CoffeeSoldier

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[–] CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Neat. Interesting it looks like company is "kono" but dripper says "konos" on it. Assume the 41 can fit a Hario 03 size filter then? Any opinion on if the 41 can brew a single cup as well as the smaller size version?

While the v60 has a decent amount of bypass, I'm not sure it's excessive. It's a popular criticism of it, but it brews a better cup in my own hands at least than some lower bypass brewers (I've thrown in the towel trying to get an ideal cup with the mugen for example).

Agree, the look of it does make we want to use it more! I'm definitely guilty of using, creating, and propagating, some somewhat complex switch recipes. For me the thing that makes these accessible is using a timer app that is programmed specifically for a given recipe that just walks me through the steps and timing without the need to plan or think ahead.

[–] CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I'm not familiar with this one. What do you like about it?

[–] CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works 4 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Not to harp but just to address those concerns. I've had mine for about a year now. Just double checked-No scratches. You can get away with just a rinse at least 9/10 times, probably more. It doesn't spot much at all, I throw it in the dishwasher just every once in awhile out of obsession not because it's stained or producing off-taste. Dishwasher is a pretty harsh environment and it still looks like new. The fins are replaceable for a few bucks too if you ever did get a scratch. I can understand wanting to wait for a different version, but I don't have a sense this is very popular and I'd be surprised if Hario released it in a different material any time soon. Consider treating yourself to one for a birthday or something. In case anyone is wondering, the fins are PCT resin and base is bpa free polypropylene.

[–] CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works 6 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

I said my bit about the plastic, so not going to try any harder to change minds.
I think a metal version might end up closer to a weapon. I bet you could find a glass blower to do a custom glass version which would be pretty neat.

38
The Second Best v60 (infosec.pub)
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works to c/coffee@lemmy.world
 

There are a lot of v60 options out there and a lot of opinions that can boil down to some pretty nuanced preferences. In my book the very best v60 will always be the v60 03 Switch. It’s an absolute workhorse brewer that can give you a standard delicious v60 pour over or the next morning a totally different perspective on the same beans with an immersion brew. The real fun of specialty coffee brewing is experimentation though, and that’s where the Switch shines as hybrid brewing options with the Switch are matched perhaps only by the plethora of tweaks you can make with the Aeropress. If you were to only have one pour over brewer – this would be my recommendation. But… I can’t in good conscience recommend having only one pour over brewer.
It’s too often discounted as a novelty, but the Suiren (water lily) v60 is more than a display piece. I don’t think we should overlook the appearance though.

Looks: The most popular and lauded v60 is the simple plastic version, but I’m going to go ahead and say that IMO, it’s kinda ugly. Having that thing out on your countertop might signal to specialty coffee geeks that you are serious about coffee, but to most it just looks like a cheap plastic piece of junk. The Suiren is visually enticing, it’s eye-catching, customizable (you can replace the tabs with different colors – but I’m partial to the stock black and white), and just plain sparks joy. I love boring guests by going on about specialty coffee in the hopes I might find an occasional convert. People are much more likely to ask questions about your Suiren than any other v60 on your shelf.

Taste: I’m probably not winning many people over here talking about looks though. The Suiren has a bit of a reputation of sacrificing taste for appearance and that’s what I want to address here. I disagree with this notion outright. One of the biggest criticisms I’ve heard is that the open architecture allows excessive heat dispersion and that this cooler brewing temp results in a more “mellow” cup. I don’t want mellow. I want flavor in my coffee, and lots of it. Personally, I haven’t noticed a difference in the taste between this, a plastic v60, or my glass v60. Heat retention in brewers is complicated as material around your wet filter can both insulate and conduct heat away. I wanted to see some hard data on what the Suiren was doing from a temperature perspective.

Here’s my experimental design:

  1. Pour 150ml of 210F water as a preheat into each brewer (Cafec Abaca filter) and measure cup temp.
  2. Empty cup and pour a second 150ml 210F flush through brewer. Measure cup temp.
  3. Brew 300ml (20g) pulsed (Tetsu 4:6 recipe) med fine grind immediately after above prep. Measure coffee temp in cup.

Results: Glass v60: Cold Wash – 166F , Hot Wash – 183F, Coffee – 164F

Suiren: Cold Wash – 173F, Hot Wash – 184F, Coffee – 163F

This confirmed my suspicion – despite the Suiren having an open design, at least compared to a preheated glass v60, it’s not losing any more heat. In fact, if you didn’t do an adequate pre-rinse, the Suiren appears to be more forgiving in that sense. I’m guessing an enclosed plastic v60 would produce higher numbers across the board, but I hope this at least convinces you that the Suiren should not be singled out as a massive heat dissipater due to its open appearance.
The other criticism of the Suiren is that it’s a “maximum bypass brewer” v60s in general are higher bypass, but I’m skeptical about this claim as well. Open doesn’t necessarily mean it’s leaking a lot more fluid around the bed. The channels on a traditional closed v60 allow for capillary action and can actually pull fluid away from the paper. Suiren has less surface contact and may actually not have as much bypass. I unfortunately do not have a refractometer, but others have reported refractometer readings for the Suiren, and they are not significantly different. I do not buy the high bypass argument, and I’d like to think I’d be able to taste the difference if there was a bypass differential and I just do not.

Cost: It comes in at twice the cost of a plastic v60, but right on par with metal, ceramic, and glass versions. It’s not a premium.

Cleanup: It’s the easiest v60 to clean. There’s very little coffee-soaked surface area. If there was a brewer you could get away with not even washing/rinsing – this would be it. I give it a quick hot rinse; there’s been no discoloration of my white fins, and zero issue with flavor retention. You can toss the whole thing in the dishwasher fully assembled or break it down into components if you prefer for the most thorough cleaning.

Travel: Easily the most portable v60. Quickly disassembles into fins and base. They are durable and you can break it down into a nearly 2-dimensional form that can fit just about anywhere. You could probably carry this thing in your pocket if you wanted. Also, it’s super lightweight. Easy win in this category.

Toxicity: Ugh. This section is a flamebait setup, but I want to preempt these types of comments with my take. It’s a very popular movement right now to avoid any contact with plastics in the brewing process. There is growing and difficult to deny data that microplastics are toxic/neurotoxic. I have not seen any convincing data to imply that high quality food safe plastics are contributing to this though. Regardless, the contact area on this is pretty minimal – that’s the whole point, it suspends the filter with as little material as possible.

In Sum: It's an awesome brewer and a beautiful piece of gear. If you already have a v60, should you add this to your collection? That’s a tough call – use the info above to inform your decision. Trying to decide which v60 to get? I’d still start with the Switch, but if you find yourself brewing a lot of cups that you want to keep fast and simple and you are not always using hybrid methods, the quick, lightweight, easy cleanup justifies this as a second v60 worth having.

Tried the Suiren? What are your thoughts?

TLDR; The Hario Suiren is more than a piece of kitsch. It’s a legitimate brewer with some real advantages. It brews an excellent cup on par with other v60 brewers and deserves more attention.

[–] CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works 15 points 1 month ago

Pretty good chance these will cross the line between epic embarrassment and getting arrested for public indency if you slip your dad bod into these to Pick the girls up from school.

Hey, thank you! Do you use a switch currently? If so do you have a favorite recipe for it?

Try it both ways. Bet that you either won't notice a difference or that you might slightly prefer leaving it off. Brewing at near boiling the entire brew might be tolerated by some pretty light roasts, but in general a little less extraction of the late grinds is typically preferable. It feels a bit less fussy to not have to keep popping it back on the stove too.

[–] CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I think there are minor differences in taste buds, but I don't think it's the main driver behind tasting subtly in coffee. Almost all of us spend years drinking coffee that tastes like "coffee" and that flavor profile by and large is from over-roasting and over extraction. Specialty coffee appreciation comes from attention more than biology. Part of tasting theses differences comes from wanting to. If you are perfectly happy with your coffee experience it's going to be harder to consciously attend to nuance. If you are interested, I think an easy way to appreciate a well tuned brew is to order a light or medium roast pour over at a reputable Cafe, buy some of the beans you just tasted, and try to then replicate that cup at home. Unless you have an immense stroke of luck, it's unlikely youll achieve the same notes you tasted with the professional brew. Whether or not you choose to chase that cup is up to you, but I'd wager you'd notice difference at least.

Oh nice catch. Fixed that!

 

Sharing here first! _ I'm excited to finally share a recipe I've been working on for quite awhile.

Web- Link

This pays tribute to Tetsu’s Devil and Coffee Chronicler hybrid recipes. I find these alterations are worthwhile. For me this more consistently achieves the hybrid balance between v60 nuance blended with the body of an immersion brew. The key here is allowing for a traditional bloom phase and a prolonged immersion tempered by just a bit of ice to drop the temp during immersion.

Ratio: 1:15

Coffee: 20.0g

Water: 305mL (This will nicely fill an 11-12oz mug)

Grinder starting points

Around 600 microns

Comandante: 18-22 clicks

Ode Gen 2: 5.3

Starting water temperature: 201F (207F if using melodrip for bloom)

Brew Time: 4:05

  • Bloom Pour — 0:12 Switch is closed Pour 55mL Leave Kettle off heat source after pour
  • Swirl then wait — 0:30 (0:42) Gentle swirl, just enough to assure grounds are all wet Allow degassing
  • Open Switch – 0:10 (0:52) Let it start to drain
  • Pour 65mL (120mL) – 0:11 (1:03)
  • Wait – 0:24 (1:27) Water should be just starting to dive under bed
  • Pour 65mL (185mL) – 0:12 (1:39)
  • Wait — 0:22 (2:01)
  • Close Switch – 0:02 (2:03) Water should be just above bed level
  • Pour 120mL (305mL) – 0:15 (2:18)
  • Add Ice Cube – 0:06 (2:24) Recipe calibrated for 8-10g ice cube Add in carefully -avoid splash
  • Swirl – 0:06 (2:30) Gentle swirl
  • Wait – 0:45 (3:15)
  • Open Switch – 0:50 (4:05) Avoid overdrainage. Close and remove just after water disappears under bed.

Notes: I’ve been toying with this on a regular basis for over six months and it’s become my go-to method. These times should be fairly accurate but will vary depending on your beans of course. This recipe assumes a standard Hario tabbed filter. This works in either the 02 or 03 switch. If you are deviating significantly, try altering grind size. Nearly everything comes out nicely with this. Shortly after the ice-cube melts the immersion temperature drops to right around Tetsu’s 160F immersion temp. If your ice cube exceeds the 10mg mark, subtract out a bit of volume from the immersion pour. I’ve tried putting the ice cube in before the immersion pour, resting an ice cube on a melodrip and pouring over that, but neither of those produced as good of a cup as the drop-in method.

I’ve taken the liberty of uploading this recipe publicly into the brew-timer app. It’s admittedly a faffy recipe, but the brew-timer app makes everything so straightforward. I’m a big fan.


I'd very much like to hear any of your thoughts and feedback if you give it a try. If you don't have a switch but have been thinking at all about trying immersion or hybrid brewing, I really think you would have a good time with the Hario Switch. ---

18
The MeloBloom (infosec.pub)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works to c/coffee@lemmy.world
 

A couple of years ago I purchased a Melodrip to see what the fuss was about and experimented with it quite a bit to justify what I think is a fairly hefty price point for a simple device. I tried using it for all my pours, for the last two pours, and for just the last pour. I tried it on flat bottomed drippers, on immersion brewers, on conical brewers. Tried it with single cup brews and multi-cup brews. I lean towards a pretty fine grind typically, and I was enticed by claims that this device could push the grind size even finer without hitting bitter notes. While I think there is some truth to that, I always found that my brews came up a bit more “tea-like” than I preferred. If “tea-like” is your jam, I highly recommend this product! Me, I prefer more “coffee-like” body that comes from the gentle agitation of a good spiral gooseneck pour. I all but shelved the Melodrip, but it remained on a 3d printed stand staring at me daily on my countertop. There was one experiment I hadn’t tried. The Melodrip instructions recommended not using it for the bloom as did many of the recipes I came across online. I had not considered doing anything anti-dogmatic, but in an act of defiance a few months ago I cranked up my kettle (I always like to bloom on the hot side, and I had previously calculated that the aeration from the Melodrip device caused about an instant 7F drop in water temp) and wet my bed. I have been using the Melodrip now for almost all of my blooms and only the bloom! I think it’s perfect for this despite going against the grain of what has been recommended. For a good bloom you want a nice even rapid moisturization of the grounds. There is a high risk of compaction and channeling as a water stream hits the loose grounds with a conventional pour. A controlled, even sprinkle allows for CO2 to escape and minimizes channel formation. I’ve been very happy with the results and have been brewing more consistent cups since using this technique. If you have a Melodrip, and you are not already in love with how you’re using it – give this a shot! Would I buy one just for blooming? That’s a tough one. If you are feeling a bit frustrated with your brew consistency (there are so many factors that can cause this of course) and you like to tinker, I think I really might consider it.

Curious to hear your thoughts be they theoretical or practical.

TLDR;

  • Consider trying the MeloDrip Device exclusively for a bloom pour. Crank your kettle temp up 6-7(F) for this.
29
In Defense of Cream (infosec.pub)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by CoffeeSoldier@sh.itjust.works to c/coffee@lemmy.world
 

As a specialty coffee apologist one of the most challenging yet most important parts of recruiting new brethren is convincing people that coffee is more than a solvent for cream and sugar. If you’re reading this, chances are you’ve cringed once or twice watching a fine cup of coffee desecrated by “extra cream” or “extra sugar”. To clear the air sooner rather than later, there won’t be any follow up article by this author defending adding any sweetener to coffee. Coaxing out and appreciating the natural sweet notes inherent in well roasted coffee is one of the pleasures of specialty brewing. Modern diets are drowning in added sugars anyway; I just don’t see any place for this. As an aside, if you’re faced with a lousy brew and just need to make it drinkable, try a pinch of salt instead.

Alright, so when is a bit of cream/milk a benefit to specialty coffee? That’s ultimately for you to decide, but consider adding your cream in a metered fashion for the purposes of either weaning down how much you’re using or discovering just how little is really needed to change the body of the cup without washing out flavor notes. First, I would be weary of using any in more floral or acidic brews. It’s likely to curdle and those notes typically get best emphasized with less body, not more. I never add anything without tasting a brew as is first. Most of the time, I add nothing, but I don’t hesitate with cream for a medium or darker roast if I feel like I’ve missed the mark a bit on the body of the cup. I use whole milk, but choose whatever you prefer, just avoid things with flavor or sweeteners already added in. The key is adding very small amounts and doing it in reproducible way. If you already use milk and want to try backing down a bit, start at 5-10 mL and slowly wean your way down to 1-3mL per cup. You’ll notice some change in the body of the brew with as little as 1mL added, and you will not mask the flavor profile of the coffee with this small amount of milk added. I have tried doing this with a dropper, but the milk doesn’t last long in a dropper bottle, so I tried using a wine thief I had. Dipping this directly into the milk jug worked well, but it was far too large. I’ve switched to using a long glass pipette, and it’s worked very well for small amounts. I use it just like a wine thief (finger over the end of the glass pipet to siphon out a bit of milk directly from the carton). It is fragile, so be careful, but I’ve grown comfortable also using this as a stirring stick to mix the milk in after depositing it into the coffee. A hot water rinse out typically does the trick for the glass pipette and soapy water every once in a while keeps it pristine. You’ll need to find a good way to store it; I’ve been placing mine in a universal knife holder that consists of thousands of plastic strands that deform when you slide something in instead of conventional knife slots. Next time you have a jammy or chocolatey brew that tastes like it could use a bit more body, try playing with very small metered amounts of milk added in. It might be just the thing to salvage what might otherwise have been a mediocre cup.

Edit: TLDR - - consider adding a very small amount (1-5ml) of milk if your brew seems to lack body. If you use large amounts of milk/cream and are interested for health reasons or to better taste the flavor profiles of the beans you brew, using a precise measured wean can help tone down the amount you are using.

 

Just wanted to share a little delight that might breathe a little excitement back into your dripper if you haven't tried it before.

I don't recommend it on the daily (the cleanup can get tedious and the cafestol / kahweol probably would get to be a bit much), but for an occasional weekend treat I like to put a #4 Coffee Sock into my Moccamaster (or dripper of your preference). You may need to adjust your grind size just a little bit coarser, and you'll wet and squeeze excess water out of the sock beforehand. Otherwise, ratios, process, etc. should be about the same. Expect a little richer, sweeter cup with more body.

Cleanup: If you are new to reusable cloth filters or have given up in the past due to issues with cleanup, please consider the following which is derived from trying many different techniques - all of which have been disappointing save this. If possible leave the grounds to cool and dry a bit after brewing (1-2h). Invert and empty grounds, then give the sock a good rinse out. Squeeze out excess water, fold it up, place in a ziplock and minimize air while sealing. Hash-mark each use with a sharpie onto the ziplock and put directly into the freezer. I've tried half a dozen non freezer based storage methods and they have all led to weird, presumably mold-based flavors sadly introduced into my brews. It's surprising to me the coffee sock manufacturers do not recommend freezing (note: freeze/ thawing may wear down the fiber structure of your filter faster, but c'est la vie). After 10 or so brews or if you are getting any unexpected bitter notes, it's time to boil some Cafiza (or urnex, or whatever you prefer) and let your sock soak in that for 10 minutes before giving it a thorough rinse-out.

 

I purchased this primarily for calibration purposes. I knew I wanted my grinders in the 500-700 micron range for pour over and this was not as expensive as the more well known Kruve sifter. The included 500um and 800um filters seemed perfect. In addition to helping me to calibrate across grinders, I was curious to see what my fines and boulder amounts looked like. In short, for $30 I was able to accomplish this fairly well. I had tried eye-balling my grind sizes (there are laser cut guides you can use, but with a high-res printer you can also just download pdfs and print these guides for free which is what I did) before, and found it really difficult to tell if something was 400um or 700um even. Immediately after filtering the boulders and fines with this thing it was so much more obvious what my grind sizes actually were. The irregularity of the raw grinder output really threw me off before this, even though, as you’ll see below, the actual noise in the mix was relatively low. After faffing around as a calibration tool was done (didn’t really take long), I threw it in the dishwasher (nice) and later decided to play with it to see if it had any longer-term value.
The next thing I did was to see how much fines a couple of my grinders were producing on typical pour-over grinds. With a 20g bean load in the ode gen 2, I had a surprising 2g of fines (10% by mass, much higher by particle number). My Commadante did better with about 1.5g per 20g. I typically only use the ode for bigger grind volumes though, and interestingly when I tried 60g in it and ran that through the Shelbru, I only came up with about 3.5g of fines, so it seems the fines production does not ramp linearlly. Now for the big question: Is there any value in the effort of sifting for brew-taste? Let’s start with an easy answer – at least with my equipment, for bigger brews (60g grinds), both academically due to the lower fines ratio produced, and emperically from brewing with it a few times, no way – it’s just not a noticeable difference as compared to brewing without sifting. From here, read with skepticism if you will as I didn’t do any proper blind taste testing. For single cup brews I had done enough sifting at this point that at least for the beans I was using, I was getting a pretty consistent 2g loss with the sifter, so I simiply weighed out 2g more beans at this point. I did feel like I lost a little bit of depth with sifting on the ode gen 2 grinds. I am an avid subscriber to the concept of grinding down to the penultimate grind size of what Hoffman refers to as the “wall of bitter”. I found that sifting let me (or almost forced me, due to the taste profile) grind down a click lower on the ode. This was very theoretically attractive to me as I felt like I had just pushed the wall back, and my cups were turning out nicley, but I’m not so certain I had achieved an obvious level of taste superiority. The effects were, as expected, more subtle on the Commadante, and the Shelbru didn’t really allow me to push the grind-size wall back here. Ultimately, it has not become part of my brewing routine; it’s pretty next level faff, and will take you a good extra minute or so to integrate into your workflow not to mention cleaning (dishwasher is nice, but there is a rubber seal that would eventually wear down a bit) and storage.
I did not try this with lesser grinders, but I will leave you with this thought. If you currently have a mediocre grinder, and are hesitant about the value of investing in a better grinder, or simply have a bit more time than you do money for such an investment currently, I think I would consider giving this a try as something that might genuinely do a decent job of immitating a more consitent grinder at a low cost. If brewing competitvely, I think I might employ this in an effort to really maximize my brew with less boulders and fines, but it’s not a daily driver for me.

~ the coffee soldier φ

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