This is the absolute fastest way to make French press iced coffee. Just forget about cold brew concentrate – with this Quick French Press Iced Coffee Recipe you can have your iced coffee ready in 5 – 6 minutes. Who doesn’t like the French press?! It’s...
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
I Tested Keurig K Compact – Here’s Everything You Need To Know
The most affordable Keurig coffee maker is available exclusively at Walmart and comes at a sweet price of only $59.00. In this article, you’ll find out how good it really is, and also find additional information like how to clean it, or do you need a water...
Here’s How to Change Keurig 2.0 Water Filter Easily
Not sure how to change Keurig 2.0 water filter? Here are step-by-step instructions that will help you do it quickly and easily. Keurig water filter should be changed every 2 months or 60 tank refills. The water filter is located inside the water tank, on the valve at...
The coffee rose for assessing Anaerobic coffee
I just came across this really neat tool to assess anaerobic coffees. I haven't used it for cupping yet. I'm not sure I will like it either because the idea of lowering the score of the coffee just because it tastes has some thyme flavors. At the same time I...
Three US Coffee Championship Events Are Heading To Rancho Cucamonga
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. The 2024 US Barista Championship, Brewers Cup, and Cup Tasters will take place March 15-17 at Klatch Coffee Roasters in Rancho Cucamonga, California.
The Origin Story of Turtle Island Coffee in Vancouver, B.C.
A new Indigenous-owned coffee company based in Vancouver, British Columbia, called Turtle Island Coffee has launched with the goal of exposing more people to high quality specialty coffee and Indigenous...
Get Ready for The Barista League’s 2024 Season
The Barista League has announced 12 competitions across four continents. BY J. MARIE CARLANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of The Barista League When The Barista…
Get Ready for The Barista League’s 2024 Season
The Barista League has announced 12 competitions across four continents. BY J. MARIE CARLANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of The Barista League When The Barista…
Get Ready for The Barista League’s 2024 Season
The Barista League has announced 12 competitions across four continents. BY J. MARIE CARLANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of The Barista League When The Barista League announces new events, it’s worth paying attention! This year, the schedule will be...
Weekly Coffee News: EUDR and Africa + More Celebrity Coffee
Welcome to DCN’s Weekly Coffee News. Keep up with all the latest coffee industry stories and career opportunities by subscribing to DCN’s newsletter. Tell our editors about your news here. Report: Small-Scale Farmers in...
Do Higher Coffee Prices Mean More Money For Farmers? A Story From Sumatra Shows It’s Complicated
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. Since coffee costs more now than ever, do those coffee prices impact the amount of money earned by coffee farmers?
Coffee News Recap, 2 Feb: Applications open for Australia’s Richest Barista 2024, De’Longhi reports 4.6% revenue increase after La Marzocco move & other stories
Every Friday, Perfect Daily Grind rounds up the top coffee industry news from the previous week. Here are this week’s coffee news stories. The word of the week is: expansion. Mon, 29 Jan AeroPress launches limited-edition Clear Pink brewer. The coffee brewer is made...
Watch The 8 Best Coffee Videos Vying For Sprudgie Awards
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. The best coffee videos from 2023 featuring Cafe Imports, Aramse, Nguyen Coffee Supply, Wildly, Mirror Coffee Roasters, Alto Stories, Quek Shio, and Cafe Retiro.
Robusta is great and has untapped potential
I live in the US and my typical choice of coffee is lightly roasted Ethiopian pour overs. I generally love acidity and fruit flavors in my coffee. My experience with Robusta has often been poor. Very dark, roasty and maybe chocolatey. I participated in the Hoffman...
Design Details: Brewing Reinvented at ULA Café in Melbourne
Welcome to Design Details, an ongoing editorial feature in Daily Coffee News focused on individual examples of coffee shop architecture, interior design, packaging design or branding. If you are a coffee...
Robert Downey Jr.’s New “Happy Coffee” Is Really Depressing
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. Robert Downey Jr. and Craig Dubitsky team up for Happy Coffee.
Out Now: The February + March 2024 Issue of Barista Magazine!
In our new issue we feature Lisa Lawson from Glasgow, Scotland, take a look at the newest grinders, explore spring drink inspiration, see how more women are getting involved in coffee tech, and much more! BY SARAH ALLENBARISTA MAGAZINE We’re stoked to announce the...
The coffee industry’s biggest competition: The story of the World Barista Championship
Every year, the global coffee industry gears up for one of its most exciting and groundbreaking competitions: the World Barista Championship. For more than two decades, the WBC has been one of the biggest catalysts for change and innovation in specialty coffee, and...
The 2023 Specialty Coffee Transaction Guide Has Landed
The 2023 edition of the Specialty Coffee Transaction Guide (SCTG) guide went live today, providing actors throughout the coffee chain a data-driven tool for green coffee price discovery. The full...
Espro great until I needed replacement filter ☹️
I've had an Espro P7 for nearly four years after seeing glowing praise on this sub (to which I later contributed). Before I bought the P7 I looked at the replacement parts available and they seemed like a solid company in that they sold e.g. replacement filters...
New Bill Requires More Kona In Your Kona Coffee
This article is from the coffee website Sprudge at http://sprudge.com. This is the RSS feed version. Currently a coffee only need to be 10% Kona to be labeled as such.
What’s the best and worst part about owning and running a coffee shop?
I'm not interested in getting into it myself, as I have no experience in the service industry, no real appetite for risk and no desire to run a business in general. But sometimes I think about it and I wonder what's the most enjoyable thing about it and...
minimum dose size?
I use the Hario switch to brew my coffee and am trying to reduce my caffeine consumption. Hence I would like to brew smaller cups of coffee. I am currently using 10g of coffee with 160g of water. (1:16 Ratio) I am wondering if there is a minimum amount of coffee...
[CAFE OWNERS] Background before starting a shop?
I’ve worked in coffee for 6 yrs as a barista and shift supervisor and have passion for it. I’ve decided that I want to open my own place in the future and so I’ve been doing the research to make a business plan. Lately, however, I’ve begun to realize just how many...
Batch-Brew Basics, Continued…
One of the first posts on this blog was “Batch Brew Basics, Part 1”. I’ve wanted to write Part 2 for a long time, but have been deterred by what I see in cafes: almost no one has the basics down. What’s the point of an advanced post if almost no one has mastered the basics? Am I in the minority in thinking cafes should treat their batch-brew setup with respect?
I’d like to restate a few things that should be obvious to coffee professionals, but even well-known cafes seem to not get these points. To the 99.9% of readers who aren’t coffee consultants, you’d be shocked at how many excuses cafe owners and baristas give me for why they can’t be bothered to implement these simple practices that would greatly improve the quality of their batch brews.
1. Brew batches no larger than 2 liters. The only cafe I’ve been to in the last five years that was too busy to get by on 2-liter batches was in Grand Central Station. I can’t even fathom how many cups of filter coffee they sell per day– it’s well over 1000. For almost everyone else, if you’re serving fewer than 500 cups of filter coffee per day, two liters per batch is sufficient. If you’re really busy, ie you serve more than 50 cups (12oz or 350ml) of batch brew per hour, it may be best to brew into a rotation of three tw0-liter carafes during those busy hours. That system will keep the coffee fresher and tasting better than will brewing fewer, but larger, batches.
There is no reasonable excuse for brewing 4-liter batches, or brewing into 4-liter urns, as I see so many cafes do. If you want your customers to respect batch-brew coffee, it will help to show it more respect from behind the counter first. Small batches, brewed into full carafes, turned over at least once per half hour is the way to go. Please.
2. Your bed depth should be 3cm–5cm... I applaud the many cafes, especially in Australia, trying to promote batch brew to a disinterested population, and brewing tiny batches (often 1–1.5 liters) to limit coffee waste. But if you want to brew one-liter batches, you either need a wire basket insert to narrow the diameter of your coffee bed (hence increasing its depth) or you need to find a machine designed properly to brew such small batches (and, honestly, the home-version of the Moccamaster is not a cafe-quality machine.)
3. This will shock many readers:
If your batch-brew grind setting is not in the 15% coarsest section of your grinder dial, there is a problem somewhere in your system.
That’s not a misprint. You know that “auto drip” icon in the middle of the spectrum of grind settings on the old Bunn and Grindmaster machines? It’s in the wrong spot*— those settings were chosen years ago when 99% of those grinders were used in American restaurants where they skimped on grounds. Back then restauranteurs were using 30-40g/L (seriously– in the 90s, when I tried to get my restaurant accounts to use 60g/L they thought I was mad) and grinding too fine in order to reach a palatable brew strength. A professional using a reasonable ratio ( i.e. 16:1–18:1) should grind very coarse. If you find the coffee is too weak in that coarse range of grind settings, at least one of these things is a problem:
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The grinder burrs are too dull.
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The bed depth is too shallow.
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The brew time is too short.
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The sprayhead may not be making use of the whole coffee bed.
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There is no prewet phase at the beginning of brewing.
There are other potential problems, but these are the most common culprits.
*While we’re at it, you may as well swap the “auto drip” and “French press’ positions on the grinder.
4. Total Contact Time should be 6:00–6:30
This advice is more flexible than the other recommendations in this post, but 6:00–6:30 seems to be the sweet spot for batch brews. Try to get there without extending the programmed brew time past 4:30.
Thanks for reading.















