Coffee

Having used a variety of methods, I have settled on a Moka pot and Aldi or Lidl single-origin ground coffee.
Me, too.
I have a cafetierre (which I rarely use), and got rid of an espresso machine (to an obese dipper fan, after it had broke, TWICE in two years. Paid £60 sold for £30), and a filter/paper machine. Can't be arsed using anything but a Moka pot, now.
Lidl's Deluxe blends are my personal fave, and tend to be on offer, about once every six weeks. Bargain.
 
Any coffee nuts on here. I have started experimenting with my filter coffee machine. Using boiling water, pour over coffee grounds first before putting in machine (fresh coffee beans from a coffee roaster) and it has made a huge difference to the taste of the coffee. I have disliked instant coffee for years and only used to drink tea.

I have been toying with the idea of getting a new machine - Sage Precision Brewer - as I don’t really want to go down the road of an espresso machine but I have been toying with the idea of using an aeropress or a V60 as you can, allegedly, get almost as good a brew for a fraction of the cost. Has anyone any experience of either of these methods or will I get a better brew with the Sage?

My advice is to stop right now! Buy a Senseo pod/pad machine and have done with it.
You are opening Pandora's box and will never enjoy coffee quite the same again.
Under extracted, over extracted. Did the milk have perfect microfoam?
Why is this bitter? Is it the beans or me?
Every cup becomes a critical review.
James Hoffmann should be banned from Youtube!

Says the guy now sat looking at his dual boiler coffee machine and burr grinder.
 
The 'bloom' phase. Also makes a difference if you make a little well in the middle of the coffee when you put it in the filter paper.

I use an Aeropress daily with freshly ground beans (game changer). Aeropress needs careful work to achieve consistency (grind size, brew time, temperature, agitation, brewing method), and V60 similarly.

Have a look at James Hoffman's channel on YouTube. He's a bit posh, but VERY knowledgeable.

Recently bought an aero press and prefer it to my stove top and French Press.
Use the inverted method but still open to experimentation. More of grind size issue perhaps.
Open to tips/advice.

Getting good beans is a must and you'll never get these in a supermarket.
Lots and lots of quality roasters in the UK now (me and mate run a coffee listing project as a 'side biz' and list around 550 roasters now.

The likes of North Tea Power, Takk, Federal, Foundation, Ancoats, Coffee Fix in Manchester all serve really, really good coffee.

My Gaggia espresso machine needs fixing (those old school metal ones) but you can get close to perfection with those, but many variables.

Would love a decent dual boiler machine and better burr grinder mind....
 
I use a cafeteria and Waitrose Kenyan AA coffee. I've tried loads of different ones in my time but this is definately the best tasting. It's pricey at £3.50 but they often have it on offer and I stock up when they do. Aldi do a great alternative, a Java I think at about £2.
 
A cafetière does the job nicely for me. Quick, simple, cheap and effective.

Sainsbury’s sell a very nice Sumatran ground coffee. There are plenty of decent ones around though.

Sometimes I’ll get the grinder out instead but most times I’m too lazy.
 
Can't recommend Aeropress enough. Gets a cracking coffee out in a few mins. I use Rave grounded coffee, really nice stuff. I just buy the "taster packs" or whatever they are. Slightly different flavors, everything keeps fresh and never a bad brew.

I just use the "inverted" method for the aeropress then top up with hot water. Done.
 
Can't recommend Aeropress enough. Gets a cracking coffee out in a few mins. I use Rave grounded coffee, really nice stuff. I just buy the "taster packs" or whatever they are. Slightly different flavors, everything keeps fresh and never a bad brew.

I just use the "inverted" method for the aeropress then top up with hot water. Done.
Inverted method is good because you don't end up either that first drip of really sour coffee in the cup which can affect the balance of the brew. Easier to get a consistent brew.
 

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