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PostPosted: Sat Jun 13, 2009 8:32 am
by Tinseljim
As far as coffee recommendations two stand out to me at the moment as being just amazing:

1) Tegu AA (Kenyan)
http://shop.squaremilecoffee.com/products/tegu-aa

2) Kenya Gethumbwini AA (haven't tried the Kanjathi yet which scores even higher! 97!)
https://www.hasbean.co.uk/products/Keny ... t-796.html


Both are amazing and if you can't taste blackcurrants (in both) then something is indeed amiss!


Those AP methods are interesting indeed. But what I don't get is at least two things:

1) Add 1dL or ~95g by weight of your water...
why is there an approx. sign in front of 95? 100ml = 100gm of water, unless it's fizzy water?!

2) i thought the point of the inversion method (which i use as well) was to plunge while it's inverted to benefit from the brew being pushed through the oily slurry bit on top. I know it's also to stop it dripping through while brewing as well but the main benefit I believe is lost in Ben's method.

Hmmm time for the last of the Tegu :)

PostPosted: Sat Jun 13, 2009 8:48 am
by bruceb
Tinseljim wrote:1) Add 1dL or ~95g by weight of your water...
why is there an approx. sign in front of 95? 100ml = 100gm of water, unless it's fizzy water?!


From a laboratory standpoint 100ml=100g of water is a very rough approximation and only applies at 4°C. The density of water is highly dependent upon temperature in a non-linear fashion.

For practical purposes this is not significant, but it's good to know and in special cases can be quite important (making cocktails with ice cubes, for instance). If it were not for the difference in density below 0°C the cubes would not float. Aren't you glad you asked? :roll: :wink:

PostPosted: Sat Jun 13, 2009 10:55 am
by Tinseljim
Nice one bruceb - makes better sense now!

PostPosted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 9:41 am
by Lambo
Richard,

Silly question time. How do you use the Aeropress "inverted"???
I'm just about to throw mine in the bin...

It's extremely limited because you have to have exactly the right size cup for it. The black plastic filter holder is too big for our nice cups that we use everyday for filter/press coffee. We've only got one chunky mug that it goes on - once that's been used I can't be bothered to wash a single mug each time I want a coffee.
And of course, if you use the wrong size cup it can be dangerous when pressing it down if it slips - hot coffee everywhere this morning - ouch :cry:

PostPosted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 10:20 am
by Gouezeri
Lammy,
With the aeropress unassembled, insert the plunger into the main body roughly 1cm (until stable), then place this unit on a table so that it is sitting on the plunger. Next pour in coffee (so that it is now resting on the rubber plunger), followed by water. Then place the filter paper in the black plastic holder and screw into place carefully (making sure there are no gaps).
Hope that made sense.

Regarding cups sizes, if I want to use smaller cups, I simply brew into a metal steaming jug first, then pour from that.
D

PostPosted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 12:12 pm
by Lambo
Merci Gouezzy!
I found some stuff on CoffeeGeek with pictures, so I gave it a go.
J'sais pas if it made any difference....
We don't seem to have anything that it fits on, apart from this one mug. My Motta jug is too small!

By the time I'd pratted about doing all that, I thought "Is it worth it?" Might try brewing as normal in the FP, then pouring it through my SwissGold filter thingy to see how much sludge it gets rid of.

PostPosted: Mon Dec 10, 2012 3:58 pm
by Richard
I find it very difficult that this thread has stuck, what's happening ?

The Aeropress is such a good tool, OK, for the espresso machine purists it might not hit the spot.

Press-pot coffee has a place and there are those who prefer the taste, when I sold my Silvia I did so after many comparitive tastings between conventional press-pot, Aero-Press and now Moka pot. The coffee type and the way it's used is more important than an expensive machine in my experience and the single most beneficial move in the right direction is roasting and grinding your own but you have to get that right or you're back to buggering-up the finest beans.

PostPosted: Mon Dec 10, 2012 11:05 pm
by bruceb
Ahhh, I have not been doing my job, that's all. :oops: I must say that I had pretty much forgotten about this sticky. It wasn't supposed to be a thread in itself, I was supposed to gather posts about the Aeropress and sort through them and put useful and/or interesting comments and tips here. Mea culpa. I will begin going back looking for thoughts on the Aeropress and try to summarize or organize them here. If you have posts about the Aeropress please put them in the normal "Other Brewing Methods" section. Thanks!