Interesting little read: http://www.dearcoffeeiloveyou.com/dinhs-win-the-story-of-an-aeropress-champion/
Interesting little read: http://www.dearcoffeeiloveyou.com/dinhs-win-the-story-of-an-aeropress-champion/
I'm looking for mild coffee as a birthday present, any recommendations?
so, the squaremile, cold brewed...
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not overly convinced but that could just be the coffee, tis a little old after all. Its not bad as such, not acidic or bitter. Actually its pretty smooth just i'm not convinced, tastes like a cold coffee more than anything
Personally i'm not a big fan of milk in coffee, but in the name of science trying the last half with a bit of milk and its not too bad:
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thanks for the link, nice little article
oh and now i want a blue Aeropress:
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(I recognise that its probably just his shirt refracted through the clear/blueish body, but still...)
The original Aeropresses were pale blue. Mine is.
Unfortunately, they had to change the plastic due to it not being BPA free.
Apparently the newest ones are have a blue tint again...
Thinking i might have to start a coffee brewing collection when we've moved house, no real reason to have a bunch of different methods practically, but as a 'collection' it makes perfect sense![]()
Just picked up a few bags of Peruvian coffee from Lidl that smell very nice.
£4.99 for a 1kg bag.
Won't be on the shelves for long!
thanks , I'll try some myself.
I haven't done it myself but I have tried it at Ozone Coffee in London. It certainly was an experience and gave a different flavour profile to the coffee I tried. The flavours were a bit too intense for me and not my usual fair "more boozy than I like" but I think trying something that is more akin to my flavour profiles may be a better experience.
My experience was completely different, I thought it was a bit watery and weak! How did you brew it and what grind did you use?
For the 3rd time in 2 years I am about to purchase an espress machine. I nearly did it 2 years ago but decided since I try to leave for work spending only 20-30mins getting up that I wouldn't have the time. Then in the summer I nearly bought a refurbished classic but then found my wife was expecting so put it off until the financials were sorted.
Now I have moved across country to be with my wife and I'm working remotely so can make espress all day. Plus with a baby on the way I will need cofee more than ever!
Definitely will buy a Silvia, but have the same questions on grindes:
* Baratza Precisio $299
* Rancilo rocky dosserless $350
* Baratza vario. $450
Keep flipping between all 3. Seems lots of mixed recviews on all 3 yet they seem the best for around $350-$450 bucks. Every time I decide on one I see a YouTube video of saying it is really bad or has flaws.
I have the Silvia and the Rocky Doserless - seems to work fine. It's easy to strip and keep clean, and I like the stepped adjustment. My only gripe would be that beans get stuck in the three screw holes that hold the hopper on, but it's no biggie - I just pick them out when I want to strip it. It weighs quite a bit mind you!
I installed a PID on my Silvia - a well worthwhile investment imvho - it means I don't have to temperature surf![]()