for you. They’ll most likely offer you a few different grinders during the competitions, but if you don’t know the perfect setting for your recipe on that grinder I would refrain from using them, even if they are much more sophisticated, because it’ll most likely produce different effects on your recipe. It has been said that grinding twice, first very coarse and then those ground beans to the final desired size may be beneficial, as it may be a way to reduce ultrafines and create a more even grind, and the current AeroPress World Champion has certainly done so, but I do not think that she won solely because of that.
Proportions of coffee and water: This is a difficult one. The AeroPress can hold at most about 300ml, and that would be pushing it. If you brew normally some of that will bypass the coffee without actually extracting much, which will the reduce the strength of the coffee compared to using the inverted method. This is not necessarily a bad thing just something to account for when trying recipes. Since you can use only 18g or less and the AeroPress can only hold about 300ml you have two upper limits here, which coincidentally makes for a somewhat golden zone ratio, as that would be 1 part of beans to 16 parts of water (also normally expressed as 1:16) You can manipulate it by using more water after brewing but it is a good reference to have. I’ve seen people go as low as 1:20 and as strong as 1:10. So that would be 10 grams and 20 grams of ground beans for 200ml of water, respectively. It has been said that bland coffees benefit from using stronger ratios, and flowery and experimentally processed coffees from milder concentrations to let the smells and taste develop, but I’d say it is very bean specific. Just determine it according to your own taste.
Filters: According to the official rules you can use any kind of filter as long as you use the normal filter cap from the AeroPress itself. You can use official paper filters from AeroPress itself, the fairly recently produced official metal Aeropress filter, or a cloth one if you want. I’ve also seen competitors using two paper filters at the same time, and Aesir filters, which are a premium type of filter said to provide more clarity.
Other considerations: Additionally, it is important to keep in mind that the judges will taste the coffee short after brewing it, so if it is still hot, it will not be judged favorably. I have an external thermometer so I’ve determined that the optimal serving temperature for me was 65ºC, which I managed to reach quickly by switching the coffee from mug to mug a few times to get it to cool down quickly, because the heat of the coffee will dissipate in the cold mug. Optimal drinking temperature has been said to be 60ºC, so I keep it a little higher because I don’t know how long the judges will take to cup the brewed coffee. Keep in mind that the judges will base their judgments of your coffee by sipping the coffee (loudly) from a spoon, much like cupping, so the whole brew won’t be judged as such, just those sips. Make sure you optimize taste for this, then.
While calibrating your recipe keep in mind to only change one variable at a time, and in order to do comparative tasting I would actually recommend using more than one AeroPress if you can to keep the brewed coffee temperatures similar at the same time.
On the day of the competition I’ve seen people spread out their beans to filter out defect beans which can improve flavor. I’ve also seen the Kruve and other sifters being used to filter out the ultrafines after grinding, as they have a tendency to overextract and taste bitter. If you have it and want to use it do so by all means, but otherwise I wouldn’t even entertain the thought.
Final thoughts: I would like to clearly state that I only wrote this out to put a method to my own process of optimizing a recipe for a specific bean as a learning process, and that the most important part of participating in an AeroPress competition is having fun, getting to know other people that have the same passion as you, make new friends and grow as a person. At the end of the day, you can think you have the best recipe ever, but if it is not according to the tastes of the judges there is nothing you can do, so relax and have fun. You are likely to see people who have been years in the industry with very expensive tools, but don’t let that intimidate you, because in my experience they are as likely to win as the newcomers if their recipe is more according to the tastes of the judges. Everybody there will share the same passion as you for the beverage, so take the opportunity to make some friends in the industry.
I hope this text gives you a little bit of direction in the search for the perfect AeroPress recipe! Also, feedback is extremely welcome!
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
Let’s clear this first, I like James’s AeroPress recipe a lot, it’s my favourite AeroPress recipe, it makes really good coffee.
But recently I decided to make his AeroPress Espresso, the result is actually quite amazing, the flavour profile, taste and body is very good. This has become my main way of making AeroPress now, hardly every make any other type anymore, you have have it as a small shot or you can dilute it and have like 300ml glass, which doesn’t taste like a americano but like a normal AeroPress cup.
Link to AeroPress Espresso Recipe:
/r/Coffee is back - for now - and talking about itself, in addition to coffee.
I’m having a bit of difficulty finding the Prismo in Toronto. My usual more sophisticated kitchen stores an coffee shops with equipment don’t carry it. I usually just go to Amazon but, strangely, it isn’t on amazon.ca. The site says the Flow Control Filter is the most popular choice. Has anyone tried it? Or even compared it in action with a Prismo?
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
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This is the place for those with a common love and interest; brewing coffee with the AeroPress! Whether you're an AeroPress newbie or a seasoned veteran presser, this is the place for you to share your knowledge, recipes and information about using the AeroPress.
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Discussion forum for members of the community, regarding videos or other things created by James
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Welcome to r/espresso, the place to discuss all things espresso-related. Please make sure to read the rules before posting. If you're looking for buying advice or tips on how to improve your coffee, check out our wiki for guides and links to other helpful resources.
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Aww, cripes. I didn't know I'd have to write a description. How many words is that so far, like a hundred? Soooo, yeah. Mildly interesting stuff. Stuff that interests you. Mildly. It's in the name, ffs.
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For practical, durable and quality made products that are made to last. **Reminder:** Please use the search function before making a request. The Mission Statement: http://www.reddit.com/r/BuyItForLife/comments/jtjuz/bi4l_mission_statement_rules_etc/
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For those who love their Cafelat Robot manual espresso machines. Share your tips, ask for advice, or post your god shots. Be sure and read our Start Here and Recommended Equipment posts.
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