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well don't get me wrong it does make a good cup but the hot water just gets dumped over the grounds and left to steep. If you're going to give someone hot coffee you should be able to control certain variables, like the water temp, the speed of the water as it hits the grounds, and how long the water stays in contact in the grounds.
check out this video of the v60 pourover from hario. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gi846njhiA&feature=related
definitly try this if you have the chance. You will immediatly notice a difference from this and french press, it's much more flavorful.
Brady said:Joe Smith said:forget the french press, it's tasty but not a great way of displaying flavor characteristics.
Interesting. Why do you say this?
I enjoy coffee brewed via most any method I've tried, I'm certainly not dismissing any of them. But, any secondary filtering aside since that to me is modifying the essence of the brewing method, I think cups brewed via french press, even if not necessarily muddy, don't have the same type of crisp clarity as those brewed in some other ways. They're not worse, nor better- just different.
Joe Smith said:well don't get me wrong it does make a good cup but the hot water just gets dumped over the grounds and left to steep. If you're going to give someone hot coffee you should be able to control certain variables, like the water temp, the speed of the water as it hits the grounds, and how long the water stays in contact in the grounds.
check out this video of the v60 pourover from hario. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gi846njhiA&feature=related definitly try this if you have the chance. You will immediatly notice a difference from this and french press, it's much more flavorful.
Brady said:Joe Smith said:forget the french press, it's tasty but not a great way of displaying flavor characteristics.
Interesting. Why do you say this?
Look, nothing against the v60. This just reads like too many other "this device is the best thing EVER" threads of the past. I also never said I wasn't aware of the differences between the brew resulting from these various methods. Well-made brews using each of these methods will taste surprisingly similar, but have their own little nuances. I'm not going to say "forget the v60, vac pot, coffee sock" though. To just dismiss any of the tools in our toolboxes out-of-hand is kinda silly.
The nice thing shared by all of these manual brew methods is that the barista controls all the variables you've listed to some degree. Want to increase turbulence in a press? Give it a swirl or a stir. Contact time? Um... that's what that screen-thing is for. Temperature? Same way you do with a v60 - use hotter or cooler water.
BTW, thought I'd point out... the v60 was kinda last year. Last I saw the trendy guys they were headed for Clever territory. Good thing, too - I was kinda waiting for the hype to die down a bit so that we could start honestly evaluating it as a mere-mortal brew device. Know what I'm saying?
haha last year...... All i was pointing out is that it's more acurate than the french press. No need to be a smartass.
Brady said:Joe Smith said:well don't get me wrong it does make a good cup but the hot water just gets dumped over the grounds and left to steep. If you're going to give someone hot coffee you should be able to control certain variables, like the water temp, the speed of the water as it hits the grounds, and how long the water stays in contact in the grounds.
check out this video of the v60 pourover from hario. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gi846njhiA&feature=related definitly try this if you have the chance. You will immediatly notice a difference from this and french press, it's much more flavorful.
Brady said:Joe Smith said:forget the french press, it's tasty but not a great way of displaying flavor characteristics.
Interesting. Why do you say this?
Look, nothing against the v60. This just reads like too many other "this device is the best thing EVER" threads of the past. I also never said I wasn't aware of the differences between the brew resulting from these various methods. Well-made brews using each of these methods will taste surprisingly similar, but have their own little nuances. I'm not going to say "forget the v60, vac pot, coffee sock" though. To just dismiss any of the tools in our toolboxes out-of-hand is kinda silly.
The nice thing shared by all of these manual brew methods is that the barista controls all the variables you've listed to some degree. Want to increase turbulence in a press? Give it a swirl or a stir. Contact time? Um... that's what that screen-thing is for. Temperature? Same way you do with a v60 - use hotter or cooler water.
BTW, thought I'd point out... the v60 was kinda last year. Last I saw the trendy guys they were headed for Clever territory. Good thing, too - I was kinda waiting for the hype to die down a bit so that we could start honestly evaluating it as a mere-mortal brew device. Know what I'm saying?
Look, surely you've noticed the coffee community's propensity to over-hype every "new" brewing device to hit the market. Its natural - we all love new methods and toys... and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. I hardly feel like pointing this out is "being a smartass".
I'm not saying the v60 isn't a terrific brewer. I'm just saying that you can take your post and substitute in "Clover", "Eva Solo", "Clever", "Halogen Vac Pot", etc and be transported to another discussion at another time - a time when the "it" device was the only way that anyone should even consider brewing coffee. Which, by the way, is what you said. Taking that sort of approach is pretty narrow-minded and leads you to miss out on some great stuff that just doesn't happen to be the flavor of the day.
I think we've run this little sidebar well into the ground.
Joe Smith said:haha last year...... All i was pointing out is that it's more acurate than the french press. No need to be a smartass.
Brady said:Joe Smith said:well don't get me wrong it does make a good cup but the hot water just gets dumped over the grounds and left to steep. If you're going to give someone hot coffee you should be able to control certain variables, like the water temp, the speed of the water as it hits the grounds, and how long the water stays in contact in the grounds.
check out this video of the v60 pourover from hario. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gi846njhiA&feature=related definitly try this if you have the chance. You will immediatly notice a difference from this and french press, it's much more flavorful.
Brady said:Joe Smith said:forget the french press, it's tasty but not a great way of displaying flavor characteristics.
Interesting. Why do you say this?
Look, nothing against the v60. This just reads like too many other "this device is the best thing EVER" threads of the past. I also never said I wasn't aware of the differences between the brew resulting from these various methods. Well-made brews using each of these methods will taste surprisingly similar, but have their own little nuances. I'm not going to say "forget the v60, vac pot, coffee sock" though. To just dismiss any of the tools in our toolboxes out-of-hand is kinda silly.
The nice thing shared by all of these manual brew methods is that the barista controls all the variables you've listed to some degree. Want to increase turbulence in a press? Give it a swirl or a stir. Contact time? Um... that's what that screen-thing is for. Temperature? Same way you do with a v60 - use hotter or cooler water.
BTW, thought I'd point out... the v60 was kinda last year. Last I saw the trendy guys they were headed for Clever territory. Good thing, too - I was kinda waiting for the hype to die down a bit so that we could start honestly evaluating it as a mere-mortal brew device. Know what I'm saying?
I wasn't knocking the french press, all I was saying is that the v60 can be a little more accurate.
It's because of conversations like this that I never post here. I can't say anything to any coffee proffesional without getting my ass chewed out for it.
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