So about a year ago, my cafe started "French Press on Tap" (and it tag-teams with our standard drip coffee until mid-afternoon, when we brew it on demand) and many of our customers fell in love with the press and its ability to bring out all of the best qualities of the coffee bean.
We are now ready to explore...the pour over bar! (dun-dun-DUNH! *insert far-off scream*) So I'm interested in hearing what some of you are doing and how you are making this work and sustainable at your cafes
Basic things I'm researching:
* what type of brewer
* roaster-designed brew bar or special-designed bar
* paper or sock(!) filter
* suggested grams to water ratio
* scale or no scale
* Hario Kettle or good ol' water kettle
* water tower or "hot plate"
And of course I want to hear the good stuff!:
* the joys & pains
* the highs & lows
* the challenges of profitability, training, labor, demand, etc.
Any information you can provide is grately appreciated! thx! nate
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A pourover bar is a fantastic addition to any shop, greatly improving the quality of your drip coffee. This does come at a price however. It is very easy to make an aweful pourover if your baristas are not properly trained. Also, unlike french press, where the customer does most of the work, a barista must be taken away from all other tasks for about 3 minutes. Needless to say, production is much slower than airpots, but if your customers are willing to wait, they will be greatly rewarded.
-MAZ
I am personal fan of going paperless. On more delicate coffees the paper flavors can taint the final product. Have had great success with the Coava Kone 2nd generation and Chemex.
Also, the Chemex do not require a bar to be built or bought.
I would recommend using a pourover kettle. Homeloos are shipped from Hong Kong, so be warned, so shipping can be quite expensive. If you can hold out until January there will be some other kettle options on the market, namely the Bonavita line that should beat both the Hario and Homeloo in price, and are very well built.
I would agree with Madison that a scale is a better option. The new Vario-W by Baratza is an excellent choice for a moderately paced pour-over bar, and by far the most affordable option (considering labor time spent weighing, and it speeds up your bar). I was developed specifically for this purpose and tested in cafes before hitting the market.
Water temp is key to brewing pour-over successfully, so appropriate tower would be recommended.
WOW MADISON! I can not thank you enough for all of this great info! This is excellent! I am certainly going to take ALL of this into consideration. THANKS!
madison swords said:
A pourover bar is a fantastic addition to any shop, greatly improving the quality of your drip coffee. This does come at a price however. It is very easy to make an aweful pourover if your baristas are not properly trained. Also, unlike french press, where the customer does most of the work, a barista must be taken away from all other tasks for about 3 minutes. Needless to say, production is much slower than airpots, but if your customers are willing to wait, they will be greatly rewarded.
-MAZ
Hey keith! Thanks for the info! you know, the paper filter is a pain but i wasnt sure of any other options. thanks for that tid bit. Huge fan of the hario, but I'm looking forward to testing out the Bonativa! =D
Keith Eckert said:
Also, the Chemex do not require a bar to be built or bought.
I would recommend using a pourover kettle. Homeloos are shipped from Hong Kong, so be warned, so shipping can be quite expensive. If you can hold out until January there will be some other kettle options on the market, namely the Bonavita line that should beat both the Hario and Homeloo in price, and are very well built.
I use Yama sock pots for 90% of my brewing. I also have Chemex (like Keith, I prefer to go paperless) and vacuum pots in the shop.
We use the 1 pint chemex with paper filters. We have a fetco 5 gallon hot water tower beside our 4 chemex station. The chemexes are on scales. We only do 12 and 16 ounce cups. 25gr whole bean, 385gr water for 12oz. 30gr whole bean, 475gr water for 16oz. We allow for roughly 1/2oz weight loss on grind. We have one person brewing all the chemexes at one time. It works out. When we're in full swing, someone else grinds the beans and preps the chemex. Use a Buono style kettle. You need control. We tried the Kone. Didn't care for it. If you use paper, you can move faster, and you don't have to be super gentle with a Kone. They're extremely fragile. They'll bend and dent super easily, and then you'll kick yourself for spending that much cash on one filter, when you can get an entire case of chemex filters for the same price, or less.
Also wanted to add that Bonavita has electric pouring kettles. Just saw them come up on Prima-Coffee. This solves a lot of temperature loss you get from going to a regular boiler/kettle to your pouring kettle. Don't have any yet, but will follow up.
Best,
Phil
Why not go the stainless steel filter route for your Chemex? Avoid the chemicals with the paper filters, even if you wet them properly before brewing there's still sometimes a paper-like taste. Not to mention if you're brewing that much coffee on a daily basis it seems a shame to go through filter upon filter.
Totally agree with Crucial Coffee, go for stainless steel filter it's more safe that using paper filters. Hate it when my coffee have that not-so-good taste. I always use stainless steel filter.
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