I’ve been using James Hoffman’s recipe since I bought AeroPress, and I was pretty satisfied. While being simple, it produced rich, balanced cups of coffee for both light and medium roasts. I was happy with it. But then I started noticing that some light-roasted coffee was too bitter. It rarely happened, but when it did, it wasn’t possible to get rid of that excessive bitterness. When I tried to increase the grind size, I got watery, but still too bitter coffee. At first, I thought there was something wrong with the coffee beans, but then I thought, maybe immersion brewing was just not suitable for them. So, I decided to find another recipe.

I wanted to try a hybrid recipe containing a percolation phase, as I believed it could produce more balanced cups. So I searched on the Aeromatic app and found a recipe from The Real Sprometheus. It has a long percolation phase and quite a short immersion phase. And this recipe fixed my coffee. I got a balanced cup without excessive bitterness and with more detailed acidity. Now, this is my recipe to go, as I think it’s superior to James Hoffman’s recipe.

  • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    What’s the recipe? Can you share?

    Was thinking about picking up an aeropress for camping, and was just going to start with the James Hoffman recipe, but I’m open to trying something different.

    • Gxost@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      Add 15g of coffee. Then:

      00:00 Pour 100g of water
      00:10 Let it bloom
      01:30 Add 150g of water
      01:45 Stir slowly with a spoon front-back, left-right
      02:00 Insert plunger and let it steep
      02:30 Make a gentle swirl and push gently
      03:15 Finish
      

      Source: https://youtu.be/VXPKxowfXDQ

      • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Picked up an aeropress and gave this a shot. Was a little more bitter than I expected.

        Will try again and change a few things, but I think this is a good starting point.

    • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍
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      3 months ago

      I’ve had an Aeropress for about a decade, and for the price I think it’s a great tool to have in the cupboard. It has positives and negatives.

      On the plus side, it’s portable, fast, and makes a single serving.

      On the downside, it’s single serving, and it produces mediocre cups (IMO, YMMV).

      I use mine to make my wife’s once-weekly decaf, and when I run myself out of cold brew and am not in the mood for an espresso drink. Maybe 5x a month. I’m really glad I have it; I’d be unhappy if it were the only thing I had.

      If you do get one, look on YouTube for best Aeropress method. Aeropress runs a competition and declares a winner for best method; the current winner is a rather fussy inverted method - but given the design, “fussy” for an Aeropress really isn’t hugely different in effort from Hoff’s “simplified” method. It’s a pretty simple process and you really have to go out of your way to make it hard, unlike pour-over which can be fractally and infinitely fussified.

    • CCMan1701A@startrek.website
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      3 months ago

      I like the fast brew method by Lukasz Jura.

      Coffee: 19.5–20g Grind: Slightly coarser than filter grind Water: 200ml @ 75°C Brewer: Inverted Filter: Paper, soaked

      Directions:

      1. Stir 4 times
      2. Stop stirring, secure the filter and turn at around 10 seconds (total contact time around 15 sec.)
      3. Press and serve

      I only use 14g of coffee and as much water as I can fit inverted without it falling over lol.