i stumbled on anaerobic coffee and im enjoying the unique quality of the beans, theyre fun and stand out, but i have noticed you really need to pay attention to how one brews it and be open to trying different things, the 4:6 method feels ideal for it cause it can adjust the acids and allows for the two larger pours,
Wow! The production quality of you're videos just skyrocketed! I've been watching since the first video, and it's great to see you grow. Really love this 👍
Thank you so much for your kind words and support!! Its been a great journey so far. Some early videos I feel are a bit cringe haha but I think I'm in a good flow now with shooting and editing 😊
I bought my first anerobic coffee and tried to brew it. Using the same technique I would for other coffee I found it too weak. It did taste fairly nice but weak. So I thought I should make it a finer grind. Went to my typical espresso grind to make it stronger. It was horrible. It takes skill but you really can mess it up. I use 22 clicks for pour over. I'll try 18 clicks (rather than 5 clicks for espresso). Most of the other things you did agree with my technique. Thank you for this video. The roaster I purchased it from (online due to the pandemic) never responded to my email questions. Most expensive roaster and absolutely no advice on how to brew the coffee I purchased from them. Time to stop buying coffee from them.
Hi Darrel! So glad others are finding similar things. Happy I could help in any way. It's a tricky topic when it comes to brewing with specific styles of coffee, more than people think! Any good roaster should certainly be more willing to help out.. that's disappointing! Thank you for watching, and thank you for your donation. It really means the world to me. Message me anytime ! Email in my profile, or Instagram @ coffeetimejr
Nice work! Easy method and good thoughts on why. What's the total brew time you're looking for here? Just so I understand: I want 60g/30s for the bloom, then 120g over about 30s, then draw down for a minute and a half, then another pour (presumably at the same pace, so 120g:30s). So you've poured all your water by about 2 minutes, is that correct? What's the time goal for completed draw down?
Hey Riley! Yes your breakdown is pretty much dead on. If we focus on timing, I'd finish around 2 minutes and hope for the last draw down to take me to 2:30-3. This can seem a bit fast, but it works depending on the coffee. One note though, I will often have longer brew times than that due to the draw down of each pour taking longer than expected. Rather than forcing myself to pour the next phase at 30 seconds, I will wait until the bed is drained almost completely and the grounds start to surface through the water before adding the next pour. When this takes longer then my brew time will likely be closer to 3:15-3:45.
I actually came to this video because I have been experimenting with a Columbian natural process on a C40. Still havent perfected it, but I just made made a pretty decent cup for me at 19 clicks on a C40. Have you figured it out yet?
i stumbled on anaerobic coffee and im enjoying the unique quality of the beans, theyre fun and stand out, but i have noticed you really need to pay attention to how one brews it and be open to trying different things, the 4:6 method feels ideal for it cause it can adjust the acids and allows for the two larger pours,
Wow! The production quality of you're videos just skyrocketed! I've been watching since the first video, and it's great to see you grow. Really love this 👍
Thank you so much for your kind words and support!! Its been a great journey so far. Some early videos I feel are a bit cringe haha but I think I'm in a good flow now with shooting and editing 😊
I bought my first anerobic coffee and tried to brew it. Using the same technique I would for other coffee I found it too weak. It did taste fairly nice but weak. So I thought I should make it a finer grind. Went to my typical espresso grind to make it stronger. It was horrible. It takes skill but you really can mess it up. I use 22 clicks for pour over. I'll try 18 clicks (rather than 5 clicks for espresso). Most of the other things you did agree with my technique. Thank you for this video.
The roaster I purchased it from (online due to the pandemic) never responded to my email questions. Most expensive roaster and absolutely no advice on how to brew the coffee I purchased from them. Time to stop buying coffee from them.
Hi Darrel! So glad others are finding similar things. Happy I could help in any way. It's a tricky topic when it comes to brewing with specific styles of coffee, more than people think! Any good roaster should certainly be more willing to help out.. that's disappointing! Thank you for watching, and thank you for your donation. It really means the world to me. Message me anytime ! Email in my profile, or Instagram @ coffeetimejr
Like the format. I Also like the side by side comparison. Thanks for the video ☕
Thanks Don!
Thanks for the guide!
Thank you! I just made a delicious brew! Been struggling
Thank you so much!! I just made a delicious brew ! I love natural fermented so much
So glad it worked for you!! Thanks for watching!
Nice work! Easy method and good thoughts on why. What's the total brew time you're looking for here? Just so I understand: I want 60g/30s for the bloom, then 120g over about 30s, then draw down for a minute and a half, then another pour (presumably at the same pace, so 120g:30s). So you've poured all your water by about 2 minutes, is that correct? What's the time goal for completed draw down?
Hey Riley! Yes your breakdown is pretty much dead on. If we focus on timing, I'd finish around 2 minutes and hope for the last draw down to take me to 2:30-3. This can seem a bit fast, but it works depending on the coffee.
One note though, I will often have longer brew times than that due to the draw down of each pour taking longer than expected. Rather than forcing myself to pour the next phase at 30 seconds, I will wait until the bed is drained almost completely and the grounds start to surface through the water before adding the next pour. When this takes longer then my brew time will likely be closer to 3:15-3:45.
@@CoffeeTimeJR Thanks! About to try this method now. Appreciate the speedy response!
if we're grinding finer than usual how does this translate to post-brew bed? are we expecting a slushy consistency?
Which grind size for comandante?
I actually came to this video because I have been experimenting with a Columbian natural process on a C40. Still havent perfected it, but I just made made a pretty decent cup for me at 19 clicks on a C40. Have you figured it out yet?
What is the brewing temperature?
what is 206 in C?
Ask google
Too bad he didn’t note total brew time or what grinder he used.