I switched away from French press to espresso to reduce my cafestol intake. It's something to consider.
Coffee and Health | The Nutrition Source | Harvard School of Public Health
I switched away from French press to espresso to reduce my cafestol intake. It's something to consider.
Coffee and Health | The Nutrition Source | Harvard School of Public Health
-- outside of our daily star-bucks addiction, we love the italian dark roast in a french press each prior sunrise..
ashamed to say, i am still addicted to diet dr pepper..
ronnie with a caffeine smile
switched the coffee routine up this morning
chemex
some ethiopia kochere beans, as espresso they are have a big berry flavor, citric and kinda rough around the edges
chemex it was sweet and fruity, i added a little extra hot water and all of the sudden it was tons of floral notes with a sweetness on the front
pretty awesome, a nice change
Intelligentsia is tried and true - still quite good (also in LA - Silver Lake and Venice). New comer Dark Matter whose proprietor I believe did time at Intelligentsia is coming on strong though. Their Mexican El Eden beans are about as good as anything I've bought in Chicago.
Can we discuss the Aeropress a little. I'm intrigued. Saw something from Stumptown yesterday that seemed neat.
Best way to make coffee short of spending hundreds of dollars. Actually it'll taste better than 90% of hundreds/thousands of dollar setups unless the person using them knows what they are doing and has dialed them in for a specific bean.
Agreed, the Aeropress is easy and fun to use and makes a very good tasting small cup of coffee. That said, it isn't really "espresso" (i.e., no crema, less intense), so if that's what you are looking for it doesn't work. Still I use mine a lot and it is great.
Andy Cohen
www.deepdharma.org
I was reading an article last night that stated crema was possible with some practice. Which is what got me thinking....my French press is dandy, but I don't drink more than a cup, so I kind of end up wasting a good amount of beans.
Single best thing about 'Intelli' in Silver Lake - their opening hours. Open at 6am daily, it's the perfect spot to coffee-dope before rolling out towards the ACH (Hwy 2).
Helps that the coffee's great too.
Aeropress - it's my daily cup when at home.
Currently working my way through a not-great bag of Gorilla coffee (Gishamwana from Rwanda), and when it's gone I intend to get another bag of Hair Bender from Stumptown. Lovely stuff.
Neil
Espresso it ain't, but it sure is good coffee. Crema is overrated.
crema is overrated
but the parameters that yield a nice shot also yield a nice crema
but i usually grind a little finer or tamp a little firmer and end up with less crema, but the temperature, taste and body end up a little better...
For what it's worth - our local coffee snob claims the best way to sample coffee is threw brewing, either cold or pour over style. I've sampled some seriously amazing brews through him. I doubt he'd willingly pull a shot with his geisha beans. He won't even allow milk or cream to touch his own roast.
Auk's words to live by:
Blow up and pin a picture of M. Bartoli on your wall. When you achieve that position, stop. Until then, stretch, ride, stretch, ride, eat less, and ride more.
I need to pick up an aeropress, im sure it would work great for travel. Also, I like the chemex but to me it seems its very finiky on the size of brew you do. I can't make one small enough for just me, and I can't make one big enough for 4 people.
Do people do a fine espresso like grind on the aero?
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