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Brewing and Storing Your Coffee
Good coffee is not a question of doing one thing right.
It is a collection of little things that together make things work. You
can make some major screw ups that will make your morning pot irreparable, such
as buying coffee from somebody besides us, but, generally speaking, it is the
little things that count.
The Beans
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Buy good beans. Make sure they are fresh.
Make sure they are roasted the best way for that bean. The body of an
Indonesian coffee does not fully develop until later in a roast, therefore
we take it darker. The subtleties of some Latin American coffees would
be lost if taken to the same degree of roast. |
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Store them correctly. The enemies of coffee are
heat and humidity, so seal them up and put them someplace cool. Do not
put them in the refrigerator or freezer. The fridge has too much
humidity and the freezer damages the flavor oils that make coffee
good. We would rather have you buy less coffee than have it go
horribly wrong because it sat around too long. |
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Whole bean is better. Unroasted green coffee has a
shelf life of about two years. Roasted whole bean coffee has a shelf
life of about three weeks (if properly stored). Ground coffee begins
to degrade after 24 hours. |
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Buy a burr grinder (we recommend and, of course, sell the
La Pavoni Burr Grinder). Your coffee will keep longer and the smell of
ground coffee is worthwhile. |
The Brewing
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Brew to the correct temperature. Coffee should be
brewed at between 195 and 205 degrees. Most home brewing equipment
comes in at about 180 to 185. If you are brewing at 160, you are not
unlocking all the flavor from your coffee. It might be time for a new
brewer. |
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Use the correct coffee grind. It should take about
3.5 minutes to brew a 48 oz. pot of coffee. Any longer and your grind
may be too fine. Any quicker and your grind may be too coarse.
The water needs the right amount of time to unlock the flavor from your
coffee. |
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Use filtered water. Sometimes it isn't the coffee
that is bad. Even city water has a collection of things you may not
want in your coffee. Furthermore, the minerals can sometimes gunk up
your brewer over time. |
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Don't leave it on the burner. Coffee is delicate
burners are evil. Drink it faster or use an airpot or thermal
carafe. Just don't burn it. |
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Use the correct amount of coffee. We recommend 1.5
tablespoons per 8 oz. of water. Using too little coffee makes it
bitter. Using too much makes it harsh. It is better to put too
much in and then dilute it with hot water (commercial brewing equipment does
this automatically). |
The most important thing is that you enjoy your coffee.
Do as many things from above as you can, adjust to your personal preferences and
time constraints, and then fake the rest.
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