(02-12-2016, 02:24 AM)Marko Wrote: NeoXerxes, I never cease to be amazed by how tenaciously people will cling to their professed love of truly awful coffee. In Canada there is Tim Horton's which serves probably the worst coffee in humanity yet its become something of a Canadian institution. Baffling. I drink coffee black so I tried a Horton's the way most people order it which is double double - 2 cream 2 sugar and it made a little more sense as it tasted more like a candy bar than a cup of coffee. Still awful in my book. Life is too short for bad coffee - it takes small incremental effort to improve your coffee significantly. Oh well, I guess that just leaves more of the good stuff for those who appreciate it.
Mark
Here's the thing: as long as people will try the alternative, I don't blame them for clinging to their sludge lol. Most folks who have tried my pour over coffee have been absolutely surprised and delighted. Those in the minority will continue to enjoy their mass market stuff, and that's okay too. Taste isn't completely objective, but I do think that once the best stuff is experienced, most people will aggregate around that.
(02-12-2016, 03:01 AM)SharpSpine Wrote: Can either of you fellas comment on how pour over coffee compared to the AeroPress brew method? I love my AeroPress but the way y'all talk about pour over does have me intrigued.
Sure! AeroPress is a nice method, and it sits somewhere in between a French press and a pour over brew. In my opinion it is better (subjectively) than a French press because it is able to extract more complexity, but it isn't quite as nice as a pour over if you have coffee that displays acidic/fruity/floral traits. In terms of home brewing methods, IMO the more delicate notes will get lost in anything other than a proper pour over brewing method (excepting some experimental and rather expensive brewing methods of course).
That said, Aeropress is a bit easier to use because many of the steps are somewhat standardized. Pour over takes practice. Even the rate and skill behind the pour will make a difference in taste. It all depends on what kind of coffee you prefer though.
kwsher,
SharpSpine and
Marko like this post