Can anyone help me understand World AeroPress Championship recipes?

Ethos Agriculture’s Journey from Vision to Impact in Coffee Sustainability: Part Two

In the second half of this article, we discover how the Coffee Barometer attempts to bridge the gap between discourse and action, envisioning a sustainable future for the coffee sector. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Featured photo courtesy of Rodrigo Flores via Unsplash As we embark on the second part of our conversation with Ethos […]


Don’t Skip the Budding Specialty-Café Culture in Quito, Ecuador

Introducing the specialty cafés of Quito, a city worth exploring on your coffee quest. BY JORDAN BUCHANANSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE Featured photo courtesy of Stratto When traveling across South America, Ecuador can be forgotten between the high profiles of Colombia and Peru. Similarly, coffee from Ecuador may be overlooked due to its giant neighbors, including […]


Brewing at Home and on the Road with Justin Pierce

In this series, we ask coffee professionals how they like to drink their coffee while at home and when traveling. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Feature photo courtesy of Justin Pierce Coffee professionals tend to spend most of their days brewing coffee. Baristas brew coffee behind the bar for their customers. Roasters brew it to […]


5 Amazing Coffee Drinks in Reno, Nev.

Here are some standout specialty drinks you can try in the Biggest Little City in the World. BY EDDIE P. GOMEZSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE Photos by Eddie P. Gomez Reno, Nev., has more cafés per capita than just about any other place in North America. And because it is a snowier-than-usual winter in northwestern Nevada […]

Can anyone help me understand World AeroPress Championship recipes?

Can anyone help me understand World AeroPress Championship recipes?

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...

Can anyone help me understand World AeroPress Championship recipes?

I should preface this by saying that I know all the usual caveats for WAC recipes. They're not practical for everyday home brewing, they're tuned to a specific coffee, they're made for a specific water composition, so on and so forth. I get that I can't expect to plug a given WAC recipe in for any coffee and get something magical from it. I don't really even care to try.

Rather, I'm curious about a very specific trend in WAC top flight recipes. Everything that I know (or think that I know) about making coffee indicates that it's ideal to chase the highest level of extraction possible without extracting "tannins". Everything that I (think I) know about brewing with an AeroPress indicates that maximizing extraction means grinding as fine as possible without causing channeling, using a relatively low dosage of coffee (e.g. 1:16), using very hot water, and steeping for as long as is feasible.

But basically every WAC top finisher for years now has done the exact opposite of all of this. They almost all seem to grind very coarse (they previously ranked the coarseness 1-10 where 1 is very fine and 10 very coarse, and it seems that 8/10 was the most common ranking given), use relatively cool water (80C is common, anything over 90C is rare, almost nobody ever uses 100C), steep for less time than the competition rules seem to allow them (almost universally brew times of less than two minutes), and most mystifyingly to me, use enormous doses of coffee (typically nothing lower than 1:11 even after dilution, and as high as 1:3 during the brew).

I'm just an amateur, but like I said, that's all nearly the exact opposite of what I've been taught results in good extraction. It seems like most WAC recipes would result in a wildly underextracted cup. This goes way beyond brews suited to a particular coffee – at first glance from my untrained eyes, it looks like most recipes go against what I thought were generally good brewing principles.

So why are so many of them like that? Am I fundamentally misunderstanding something about extraction and flavour, or is there something about the WAC tournament environment that adds context which I'm missing?

submitted by /u/AigisAegis
[link] [comments]

Shopping cart0
There are no products in the cart!
Continue shopping
0