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My First French Press
Just a cheap $20 Bodem, but it did make a mean cup of coffee. I was a little disappointed however, on the box it said 8 cup, so being the literalist that I am, I thought it was 8 cups, well apparently to Bodem, a cup is only 4oz. Over all however, the process was very simple, boil water, add grounds, add water, wait, press, enjoy. Plus as an added bonus, it's frothy!
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You never forget your first French! :D
Nice press. Enjoy GREAT coffee now. |
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Love me some french press. Best way to make coffee:2
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Well, depending on the drip machine it probably wasn't getting hot enough anyways. Now you're at 212 when you pour over so you get maximum oily goodness out of them beans!
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I guess I'd have never thought that made a difference. Our water out of the tap is to hot to handle, but your saying still boil and use that for maximum oilation?
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TEmp depends on brew time as well. A great temp ratio is 195-205 water and about a 5-6 minute brew time. Out of a drip machine, these specs can yield a pretty decent cup o joe.
We had a few machines (mr. coffee, krups a cuisanart) that we did a test with against the Capresso m500 we had just bought. Each of the cheaper guys had about a 155-165 temp whereas the Capresso was 200 in the basket and 190 going into the pot. Time for a full brew was 6 minutes. Great smooth coffee out of that drip machine. I don't know all the science behind it, but do know temp & time are important factors. We are back to a $19 cheapo drip now after losing the capresso in the fire and have not had a good cup of coffee since. Plus it takes 15 minutes to brew a bitter pot of coffee now. :( coffeegeeks dot com can teach you tons about the dark coffee bean goodness |
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What Beans did you use?
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"8 cups" ...:r:r more like two mugs, or one BFM (big farkin mug) like mine...
Enjoy, the french press is my mainstay, one at home and one at work...:tu |
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Good move. That bodum will give you better coffee than 90% of people will ever get at home. It's funny how some of the greatest coffee comes from some of the cheapest equipment.
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http://www.amazon.com/Toddy-T2N-Cold...0578869&sr=8-1 Basically, you just let the grounds/water soak for ~ 12 hours and filter it into the glass. It's a concentrate and you add water to each cup. Give it a try... |
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LA LA LA LA LA LA LA
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mmm french press
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Congrats on the French Press. I love using mine but the coffee never really ends up hot enough for me.
I googled about cold brewing yesterday after reading this thread and decided to try it. I just used a pitcher, a carafe, and some coffee filters. After about 18 hours I came up with some fantastic brew. It has so much more flavor with no bitterness whatsoever. I think next time I'll save some time and effort and just cold brew in the French Press for easier filtering. |
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Next time I will simplify by using the same coffee to water ratio, but I'll just do the whole darned thing in the French Press and transfer it over to the pitcher afterward for storage. I may run it through a paper filter after the press or I may not. The end result is very concentrated, sort of like espresso. It can be warmed up or drank cold but should be diluted. I tried it heated, cool, and iced, each time with 1-2 parts 2% milk. I like it all three ways and will experiment some more in the future. Everything I read says it will stay fresh and untainted for up to two weeks in the fridge, unlike traditional brew. Please excuse the grammar and sentence structure right now. It's bed time. Enjoy, I know I will. :) |
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http://www.toddycafe.com/customerser...structions.php |
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We've been doing the French press thing now for a couple of years, and there is just no going back. I'm hooked on Mr. Jerry's "Killer Beans" and have done business with him for several years. I have started to check out the local roasters, though...some good stuff here in PDX.
In addition to the French press, I bought a Baratza grinder a couple of years back. No, they aren't cheap...and there is no comparison to the blade grinders. A good conical burr grinder will give you the most consistent grind imaginable. This is one of those dumb things that makes me smile every time I use it. Lastly, as a friend of mine put it....here's the "next step off the cliff"....home roasting. Haven't gone there yet, but I'm looking into it. Cheers - N.F.H. |
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Two things to remember, though, coffee should NEVER be made with boiling water. If you boil water,
let it sit for 5 or so minutes before using it to make coffee. And secondly, if you use hot water from the tap, make sure you do not have a conventional water heater. If you have that kind of instant heat deal, that's OK, but drinking hot water from a conventional tank water heater is not good for you. |
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This is my auction, I have a few of them, if anyone is interested, and priced them well. |
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As far as the other.... No real reason that water would be harmful, in my experience. If you were on a well, with untreated water, and you had some high temp biological contamination, that might be an issue, but in general not an issue for 99,999 people out of a 100,000. What are you referring to? Soft water? Not really an issue, as the sodium levels in softened water are so low that for it to impact your health you would need to drink bathtubs of it to affect you. Daily. The sodium, in a softened water system are used in the ionic exchange process in the softener, and the resin bed is flushed of virtually all free NaCl in the final bed rinse. Curiosity killed the cat, I suppose. |
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Now I'm curious; I'll stick a thermometer in the water tomorrow and find out where I'm at.... |
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Edit, the pads appear to be washable along with the other components per the directions. Sorry for the psuedo threadjack, fellas. That being said, you can also boost the temp of the water by putting it in a glass mixing bowl and nuking it for minute or two. No harm, no foul in that. |
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Some good reading here...might pick up a french press today to give it a try.
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OK, it's official, after doing a little more reading, cold brewed just seems like way to much work for a cup of joe. I really don't want to take 18 hours to make my coffee.
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My wife microwaves her coffee in the morning, but prefers the iced coffee in the afternoons. |
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Damnit, this is starting to sound tempting.
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Yeah, I realized after that waiting 5 minutes was way too long, but my 15 minutes of time to
edit were up and I blew it off. When I came back and saw the debate was on, I figured I would come on and eat my crow. 15 seconds maybe to wait?? As long as it is not BOILING water. And that's from the coffee Experts at Community Coffee. As for the tank water, higher concentrations of lead and I am guessing also contaminants from the fiberglass tank itself. |
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The only drawback to the Cold-Brew would be if you wanted it hot. Coffee never has the same, good, fresh brewed flavor if it is reheated. No matter if its in a pot or the micro, it never tastes as good.
I will stick w/ the Press for hot coffee. I will probably try the cold brew this summer though. |
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Just put another "pot" in...
My instructions I shared in another thread: After putting in plug/filter: 1) Pour in 4 cups water 2) Put in 4 cups of course grind coffee 3) Put in 3 more cups of water 4) Do not mix/stir, but gently fold in the dry grounds in the water until it's all soaking 5) Approximately 12 hours later, pull the plug and filter into the decanter 6) Determine the dilution you like best-I think the manual says a 3:1 or 4:1 wateroffee concentrate, but you need to determine what works best for your taste. |
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