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the decent espresso machine ships in a suitcase, just sayin.
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The same thing happened to our beer! Swedish coffee was just slightly different, they put an egg into the coffee which kept the grounds from floating in the coffee, but that just seems odd because if they simply waited the grounds would settle to the bottom of the cup. The Turks would make you a cup of coffee then after you drank it you handed them the cup and they would read the grounds and tell you your future...all nonsense of course but they believed in that stuff back then, they still do readings today in Turkey but it's more for entertainment purposes. |
#48
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For home use I have the Aeropress, Moka pot, Takeya cold brew coffee maker, Hario V60 Ceramic pour over maker, French Press, Turkish Cezve, and a Flair. They all make coffee differently, but the one that makes the most shockingly difference is the Turkish Cezve, not that it's better, it's just a huge difference between all the others in flavor, the others have subtle differences, though the one I like the most is the Takeya cold coffee, it's extremely smooth yet strong without being bitter. Supposedly with cold brew you're suppose to dilute the finished product with half water, I don't dilute it at all, just drink it straight.
I like strong coffee, which is why I don't dilute the cold brew, it's also why I put more coffee into all my different ways then the instructions call for, the Moka pot you can't really do that, the basket only holds so much coffee. I don't have a method that I don't like, but my least favorite is the Pour over, not that I hate it, it's just one I don't prefer to use more regularly, it makes a weaker tasting coffee in my opinion. The Aeropress is very similar to the French Press, except you can filter the grounds out. If you get the Aeropress, the best way I found to make coffee with it is to basically treat it as a French Press. You turn the unit upside down, what is known as the nuclear position, put in the amount of coffee you prefer, put just enough hot water to cover the grounds and let it set for about 30 to 45 seconds so that it blooms, then pour in the rest of the water, then use the plastic stirrer it comes with and gently stir the grounds, wait 4 to 5 minutes (as you would with the French Press), turn a coffee cup upside down and place it on top of the filter basket that is connected to the Aeropress, then with the two together turn the whole thing right side up and press the plunger down pressing the water through the coffee grounds into your cup. |
#49
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I always thought "weak" coffee was the result of the Great Depression followed by WW II rationing.
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#50
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(I fell down a rabbit hole recently researching commercial processes in the pre-espresso golden age of the Vienna Kaffeehaus. They did large batch decoctions with a coarse piston-actuated filtration, and the serving carafes were stored in hot-water baths. Cooler-than-boiling extraction was apparently quite rare.)
__________________
Jeder geschlossene Raum ist ein Sarg. |
#51
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hmm, maybe?!
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#52
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Damn this thread
After reading through the manual lever espresso thread and now this one, I now have a Robot Barista, a 1zpresso JX-Pro grinder and a Bonvita variable kettle coming in the mail.
Went back and forth going with this set up or buying a used Rancilio Silvia off ebay. Decided since I mainly like straight espresso or long blacks this would be the best set up for me. Plus I can take it camping when we hit up the RV parks here in SD. Figure I can add a V60 to go with the kettle and 1zpresso grinder and go down the pour over rabbit hole as well. Quote:
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#53
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#54
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Before reading about these two products here on Paceline I didn't know they existed. After researching both, it was hard to find any negative experiences. |
#55
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Hey gang,
Completely agree the Aeropress can't be beat for portability, convenience and taste in the cup, as others said, it's not technically espresso. I'm not sure if this would be portable enough, but since the Rancilio Silvia was mentioned, I thought I'd chime-in. Smaller and more portable, but also a single boiler machine, is the Saeco Via Venezia. The rebadged Starbucks 'Barista' (Saeco VV) was my first machine, and I now have used it exclusively on vacations. The older machines, like this one, even have the regular steam wand (not that 'panarello' style!). Unlike this Siliva, this machine utilizes a 'barista 101' pressurized portafilter system. However, one can modify the stock portafilter to 'de-pressurize' it or simply purchase a regular, non-pressurized PF (I have both a dual spouted and bottomless, non-pressurized PFs for it). Thanks,
__________________
-Jeff |
#56
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#57
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#58
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__________________
2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
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#60
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That was good for a laugh, thanks! LOL!! |
Tags |
caffeine, coffee, coffee espresso |
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