DIY Pour Over Coffee Set ups
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- I made a pour over stand for making coffee out of a rock! This DIY project is a great gift idea and this video not only includes the DIY steps for this pour over stand I also show how to make accessory pieces for nice looking modern coffee set ups. I am testing out ideas for the in-room coffee set up at the hotel I am building called RESET but these would be great for a coffee bar at home.
If you are curious about the Reset Hotel in Joshua Tree follow us on instagram:
/ hotelreset
Tools and Links (affiliate links)
Stone carving wheel for angle grinder by Ridgid and available at The Home Depot
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Stone carving wheel for angle grinder from Amazon
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stone cutting and flat grinding wheel for angle grinder from amazon
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Lab equipment parts
Rods with Circle stands
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The nice support ring I used:
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Black Pour over stand:
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This video is sponsored by Ryobi and Kreg
Ryobi Angle Grinder:
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Kreg Portable CrossCut
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Ryobi Circular Saw
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Ryobi Orbital Sander
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Ryobi HP drill and Driver
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Ryobi Palm Router
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For additional projects and information check out our website:
www.homemade-mo...
The stone pour-over station would be n attractive feature for a bar/barista area in the lobby.
yes would be great at a counter and durable!
Great video as always! I admire the simplicity (or minimalism rather) of your setup, videos and the end products! No fancy workshop, tools and 3D renders, just great looking products.
thank you!
Wow! I’m so inspired by this video thank you.
Am continually amazed at human design possibilities brought to the fore. Thx man, it is inspiring.
thank you for watching!
The green one was my favorite then the white ash I believe it’s called is my 2nd favorite ❤
Green and the white sets are my favs.
yes!
Your use of an angle grinder on stone and Lego makes me giddy. Love it. I cut my first rock and I was amazed that it really was as easy as it looks. Next, to the Lego store!
Wow, you opened my eyes to more possibilities... I want to be you when I grow up.
Really cool ideas. Now I'm thinking about doing something like this for my own kitchen.
do it!
Thank you! My brain is now filled with possibilities 🤔
get to making then!
You always seem to find something new to surpirise us with. You are just so creative!
thank you :)
Simple ideas and designs but very effective 👍👍☕☕😁
Thank you so much 😊
Nice!
thanks!
The lego stand thing is cool. Except, I'd suggest more room for sugar. At least 4, otherwise a lot of people are foing to have to pull out the other storage for sugar.
yeah might have to add another layer of lego brick to make it deeper
Super.
Thank you! Cheers!
Great design exercise. All concepts look awesome. Mahalo for sharing Ben. 🙂❤️🙏
Glad you enjoyed it!
Interest designs, Ben! I think I like the black or white ones the most.
thanks Bruce!
Great work, very clever idea!
Thank you! Cheers!
ooo the sage green 😍😍
yes!
I really like the blond wood option! I'd like the walnut one if the coffee pour over had a better base. I feel like you could make the base better - maybe with a tile imbeded in the walnut to catch the drips.
I like the tile idea!
Love this
thank you!
Hey Ben great video maybe for the creamers you can use varying sizes of test tubes
test tubes would be rad!
The whitewashed/blonde version and monochromatic set look the best in my opinion.
that seems to be the consensus
You've really opened my eyes to the versatility of the angle grinder. I've only used mine on bolts and rebar LOL. This and that bench with the rock base are only scratching the surface i'm sure. Anyway... have a great Xmas and hug your sister like a good brother should!
its a great tool but requires caution because they are powerful!
I’m surprised you didn’t make your own concrete rocks 😂
I have done that!
very cool, Ben!
thank you!
Always great, Ben! I'd love to visit your place. Those concrete versions have some Frank Lloyd Wright flavors going on. For those who don't know, Wright also dabbled in hotel architecture and stylizing. For example, the Arizona Biltmore which predominantly features... his experiments with concrete block!
I love his work and his textile blocks inspired a lot of my concrete work
Neat service! How about a concrete drip catcher that fits into a hole below the coffee cup? Yeah, I prefer real milk or cream to the pre-pack Coffeemate but not sure how practical it is to provide actual cream/milk in a hotel situation, mostly due to spoilage issues.
yes! I was actually thinking of doing the drip catcher out of cork so that it insulates the coffee
Try putting water on the stone as a lubricant when drilling through it for those stainless steel bars
yes good call! the heat does seem to be the problem
05:30 now i want a matcha dessert.
Also now i am wondering if the Lego form approach would work with fine clay. should work if you let it dry in the form, and try to fire it after breaking the mold. Basically combining Primitive Technology and HMM. The concrete is beautiful and has its own aesthetic, but doing it with clay might be an option for a more natural look... you know like the Lego you find in the Woods :)
would love to see this
Love the lego design technique. Unless the weight is absolutely necessary, you might want to consider using a piece of (compressed) styrofoam inside your mold once you get into product. I wouldn't want to see that go through a window easily either.
What if you glued the rock pour-over piece to the tray? Stop people from tossing it through a window. It's by far the most memorable of the sets. If not, the black and blonde both look great. I am partial to the sturdy black but it will show limescale faster.
that about that but it would be harder to clean
Having a pour-over system in a hotel room introduces a ton of failure points in the coffee brewing process, and I'd be really leery of using it. It also seems like it's only allowing for a single-serving of coffee per day, and the fact that it's loose definitely makes it harder/more time-consuming for staff to refill.
I'm not sure how to address this, since (I think) anything more complicated than a Keurig is just automatically going to feel complicated to the average guest. You could try pre-filled silk sachets for your coffee, that way brewing is as simple as making tea, while still feeling like a relatively luxe experience.
I'd also recommend switching to a small carafe for the brewing vessel, and scaling up your coffee dose to fill it.
That said, you know your clientele best, maybe pour-over just isn't an issue for them.
maybe but we are side by side testing it vs pod machines and so far results are leaning towards pour over
if you soak the wood in black tea before you add the vinegar black it will made a darker color.
great tip! thanks!
If you get re-sealable creamer containers, and don't mind taking on the liability of it, you can use a pressure cooker to ultra-pasteurize them so they're shelf-stable.
smart! thanks!
Check bad dog tools They have a cutting diamond wheel with a life time guaranty Cheers
will do!
the black and white both look super cool. however, i think the green kinda shows off your fun creative side a bit more. the lego brick pattern looks "at home" in the green.
agreed!
ash or the green one
yeah the green one is probably my favorite.
Look out for thieves' hotels lose a lot of stuff.
yes always a consideration!
This is a really solid idea.
and heavy!
That’s not a Buster Sword, it’s the Benster Sword
lol!
the green speaks to me. bummer about the rock stand, that would be my first choice for my home.
the rock stand is going in my home! should last forever
I love the whole process of DIY-ing your hotel furniture and accessories! One question though: how do you plan to fast replace items like these in the (inevitable) case of damage and/or destruction by guests? I’d be curious to hear about contingency ideas you’re preparing!
we have a firm called sightline running the operations and they provide input on these issues. we def need back up items ready on site for damage and theft. the trick is balancing practicality without doing the same boring plastic stuff everyone else does.
I'm glad to know power carving stone is so easy. I've been wanting to try making cairns
and the carving discs last a long time!