Hitting a wall with Aeropress brewing and flavor profiles

Understanding the Process: Double Fermentation

Continuing our series on coffee processing, we learn about double fermentation, a term that can refer to several different processes. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of Cafe Imports Editor’s note: Check out other entries in our “Understanding the Process“ series here. When exploring the wonderful world of high-quality coffee, you’ll discover that no […]


Understanding the Process: Carbonic Maceration

Continuing our series on coffee processing, we learn about carbonic maceration—a unique, newer processing method. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of Cafe Imports Editor’s note: Check out more entries in our “Understanding the Process“ series here. The rise of the specialty-coffee scene has helped many people understand that talking about coffee as something […]


4 Cool Cafés to Try Out in Kuala Lumpur

The Malaysian capital is often visited in a hurry, but visitors who take the time to explore will discover a welcoming city, thanks in part to its friendly specialty cafés. BY TANYA NANETTI SENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos by Tanya Nanetti Kuala Lumpur, the capital of Malaysia, is often a stopover on vacations, quickly left behind […]


Breaking New Ground: A Sicilian Coffee Plantation, Part 2

The Morettino family has successfully cultivated a coffee plantation right in Sicily. Next on the agenda: making the island an international coffee hub. BY JOSEPH PHELANSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Feature photo by Tomas Anton Escobar via Unsplash Editor’s note: Check out part one of this story here. Andrea Morettino’s family has proven that coffee […]

Hitting a wall with Aeropress brewing and flavor profiles

Serving Coffee in the Epicenter

The Turkish specialty-coffee community is coming together to support earthquake relief. BY MICHAEL BUTTERWORTHSPECIAL TO BARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE When Niji Coffee went live on Instagram, it felt as though the entire Turkish specialty-coffee community was watching with bated breath. Niji Coffee made a name for itself in the Turkish specialty-coffee scene when, as a relatively […]


How to roast anaerobically fermented coffee

Among the many different kinds of experimental processing methods, anaerobic fermentation is perhaps the most popular and intriguing. Interest in this processing technique is only growing, with more and more anaerobic fermented coffee available in cafés and roasteries around the world. Moreover, of all the advanced processing methods, this particular technique has one of the […]


María Andrée Is Honing Olfactory Skills in Antigua 

A sensorial class in Guatemala at Artista de Café teaches how to use your nose for the ultimate coffee experience. BY JORDAN BUCHANANBARISTA MAGAZINE ONLINE Photos courtesy of Arista de Café Walking into a specialty café in Guatemala, your nostrils are infused with aromas from the best coffees in the country. Your nose recollects the […]


Oklahoma’s T3 Roasters Completes a Historic Opening

Oklahoma-based coffee company T3 Roasters has opened a flagship brick-and-mortar roastery and coffee bar called T3 Coffee Co., inside a thoroughly remodeled historic building in downtown Collinsville. The building is…

Hitting a wall with Aeropress brewing and flavor profiles

Hitting a wall with Aeropress brewing and flavor profiles

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...

Hitting a wall with Aeropress brewing and flavor profiles

Hey all, I’ve been on the specialty coffee journey for several months now, so far only using my baratza encore and an Aeropress. I’m at the point where I can brew great smooth cups of coffee that aren’t bitter or sour, but have found the more complex flavors that are supposed to come out of different light roasts to be elusive depending on the beans I get.

I’ve gotten a bunch of different coffees from Onyx as well as a local roaster here in Colorado- and a couple of them have been really fantastic such as Onyx’s Ethiopia Modor Shantawene- The citrus notes and florals were really pronounced and delicious. But other beans that should be just as high quality and offer nuanced flavor profiles have overall tasted somewhat “generic” for lack of a better word. Again, super smooth and leagues above your average coffee machine coffee, but lacking the more nuanced flavors mentioned in the tasting notes.

Is this an inherent limitation with Aeropress brewing? I’ve got a v60 on my Xmas list and am looking forward to experimenting with that, but am wondering if there’s something lacking in my Aeropress technique that if changed could help bring these flavor profiles out more.

I’m basically doing an inverted hoffman method with his same ratio, 202 degree water (as hot as it will get in Colorado), and starting at a 10 (medium fine) on my encore and adjusting from there as needed depending on the beans, 2min steep and then flip onto the mug and either wait another :30 or start slowly pressing. I’ll use the aesir filters on super light roasts and standard filters for slightly darker ones.

It admittedly could also be that my palate isn’t as developed yet but like I mentioned I am getting some great flavor profiles out of certain beans. Should I be doing v60 if I really want to maximize these flavor profiles?

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