Coffee
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Here's the stamp on the bottom. I love the feel of stone wear. So old school.
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Those are 666S. They were Shane's before I got them. Love the devils.
"Obstacles are stepping-stones That guide us to our goals"
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Jeez… This Cape Town coffee shop is amazing....
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I was gonna get one but they're not made in USA. I have so many mugs now that I'm getting picky about that shit. Made in USA mugs cost about $6-8 with designs on them. Makes no sense to buy one that's $15+ And made in China(or wherever) unless you love the design on the mug. Can't wait for $50+ Made in Japan Ironheart mug though, am I right??
funny shit
would love to have some of those "made in USA" mugs though… -
Well, the V60 is proving to be a finicky bitch. I can't see getting a great cup until I have a gooseneck kettle. Just not gonna happen. The Aeropress consistently creates an amazing cup with these Gesha beans. But so far the V60 is lackluster. I've adjusted my grind, pour speed, etc a couple of times. Still not great.
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The gooseneck is huge the way I do mine. I can't imagine a pour over without it.
Either way, it is a way different extraction, and a different flavor.
I can detail what I do here if anyone is interested, it works really well for my palate.
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Hey Urbs, what were you shooting with? I've been thinking about the series all day.
Cheap setup
Canon 6D with Canon 50mm 1.4 -
Quick question for all you coffee lovers.
I have just purchased an Aeropress and Porlex ceramic hand grinder for using when at work. A simple and neat coffee making solution that will gets lots of use.
With regard to the Porlex grinder, do you wash the grinder out or just keep using it?? If you do clean them, how often and what with, warm water or with any kind of detergent?
Also the grade of grind looks to be controlled via twisting a nut on the underside of the grinder unit, can anyone confirm this to be the case?
The instructions that came with the grinder were entirely in Japanese which I don't read.
Any top tips would be appreciated.
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Snowy, thanks for the info, much appreciated.
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Salvadorian beauty; Santa Marta honey process arrived today. Roasted yesterday. 11oz pourover at 197F, one minute bloom, 29g ground at 15 on the Baratza. Yes I like strong coffee
http://www.paradiseroasters.com/el-salvador-santa-marta-honey-process/
Honey, berries, caramel, chocolate, butter, pine resin, clove. Crisp and bright.
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Give it a few more days if you can. It peaks around days 4-11. Haven't looked too far for a definititive answer but it's been true to my tastes as well as what I've been told. Quick quote I found;
Most single origin coffees will start to show well around 4 days post roast and start to decline on day 8 or 9. Most well made blends, many of which demand higher dosing (at least those "marquee blends" from major roasters in N. America), will peak a little later, maybe on day 5 or 6 or 7, and could last for 4 or 5 days near peak, if they have enough constituent coffees in them so that there is more than one "peak" to contend with.
As a general rule, the more lightly roasted is a coffee, the longer it will take to peak, and the darker is the roast the faster it will peak and decline.
http://www.home-barista.com/knockbox/how-long-after-roasting-is-coffee-at-its-best-t16604.html
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Oh yeah; the idea is to get them ASAP after roasting and use a repeatable extraction so that I get to sample the full progression and evolution of the bean. Then I can determine each bean's taste curve. Then I can adjust the recipe as needed once I've found the peak for a given bean. The scientific method rocks!