Brewing A Perfect Cup Of Coffee
Brewing a great cup of coffee depends on a number of things such
as the quality of the coffee bean, the quality of the water
being used, the type of brewing being done, and the grind of the
coffee. Now quality of bean and water is something you can
easily take care. Just use good quality beans and pure water.
However the relationship between the grind of the coffee and the
type of brewing being done is more detailed and could use a
little explanation. Now we all know that we make coffee by
passing hot water over crushed coffee beans. However for it to
really work well we need to understand just how long the water
should be passing over the beans. The purpose of this article is
to help you understand how to match your coffee's grind to the
type of brewing you are doing in order to make the best coffee
possible.
Generally speaking, the 'soaking' time relates directly to how
coarse the coffee is ground. This means that smaller coffee
grinds need less contact with the water, and coarser grinds need
longer contact. Espresso coffee is only exposed to water for
20-40 seconds and as a result is made using extremely fine grind
coffee. A French press coffee maker can take as much as 4
minutes and uses an extremely coarse grind. If coffee is left
contacting water for too long for its grind size, unwanted
extracts emerge and make the coffee taste bitter. Of course if
the grind is too large and the water passes very quickly (like
using frech press grind in an espresso maker), very little of
the caffeine and flavours extracted and will have poor flavour.
Of course filters play an important role in managing the balance
between over and under brewing your coffee. Not only do they
keep the grind out of your cup, but they also control how fast
the water passes over the grinds. Paper filters are the most
common, but many people are also using metal varieties. Paper
filters are quite good. However they can absorb some of the
coffee flavour, and some people claim they can taste the paper
in the final coffee. Metal filters are normally made from
stainless steel or gold plated mesh. They have very fine weave
and filter out the coffee grinds very well. They also do not
alter the taste of the coffee at all. Metal filters are also
more environmentally friendly than the paper alternative.
Whichever you choose, be sure to buy decent quality. Cheap
filters often clog or not allow the coffee to brew properly. A
decent quality metal filter will last years and save money in
the end.
Brewing a cup of coffee is not that hard. Brewing a great cup
takes a little more understanding, but isn't any harder. Start
with fresh beans and good clean water and then match your
brewing style to the proper grind and then mess around with the
exact proportions and pretty soon your be brewing killer coffee
every time.