#346
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cheers to everyone with the recent posts
i had 3x double decaf espressi; perhaps ultimate expression in pointlessness |
#347
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Yes, please. If I were your neighbor I'd want to set up some sort of buy-in where you leave an espresso on your front porch every morning and I leave a few bucks. Well done!
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#348
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My neighbors know my coffee addiction well and take full advantage! Look me up if you're ever in Oakland.
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#349
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Quote:
i woke up out of coffee this morning, into the roasting cave! |
#350
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39 and never have liked coffee
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#351
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#352
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really not sure why you chimed in here then...
i'm not particularly a fan of steel bikes; you don't see me going into steel bike threads and letting my opinions be known writ large |
#353
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Quote:
Let me know what you are pulling. |
#354
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Decaf drinker here as well. (hangs head in shame)
The is so little decent decaf in the market. That is why I started roasting my own coffee. Really enjoy the process and it is fun trying new beans and roast levels. |
#355
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hunting for good decaf is quite the chore. Most grocery stores (save for Whole Paychecks with roasting on site) are absolutely horrible. TJ doesn't sell many decaf, and its darker decaf is stale when the can is opened. The fancier local grocery store (Wegmans) sells loose decaf that's stale out of the chute. Whole Food does sell something decent (i'd classify as medium dark, they call it the decaf espresso), but you have to buy 12 oz at a time, which may be too much, depending on daily consumption
Look for coffee shops that allow you to buy by the quarter pound. Every city should have at least one that does this. When I lived in DC, only one roaster did this. It wasn't a darling of the instagram crowd, due to the somewhat grungy decor, but they roasted good coffee and sold by the 1/4 pound; as such, I always had fresh beans. The fancier places, OTOH, had minimal order requirements (and were more expensive to boot). Sorry I can't be of more help. eta: the Whole Paycheck product is called Allegro Coffee Decaf Organic Espresso Bel Canto Whole Bean Coffee, 12 oz Last edited by echappist; 02-11-2019 at 12:35 PM. |
#356
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Quote:
Thanks.. I'm in the Bay Area so there is actually a true glut of coffee roasters...but very few of them have a decent espresso. Only Scarlet City has anything that comes close. Most lack body. So to date I think I've had decent decaf espresso from Victrola in Seattle, Handsome in LA (now taken over by Blue Bottle) and Scarletcity. This might need a thread of it's own ! |
#357
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I realize this question is below the general level of discussion in this thread, but I don't know any serious coffee geeks IRL so here goes...
What is the easiest & cheapest way to brew good black coffee in single-serve quantities (say, 8 to 12 oz for a travel mug/tumbler)? Consider that I'm currently using K-cups at home. At work I use the free-to-me Nespresso pods which I brew on the largest volume, then again to add 50-100% more water so it resembles something more like normal coffee or an Americano. Point being, the bar for improvement is extremely low, but so is my desire to spend big money on this. FWIW I do have a Cuisinart burr grinder from my pre-kid days when I had time to mess with making a full pot before rushing out the door in the a.m. What should I be looking at in terms of brewing apparatus? Aeropress? Seems like cleanup with the filters would be a little easier/quicker than a French press. |
#358
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i would think Aeropress or pour-over would work equally well. Was pleasantly surprised by the quality of pour-overs (none of that scalding, burnt out taste that's part and parcel of peculators) |
#359
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I say aeropress too. thats what I use for myself everyday everytime I am traveling for work
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#360
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Tags |
coffee, coffee espresso |
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