Another thing I'm serious about is coffee. I have a plethora of devices for making coffee, but for the past two years - both at home and at work - I primarily use the Aeropress (w/ an inverted technique) ...
You might recall those orange rings that cost $20 that you got hung up in the trees on your first throw Christmas day ... well, they re-engineered a good cup of coffee a few years back.
I rarely pull out the Chemex, the MyPressi, the Hario V60, the french press, the Moka pot, or the vacuum contraption these days ... I use the $25 Aeropress.
At the end of the day, good beans are good ... I buy mine from Intelligentsia for the most part ... their roasting schedule and shipping works out for me, and I like the bloom ...
Paramount to good beans, however, is grinding whole beans just before making your beverage ... I'll take Eight O'Clock fresh ground over pre-ground Intelligenstia all day, everyday ...
Get a grinder w/ ceramic blades, for the same reason you want one for your spice grinder ... less heat, more precise grind ...
I went through a loose leaf tea phase some years back, before the microbrew phase, before the coffee phase ... so I have a Zojirushi countertop hot water dispenser that uses a vacuum canister to make it efficient ... I would not spend that money, though ... I'd just get the Capresso H2O Plus or Pro, for a fraction of the cost ... it boils a boatload of water in mere minutes - so handy ... There's a whole bunch of healthier things I do at work because I can boil water in minutes at lunch, like rocking those Annie Chun soups etc ... good for the diet ...
Grind about 17-20g whole beans in something like the Hario Mini-Slim ($40 or so) I'm using here, ground half way between espresso and drip size ...
I use pickle jars, because I have them a plenty, and the Aeropress fits right in the opening nice and secure ... and they seem to take the hot water just fine (I've made a zillion drinks in them) ...
Put the freshly ground beans in the bottom of the Aeropress and add near boiling water about 1/3 to 1/2 way and stir it for 15 seconds or so ... with freshly roasted coffee, you'll generate some frothy crema in a bloom or sorts ... after a couple of seconds fill the cylinder the rest of the way and place the filter cap w/ a pre-soaked filter on it so the heat is contained well and set it off to the side ...
White it sits, microwave some sugar and milk or half-n-half in the microwave in the jar for 1:00 - 1:20 on high depending on how soon after you are done you want to be able to consume your beverage ... it's best at 1:20, but when I need my fix in the morning, I often go 60 seconds so I don't have to wait to long to start chugging ...
When it's done, pull it out and froth it up w/ a $10 BonJour mini-frother ...
And then flip the Aeropress into place in the jar like so ...
Producing a 3 tier result that should look like this ...
It's heaven, and there's no longer any reason to buy $5-$10 coffee beverages from Starbucks ... this is MUCH better, and much more convenient ...
And take this shit back off your bucket list, it's nothing special ...
Seriously, NOT the best coffee by a mile ...
I like Kenyan and Rwandan coffee a lot, but bean origin is REALLY subjective to one's palette ...
$25 Aeropress
$45 ceramic burr grinder
$45 water boiler
$10 milk frother
----
$125
It doesn't take long to pay for itself if you like coffee, and normally buy it in shops ...
You might recall those orange rings that cost $20 that you got hung up in the trees on your first throw Christmas day ... well, they re-engineered a good cup of coffee a few years back.
I rarely pull out the Chemex, the MyPressi, the Hario V60, the french press, the Moka pot, or the vacuum contraption these days ... I use the $25 Aeropress.
At the end of the day, good beans are good ... I buy mine from Intelligentsia for the most part ... their roasting schedule and shipping works out for me, and I like the bloom ...
Paramount to good beans, however, is grinding whole beans just before making your beverage ... I'll take Eight O'Clock fresh ground over pre-ground Intelligenstia all day, everyday ...
Get a grinder w/ ceramic blades, for the same reason you want one for your spice grinder ... less heat, more precise grind ...
I went through a loose leaf tea phase some years back, before the microbrew phase, before the coffee phase ... so I have a Zojirushi countertop hot water dispenser that uses a vacuum canister to make it efficient ... I would not spend that money, though ... I'd just get the Capresso H2O Plus or Pro, for a fraction of the cost ... it boils a boatload of water in mere minutes - so handy ... There's a whole bunch of healthier things I do at work because I can boil water in minutes at lunch, like rocking those Annie Chun soups etc ... good for the diet ...
Grind about 17-20g whole beans in something like the Hario Mini-Slim ($40 or so) I'm using here, ground half way between espresso and drip size ...
I use pickle jars, because I have them a plenty, and the Aeropress fits right in the opening nice and secure ... and they seem to take the hot water just fine (I've made a zillion drinks in them) ...
Put the freshly ground beans in the bottom of the Aeropress and add near boiling water about 1/3 to 1/2 way and stir it for 15 seconds or so ... with freshly roasted coffee, you'll generate some frothy crema in a bloom or sorts ... after a couple of seconds fill the cylinder the rest of the way and place the filter cap w/ a pre-soaked filter on it so the heat is contained well and set it off to the side ...
White it sits, microwave some sugar and milk or half-n-half in the microwave in the jar for 1:00 - 1:20 on high depending on how soon after you are done you want to be able to consume your beverage ... it's best at 1:20, but when I need my fix in the morning, I often go 60 seconds so I don't have to wait to long to start chugging ...
When it's done, pull it out and froth it up w/ a $10 BonJour mini-frother ...
And then flip the Aeropress into place in the jar like so ...
Producing a 3 tier result that should look like this ...
It's heaven, and there's no longer any reason to buy $5-$10 coffee beverages from Starbucks ... this is MUCH better, and much more convenient ...
And take this shit back off your bucket list, it's nothing special ...
Seriously, NOT the best coffee by a mile ...
I like Kenyan and Rwandan coffee a lot, but bean origin is REALLY subjective to one's palette ...
$25 Aeropress
$45 ceramic burr grinder
$45 water boiler
$10 milk frother
----
$125
It doesn't take long to pay for itself if you like coffee, and normally buy it in shops ...