Cerapotta ceramic coffee filter

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Been looking at some reviews on the "Cerapotta ceramic coffee filter" and it's a 50/50, so does anybody use or used this? pro/con; worth it?



TY
 
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Been looking at some reviews on the "Cerapotta ceramic coffee filter" and it's a 50/50, so does anybody use or used this? pro/con; worth it?



TY

Not seen them before tbh! Looks quite interesting but I'd imagine making sure it's clean would be a palava? These days i'm pretty much just v60 with unbleached filters and awaaaaaay
 
Not seen them before tbh! Looks quite interesting but I'd imagine making sure it's clean would be a palava? These days i'm pretty much just v60 with unbleached filters and awaaaaaay


To clean it, you just rinse it in hot water and if at some point (month+) it does need something more then just have it sit in boiled water for a bit.

I should have added these 2 clips before, but.... here they are:

How the filter is made:


Review of the filter:



TY
 
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Seen several various brewers like this over the years. Not bought one yet as the thought of cleaning them out just puts me right off. Also, I regularly change what coffee I use (occasionally daily) so having to do a deep clean each time would really annoy me.
 
Been looking at some reviews on the "Cerapotta ceramic coffee filter" and it's a 50/50, so does anybody use or used this? pro/con; worth it?



TY

This might help, personally, i will stick with paper.

If you go to the cleaning part....the amount of energy require to clean this properly will be more carbon footprint than paper.

1 - You can't scrub it, because it will retain any material and fabric
2 - You can't dry it with a towel, because it will retain material
3 - You can't use detergent
4 - I suspect it will trap skin as you rub it with your fingers when cleaning....yum!
5 - James Hoffmann suggests inverting it and put it on a gas stove to burn off all the residue and carbon...great use of energy!
6 - You can make only use really hot water to rinse it and will need a lot of it since you can’t scrub it.


Nice idea, terrible in practice is my conclusion.
 
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Well, the settles it...

I'll just keep things the way they are.

Thank you very much for all of your help and to think I would have been paying roughly £70 for it :( .
 
Not seen them before tbh! Looks quite interesting but I'd imagine making sure it's clean would be a palava? These days i'm pretty much just v60 with unbleached filters and awaaaaaay
Yes I don't see what is wrong with unbleached, biodegradable paper filters in a 5 quid V60. Convenient, sustainable, makes a good cup!
 
Yes I don't see what is wrong with unbleached, biodegradable paper filters in a 5 quid V60. Convenient, sustainable, makes a good cup!
Have to say I do prefer the oxygen bleached papers. Need less rinsing and significantly less paper taste which I'm really good at detecting. Although good quality paper filters helps with that anyway. Proper Hario/Chemex/Kalita brand filters are much better that the cheap generics.
 
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