Me too I literally just ordered the v60 from Amazon so I’m watching tutorials bout using these I went from French press mocha pot now this I hope this one works
Simple and informative without getting too much into the weeds - the swirl is a good technique that I also use to even out the coffee bed so it draws down evenly
I really want to try this brew, but I have 2 questions... 1. Following the 1:16 ratio, if I decided to lessen the bean weight to, say, 15g : 240mL, will I also need to lessen the time to brew it? 2. Your cup (if I computed it correctly) was brewed: - first pour to 50g: 0s - 30s - second pour to 200g: 30s - 45s - third pour to finish: 45s - 3m15s? (total of 2m 30s of it just sitting? This is what isn't making sense for me 😅) Great vid btw!! Great for beginners :)
Hey Kristine! These are great questions. 1. Yes, the total brew time will be less than what we recommend in this video since it'll take the water less time to flow through. For that, trust your pallet! If it's tasting sour, you can go a little longer. If it's tasting bitter, you might want to shorten your brew time! 2. I'm going to try my best to make this a little easier to understand haha - For the first pour, you're just pouring to 50g. This will probably take around 10-15s. Once you're done pouring, you're going to wait until the 30s mark on your timer. - The second pour to 200g will begin. This will probably take until 45s - 55s depending on how fast or slow you're pouring. Don't get caught up too much in the timing here. Just gently pour your water to 200g - Wait 10-15s for the water to come down a little bit - Begin pouring until 320g. Once you're done, just wait until it's finished brewing. It will take some time for it to draw down and should hit those target times. I don't know if that was any easier to understand, but hopefully that helped! I think you're headed in the right direction. Feel free to respond if you have any other questions. Happy to help!
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters ah, that makes a lot more sense for me now. Thank you so much, I appreciate it! I’ll try doing this and adjust according to my taste! 😁
OMG I jus tried this and my coffee becomes SO MUCH better! Such simple tips but makes so much difference even if I was not using a scale and only eyeing on the measurements lol. Thank you!
Perfect! I'm a potter, and I've been working on a design for pour-over cones but haven't really perfected the brew technique myself yet. Knowing how fine the grounds are and about how long it should take is SUPER helpful to test out mine!
Do you have any suggestions for designing the ideal cone? I've seen a few different ways to do the drip holes, and the inside texture. What I have now I've taken a tool and carved out a swirl, but the next one I want to try is actually a piping bag full of slip to make ridges.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters The first few I've done I took a trimming tool and carved a spiral, but next I plan on using a piping bag full of slip to make ridges.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters The first few I've done I took a trimming tool and carved a spiral, but next I plan on using a piping bag full of slip to make ridges.
my coffee maker recently died. So, I started using a similar method of boiling water in a kettle and pouring it over the grounds. I didn't even know it was a "thing". After a bit of trial and error I have had decent results. Many of the tips shown here are things that I learned too doing this method. Thanks.
This combo worked perfect first time for me.. old kitchen kettle and no timer scales yet .. plus no ideas of the quality of the water disoensed here in Laos… thanks for setting me on the path to coffee mania 👍👍🙏🙏☕️
THANK YOU!!!! My coffee was tasting bitter and I could not taste the chocolate notes that Starbucks Pike Place is supposed to have. I've always freshly ground my beans but was grinding too fine. I went from 8 to 10 because you said medium to coarse. I also followed your steps as close as I could with my kitchen scale. WOW! I smelled rich chocolate before I even took a sip. It tastes like rich chocolate and is way smoother than before! ❤
Wow, thanks! Every time my sister makes coffee it’s great, but every time I make my own it is so bitter! Just made some using this method, added some steamed milk and cream and it’s great! I hope to find other videos using French press and also this new Aero-press I just got! Again, my sister makes great coffee with these tools and mine turns out tasting like cigarettes. Never thought I’d need a recipe for coffee, but here I am.
Thank you for sharing your experience with this method we shared! We're glad to hear that it was helpful and now your coffee tastes much better. As for French Press and Aeropress, we have our recipes and methods on our RUclips channel. Feel free to give those a shot!
I’ve never measured out my coffee before and I was surprised how little coffee this produces. Goes to show I was brewing too much. However the cup I just made with even bad brand coffee grounds was so delicious and fruity just by following these instructions!! I live really close to the ONYX Coffee Company which is exploding all around the US. Safe to say this week I’ll be going to get their fresh coffee beans to grind myself and use with my pour over 😬
That's a really good sign when you can make a delicious coffee with bad brand coffee grounds! You're lucky to have Onyx so close. They're pretty great! If you're looking for some new coffee to brew, head to our website at Mirrorcoffeeroasters.com Take 20% off while you're at it with Mirror20off
Thanks, this helps! i developed my taste for coffee when covid hit (like many others :) ), watched a couple tutorial and its always hit or miss for my pour over, and i think its when I pour the water. I usually start pouring from the outside to create the bloom, but the gounds in the middle always doesnt get wet coz I am afraid its too much water for the first round. This vid make me realize I should start from the center and swirl outward. I probably also had too small of water (4-5oz). I tried 8 oz this time and poured 3x like you did. Came out great!
That's so awesome, thank you for sharing that! We're glad this was helpful. If you still want to make sure your bloom soaks all the grounds, feel free to give it a really good swirl after pouring the bloom!
Thanks for my first pour-over! It wasnt delicious but that wasn't because of your informative tips, overhead angles, and that satisfying slurp at 3:15 . I'll get better, and re-watch this video many times.
This comment is simply incredible. Glad the informative tips, overhead angles, and the slurp didn't take away from the experience. Thanks for sharing and best of luck!
You can do both. It's just a personal preference to brew into a carafe or serving vessel and then distribute it into a cup. Going directly into a cup is more convenient and efficient if you're drinking the whole cup!
When i started to drink coffee i was very noobie, using those prepared cappuccino dust pods, just add milk/water and drink. Some time later without drinking idk why, is like gave me the impulse but decided to drink again so ordered a coffee maker, the one u pour water down then in the filter the coffee and put it in the worktop (i think its the word, im spanish) But for some months i've been thinking to buy one of these to those days that i have all the time i need no rush to make coffee with calm but something came to my mind. What if u run out of paper filters? U will need to order? U can find them in a shop?
Hey! Yes, you need to keep buying paper filters. If you buy a few packs of filters, that should last you a year or more so it shouldn't be that big of a problem
Thank you for the tutorial. Just one small question. Do you keep water temperature the same during all the process or you boil it once and it cools down while brewing?
Our kettle has its own heating pad and we usually set it back on there between pours. It doesn't do a whole lot but it's worth mentioning. It's not too big of a deal if you just let it cool down while brewing.
I buy the cheapest store brand coffee already ground, I go heavier with the coffee because we like it strong. We use cheap generic filters, cheap dripper purchased at TJ Maxx. Everyone says it's delicious, has crema etc. My point is, this method of coffee is pretty foolproof. You can get great coffee, and I dont pay attention to how long it takes to drip thru. Still delicious 😋
if i start off with 16g of coffee and 256g of water, at how many grams do i stop and swirl to wait for 10-15seconds? Thanks for the nice video sharing!
Thank you for this simple yet informative video! I was trying to makey coffee for the first time while watching it but when I poured the water on the coffee, there wasn't any bubbles, is that ok?
We were hoping it was simple and easy to understand. Not having bubbles is okay and to a certain extent good! It will also depend on coffee freshness. If a coffee is really fresh, you will get much more bubbling and inflation of the grounds!
Hmm that's a good question. You could throw it away or use it as fertilizer for your garden! There's probably more uses for used grounds on the internet
I just made and it tastes amazing also not too strong that makes your toes crawl 😂 i used to make it too strong n bitter and thought that it was the way it suppose to be.
For the measurements, a 1:16 ratio of coffee to water is close to an industry standard. Of course, you can adjust that to preference and flavor. As for time, that comes from tasting many coffees and seeing where the sweet spot is. You can experiment with that yourself. Coffees running quicker than that usually tend to be on the brighter / sour side and coffees slower than that are usually bitter with and astringent mouth feel. Hope that helped you understand!
Thank you! Great video! Just a thought, I'm a novice and if I had made that coffee I would have thought I had failed, because it looked so thin when you poured it. Of course it's the taste that matters, but has it to do with the kind of roast?
Thank you! Glad to hear you enjoyed it. Taste is always most important, and many people think that just because it's visually a little different then it must be bad. This will mostly be dependent on roast.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters Yes, thanks. It's harder than I thought to be consistent and find confidence. But sometimes I wonder if I'm just chasing a dragon. What am I after? How good can coffee get? But I've also realized that it's not only the end result that matters but also the preparation is enjoyable, the grinding, the scent and all the little details.
Hey Bryce! It's actually a small accessory that comes with the Fellow Stagg X brewer. We're not sure if you can buy it separately, but it really is neat!
If you're brewing a coffee that's in the light to medium roast, it should be off boiling 98 - 100c. For coffees that are darker, you can bring that down a few degrees
That's an Acaia scale. V60: prima-coffee.com/equipment/hario/v60-02 The plastic v60 is a little more durable than the others, but the ceramic or glass ones are great too!
Great question! You can rinse filter with room temp water and it will get you similar results. The benefits of rinsing the filter with preheated water is that you're also warming up your brewer which is beneficial to extraction! You're knocking both things out at once.
You can double it indeed, but that will change your extraction time. For something like that, you'll have to use the tip we gave at the end to get it to taste just right in terms of extraction time.
It's the total time. So, I like to be done pouring by about 2:45 to let it drop for the last half a minute. That said, the pour over method is all about brewing a cup YOU enjoy, so do whatever you want, this is just a guideline.
This is a great question and a difficult one. There's no easy answer for this since the V60 was meant to brew just one cup at a time. That being said, if you're brewing more coffee then yes, it will require a longer brew time. It may not be twice as long, but expect it to be fairly longer. A side pro tip, with higher coffee doses you might want to consider grinding coarser! Adjust to your taste preference for the best brew.
@@NiCo-87 With all things coffee, we need to consider how big cups are. Most of the time, those on coffee makers are much smaller than a traditional cup.
Hi Hannah! This is generally the same process. For the individual pours in this video, you might want to pour more water proportionally to your ending water yield. The time markers will also change so don't worry if it takes longer for the water to draw down since this a larger pour. In general, the concept and ratio can be scaled up to what you want. If your final brew is bitter, you can coarsen up the grind and if it's sour, you can make the grinds smaller. Feel free to ask any other questions if you need to. Enjoy!
Hey, sorry for the late response! It helps give an even extraction to your brew as well as helping with the draw down time. You might end up noticing a little more of a flat, even bed to your grounds.
Yes, you're right that it cools a bit while you're doing the other steps, but also, by the time the water hits the coffee and sits over the coffee, the water has already cooled several degrees.
What is the general consensus if we're to do a circular motion while pouring or just plainly pouring in the middle? Read something that middle pouring is the best and that doing circulars will ruin the taste of the coffee?
We would recommend doing a circular motion although we have seen many people enjoy pours pouring in the middle. Doing circulars will definitely NOT ruin the taste of the coffee. That's often times actually what's preferred.
Water temperature? Temperature greatly affects draw down time. I've also seen that some paper filters are 'faster' than others. In general, what temperature do you recommend? Thanks
You're right! Those variables will affect your brew. For light roasted coffee, we'll brew right off boil. That will be different depending on your elevation, but for us in WA that's 212F. If you're brewing darker roasts, you can come down on the temperature 4-5 degrees or so.
I used to laugh at people who nerded out on coffee. Now I'm over here, taking notes like I'm going to be tested for a job.
It's happened to all of us haha! This comment gave us a laugh. Thanks for sharing!
😂☕🤤
Now Im in the wagon with you guys! This is the simplest and easy to follow instruction thank you for sharing this video. Stay safe y’all!
Same 😂
Me too I literally just ordered the v60 from Amazon so I’m watching tutorials bout using these I went from French press mocha pot now this I hope this one works
Thank you for keeping the video simple and not overproducing it.
Thanks! We were hoping to keep it simple and to the point!
He's a cool guy. Earned my sub
Agreed! A good coffee doesn’t need to be super complicated! Thank you.
@@indraneel5123 very cool guy
Wait was that a coffee joke? Like over extraction? 😂
Simple and informative without getting too much into the weeds - the swirl is a good technique that I also use to even out the coffee bed so it draws down evenly
That's exactly what we were aiming for. A simple and informative way to get a good cup of coffee!
I lovedddd this presentation. Straight to the point without the extra dialogue. Thank you.
That was the goal! Keep it nice and simple.
I poured my first water on the carpet like in this video, and my wife told me I can't do pour over anymore! Back to Mr. Coffee.
Did your carpet get wet?
I really want to try this brew, but I have 2 questions...
1. Following the 1:16 ratio, if I decided to lessen the bean weight to, say, 15g : 240mL, will I also need to lessen the time to brew it?
2. Your cup (if I computed it correctly) was brewed:
- first pour to 50g: 0s - 30s
- second pour to 200g: 30s - 45s
- third pour to finish: 45s - 3m15s? (total of 2m 30s of it just sitting? This is what isn't making sense for me 😅)
Great vid btw!! Great for beginners :)
Hey Kristine! These are great questions.
1. Yes, the total brew time will be less than what we recommend in this video since it'll take the water less time to flow through. For that, trust your pallet! If it's tasting sour, you can go a little longer. If it's tasting bitter, you might want to shorten your brew time!
2. I'm going to try my best to make this a little easier to understand haha
- For the first pour, you're just pouring to 50g. This will probably take around 10-15s. Once you're done pouring, you're going to wait until the 30s mark on your timer.
- The second pour to 200g will begin. This will probably take until 45s - 55s depending on how fast or slow you're pouring. Don't get caught up too much in the timing here. Just gently pour your water to 200g
- Wait 10-15s for the water to come down a little bit
- Begin pouring until 320g. Once you're done, just wait until it's finished brewing. It will take some time for it to draw down and should hit those target times.
I don't know if that was any easier to understand, but hopefully that helped! I think you're headed in the right direction. Feel free to respond if you have any other questions. Happy to help!
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters ah, that makes a lot more sense for me now. Thank you so much, I appreciate it! I’ll try doing this and adjust according to my taste! 😁
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasterswas going to ask the same re: the timing :) thank you both!
OMG I jus tried this and my coffee becomes SO MUCH better! Such simple tips but makes so much difference even if I was not using a scale and only eyeing on the measurements lol. Thank you!
That's incredible, thank you so much for sharing that!! That was the goal of this video so we're glad to hear this made your coffee so much better.
My first ever v60 arrived today and I applied your instructions and have to say I had a great tasting cup. Much thanks broo. 😊👏
Thank you for sharing that! Very glad to hear this resulted in a great tasting cup!
i just tried this method and the result is mindblowing!!!!!!!
Happy to hear that! Thanks for sharing.
The difference is HUGE thankssss
Yes!! That's incredible!
Perfect! I'm a potter, and I've been working on a design for pour-over cones but haven't really perfected the brew technique myself yet. Knowing how fine the grounds are and about how long it should take is SUPER helpful to test out mine!
Do you have any suggestions for designing the ideal cone? I've seen a few different ways to do the drip holes, and the inside texture. What I have now I've taken a tool and carved out a swirl, but the next one I want to try is actually a piping bag full of slip to make ridges.
One thing we might mention is whether or not the part where the filter goes has ridges or not.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters The first few I've done I took a trimming tool and carved a spiral, but next I plan on using a piping bag full of slip to make ridges.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters The first few I've done I took a trimming tool and carved a spiral, but next I plan on using a piping bag full of slip to make ridges.
Thanks. Improved my technique with a shorter brewing time, taste is so much better now. Tomorrow gonna try it on Panama Geisha light roast beans😁
That's excellent!
Wow, some Panama Geisha light roast. that sounds very nice!
my coffee maker recently died. So, I started using a similar method of boiling water in a kettle and pouring it over the grounds. I didn't even know it was a "thing". After a bit of trial and error I have had decent results. Many of the tips shown here are things that I learned too doing this method. Thanks.
That's excellent. Love that you decided to create something on your own and you made it work with decent results. Thanks for watching Gordon!
Rinse paper
Grind coffee 20g
50g water around 30 sec
200g water (swirl)
320g water
Total 3:15 (from adding water)
Perfect.
hi there! how about the temperature of water used?
@@syafiqrazali4117Not many videos mention this, but one video I found said 204 degrees. I’m guessing it’s personal preference.
@@syafiqrazali4117I usually used the boiling water. ASAP.
Pls explain 4:6 methods
And how to made sweet taste pls tell me sir
This combo worked perfect first time for me.. old kitchen kettle and no timer scales yet .. plus no ideas of the quality of the water disoensed here in Laos… thanks for setting me on the path to coffee mania 👍👍🙏🙏☕️
Happy to hear it worked perfectly even with an old kitchen kettle and no timer scales.
The path to coffee mania is a wild one!
Jesse Pinkman doing tutorials
It's quite delightful, not upset at all.
The whole block be lining up for a taste yo
@skopp888 why did i read this in his voice 😂 cracked me up.
Pour the coffee, bitch!
@@yonolatiff2285me too!
Straight to the point video. Thank you for the tips ☺️ im a newbie pour over person here.
Glad to hear that! We wanted it to be easy to follow and to the point.
I see Jessie from Breaking Bad is now addicted to coffee instead of Meth. Glad he’s doing better
Definitely doing better.
THANK YOU!!!! My coffee was tasting bitter and I could not taste the chocolate notes that Starbucks Pike Place is supposed to have. I've always freshly ground my beans but was grinding too fine. I went from 8 to 10 because you said medium to coarse. I also followed your steps as close as I could with my kitchen scale. WOW! I smelled rich chocolate before I even took a sip. It tastes like rich chocolate and is way smoother than before! ❤
This is awesome! Thanks for sharing your feedback and experience with this pour over guide. Happy you're getting delicious cups now!
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters Life changing!!!! 😋😝👌🤌🙌👏
Wow, thanks! Every time my sister makes coffee it’s great, but every time I make my own it is so bitter! Just made some using this method, added some steamed milk and cream and it’s great!
I hope to find other videos using French press and also this new Aero-press I just got! Again, my sister makes great coffee with these tools and mine turns out tasting like cigarettes. Never thought I’d need a recipe for coffee, but here I am.
Thank you for sharing your experience with this method we shared! We're glad to hear that it was helpful and now your coffee tastes much better.
As for French Press and Aeropress, we have our recipes and methods on our RUclips channel. Feel free to give those a shot!
Thank you so much!! I did my first v60 after watching this video and it tastes delicious. I am drinking it right now. Thank you again
Yes!! Happy to hear it was delicious.
Thanks for these "simple adjustments". Bravo!
Happy to hear that!
Good tutorial. You spoke in a clear way, the instructions were easy, and the footage as you showed us each step was very well composed.
Thank you!
I’ve never measured out my coffee before and I was surprised how little coffee this produces. Goes to show I was brewing too much. However the cup I just made with even bad brand coffee grounds was so delicious and fruity just by following these instructions!!
I live really close to the ONYX Coffee Company which is exploding all around the US. Safe to say this week I’ll be going to get their fresh coffee beans to grind myself and use with my pour over 😬
That's a really good sign when you can make a delicious coffee with bad brand coffee grounds!
You're lucky to have Onyx so close. They're pretty great!
If you're looking for some new coffee to brew, head to our website at Mirrorcoffeeroasters.com
Take 20% off while you're at it with Mirror20off
@@MirrorCoffeeRoastersI love that! Thank you so much 😬😬😬
Hey there, I am curious to know what mic has been used to record it. The video is brilliant and sounds so clear, love it!
Thank you so much! If I remember correctly, it was the NTG4+ mic
感谢分享这个美妙的手冲咖啡制作过程,非常喜欢!希望你能继续分享更多的旅游和美食经验,期待下一个视频!💯👍
No BS, straight forward enough, this video deserves more likes!
That's what we were going for! Appreciate it!
thanks for the excellent, concise information without an extra 30 min's of fluff. keep it up!
No problem. That was the goal!
Simple, clear and excellent information. The part about rinsing paper first I never do that and it makes a massive difference. Good advice my friend
The goal was to make something simple and approachable! Thank you, glad you enjoyed it
This video is a sure change my bad coffee cup to a better tasty cup, love it.
Happy to hear!
Thanks for this. Hopefully, with a few changes, I'll get a consistent cup of coffee
Best of luck!
When do you start the timer? At the very beginning pour or after the last 150g of water to drip out?
Start the timer at the very beginning
Thanks, this helps! i developed my taste for coffee when covid hit (like many others :) ), watched a couple tutorial and its always hit or miss for my pour over, and i think its when I pour the water. I usually start pouring from the outside to create the bloom, but the gounds in the middle always doesnt get wet coz I am afraid its too much water for the first round. This vid make me realize I should start from the center and swirl outward. I probably also had too small of water (4-5oz). I tried 8 oz this time and poured 3x like you did. Came out great!
That's so awesome, thank you for sharing that! We're glad this was helpful.
If you still want to make sure your bloom soaks all the grounds, feel free to give it a really good swirl after pouring the bloom!
Wow ✨ If may I ask, how many times can I use the same coffee ground? Can I again pour another hot water on it? Or is it just one time use?
Only use coffee grounds once.
Thanks for my first pour-over! It wasnt delicious but that wasn't because of your informative tips, overhead angles, and that satisfying slurp at 3:15 . I'll get better, and re-watch this video many times.
This comment is simply incredible. Glad the informative tips, overhead angles, and the slurp didn't take away from the experience.
Thanks for sharing and best of luck!
What scale are you using in the video!?? It looks great and want to get it myself!
Hey Mike! It's the Acaia Pearl scale. It's a beauty!
Just wondering - why not brew it directly into the cup, so that you wont loose any heat? ☺ Thanks for the tutorial 👍
You can do both. It's just a personal preference to brew into a carafe or serving vessel and then distribute it into a cup. Going directly into a cup is more convenient and efficient if you're drinking the whole cup!
This video is awesome, I have my first cup. It came out amazing. Not that complicated. Thank you. I used to think it’s much harder to make hand brew.
That's so great to hear! Glad you were able to brew an amazing cup and enjoy it!
This is what a tutorial video should be like. Thank you.
You're welcome!
Simple explanation. With informative text so i can screenshot it. Thank you!
That was what we were going for. Glad to help!
Helpful video, thanks. Is it 3:15 from the final swirl or 3:15 altogether from the first time you start pouring water?
It's 3min 15s altogether from the first time you start pouring
Thanks, this actually really made a difference in the taste for me! ❤
Happy to hear!
Man this is more informative in 4 minutes then 90% of other videos. Guess i gotta breakdown and buy a kitchen scale lol
Happy to hear that!
When i started to drink coffee i was very noobie, using those prepared cappuccino dust pods, just add milk/water and drink.
Some time later without drinking idk why, is like gave me the impulse but decided to drink again so ordered a coffee maker, the one u pour water down then in the filter the coffee and put it in the worktop (i think its the word, im spanish) But for some months i've been thinking to buy one of these to those days that i have all the time i need no rush to make coffee with calm but something came to my mind.
What if u run out of paper filters? U will need to order? U can find them in a shop?
Hey! Yes, you need to keep buying paper filters. If you buy a few packs of filters, that should last you a year or more so it shouldn't be that big of a problem
Excellent video. I'm learning how to do this.
Best of luck! Let us know if you have any questions
Thank you. I feel so dumb. Ive been trying to brew a decent coffee for months ive been trying every maker i can find. Im excited to try this method
Hopefully this helped get the coffee you're looking for!
How many tablespoon is 20 grams?
Try using a scale, it helps
Target time of 3:15mins, is from the very first pour (50g) to finish, or, from only the final pour to finish?
That's the target time of 3:15min from the very first pour.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters amazing, thanks for the info 💪🏼🙏🏼
Such a great, informative and simple video. thank you for that !!
So glad to hear this was informative and helpful. Thanks for watching and hope you got some delicious results from this!
Nice recipe mate, but wat is water temp while starting first pour ? Medium coars = 28-32 clicks on comandante ?
Water is at about 210F.
Without red clicks on Comandante, start at about 16-18. Then adjust from there for each coffee
Awesome tutorial, thank you! What size hario v60 are you using here - 01 or 02?
Thank you! This is a Hario 02
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters Thanks! Really appreciate the response.
The best tutorial so far!! Thank god I found your video
Thank you for sharing that!
I need some guidance on the swirl, I feel that by swirling it brings a rather strange taste to my usual coffee. What should I do? Thanks :)
What do you mean by 'strange'?
Would love to help give guidance.
Thank you for the tutorial. Just one small question. Do you keep water temperature the same during all the process or you boil it once and it cools down while brewing?
Our kettle has its own heating pad and we usually set it back on there between pours. It doesn't do a whole lot but it's worth mentioning.
It's not too big of a deal if you just let it cool down while brewing.
I buy the cheapest store brand coffee already ground, I go heavier with the coffee because we like it strong. We use cheap generic filters, cheap dripper purchased at TJ Maxx.
Everyone says it's delicious, has crema etc.
My point is, this method of coffee is pretty foolproof. You can get great coffee, and I dont pay attention to how long it takes to drip thru. Still delicious 😋
that's awesome! Glad you're enjoying the cups you're brewing since that's the main goal.
This is our favorite brew method!
Thank you for this amazing detailed video!
Thank you for watching!
Video was so pleasing and relaxing, I had to watch it twice because I forgot to follow along haha
Thanks for the tips!
Wow, this is incredible. Might be one of our favorite comments on this video yet!
if i start off with 16g of coffee and 256g of water, at how many grams do i stop and swirl to wait for 10-15seconds? Thanks for the nice video sharing!
Hmm, I would guess at around 150g. Expect your total brew time to fairly less than what we recommend in this video.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters Thank you so much! Let me try it out :)
Thank you for helping me make a good cup of coffee!
No problem! Glad this was helpful!
Thank you for this simple yet informative video! I was trying to makey coffee for the first time while watching it but when I poured the water on the coffee, there wasn't any bubbles, is that ok?
We were hoping it was simple and easy to understand. Not having bubbles is okay and to a certain extent good! It will also depend on coffee freshness. If a coffee is really fresh, you will get much more bubbling and inflation of the grounds!
So I have this confusion 🤔 what do u do with the coffee left in the filter? U just throw it?
Hmm that's a good question. You could throw it away or use it as fertilizer for your garden! There's probably more uses for used grounds on the internet
I just made and it tastes amazing also not too strong that makes your toes crawl 😂 i used to make it too strong n bitter and thought that it was the way it suppose to be.
So strong your toes crawl haha. Have not yet experienced that, and not sure if I want to.
Glad to hear you're enjoying your coffee!
I heard that water temperature had an impact of how good the brewing is. That true? Since I took my water boiled but not above 100°C
Yes, temperature has a big impact on the brewing.
Thank you. Where did u get the time and grams computation? By just trial and error?
For the measurements, a 1:16 ratio of coffee to water is close to an industry standard. Of course, you can adjust that to preference and flavor.
As for time, that comes from tasting many coffees and seeing where the sweet spot is. You can experiment with that yourself. Coffees running quicker than that usually tend to be on the brighter / sour side and coffees slower than that are usually bitter with and astringent mouth feel.
Hope that helped you understand!
Thank you! Great video! Just a thought, I'm a novice and if I had made that coffee I would have thought I had failed, because it looked so thin when you poured it. Of course it's the taste that matters, but has it to do with the kind of roast?
Thank you! Glad to hear you enjoyed it. Taste is always most important, and many people think that just because it's visually a little different then it must be bad. This will mostly be dependent on roast.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters Yes, thanks. It's harder than I thought to be consistent and find confidence. But sometimes I wonder if I'm just chasing a dragon. What am I after? How good can coffee get? But I've also realized that it's not only the end result that matters but also the preparation is enjoyable, the grinding, the scent and all the little details.
Simple and direct to the point. Thanks.
That was exactly what we wanted! Enjoy
any tips on what i should add in? frothed milk and such?
We like to drink our coffee black, but anything you enjoy will work.
This is a good video, but I'm still not sure of when exactly to start timing the brew length.
Start as soon as you begin pouring
Thank you.@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters
Made my first pour over with your video today. Appreciate it
That's great to hear. Hope you enjoyed your cup!
loved those little tipps. Thanks
No problem!
Hey man, Random one what little black measuring cup did you use to measure the beans…. Love it
Hey Bryce! It's actually a small accessory that comes with the Fellow Stagg X brewer. We're not sure if you can buy it separately, but it really is neat!
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters awesome thanks for sharing it really does lionlike decent little accessory.
i whish i had a teacher like him. Great vid.
Thank you!
...I used to drink peasant 711 coffee, and now look at me ma....sipping the finest brew. Catuay Rojo and Laurinia babyyyyyy
Happy for you
Very good tutorial
Thanks Jeff!
Good Vedio , it is easy to fellow and understand
Thank you!
When you do the first pour, what temperature is the water at? I know washing the filter initlaly would be at 100C.
If you're brewing a coffee that's in the light to medium roast, it should be off boiling 98 - 100c.
For coffees that are darker, you can bring that down a few degrees
for the bloom, do you pour 50 grams THEN wait 30 seconds before the second pour or is it 30 seconds for the pour and bloom combined ?
Yes, you do the bloom, pour 50 grams, then wait 30s
This video helped me make my first cup of pour over coffee. Thank you so much!
Wow! That's awesome to hear. Thank you for sharing that, and we're glad that we could help you make your first pour over coffee!
Holy 💩 such precision
Not for everyone, but we enjoy precision!
thanks to this tutorial, my dad finally loves his pour-over coffee! hahahaha
This comment is everything!! Amazing haha
What scale is that?
And can you provide the link for the v60? It seems there's alot of v60s online.
That's an Acaia scale.
V60: prima-coffee.com/equipment/hario/v60-02
The plastic v60 is a little more durable than the others, but the ceramic or glass ones are great too!
Is it really noticeably better to rinse the filter with preheated water or can you just use cold or room temp water?
Great question! You can rinse filter with room temp water and it will get you similar results.
The benefits of rinsing the filter with preheated water is that you're also warming up your brewer which is beneficial to extraction! You're knocking both things out at once.
Just curious how many tbsp of coffee grounds to ounces of water would you recommend for times when I don’t have a scale and grinder
This guy is special ed using a food scale. Just use your normal amount of coffee and water (1-2tbsp and 1-2 cups of water) and pour as he does
How does it work with 2 cups of coffee? Should you just double the amount of coffee and extraction time?
You can double it indeed, but that will change your extraction time. For something like that, you'll have to use the tip we gave at the end to get it to taste just right in terms of extraction time.
This might be a silly question but is 3:15 the total time or just from pouring the full 320g?
It's the total time. So, I like to be done pouring by about 2:45 to let it drop for the last half a minute. That said, the pour over method is all about brewing a cup YOU enjoy, so do whatever you want, this is just a guideline.
Not a silly question at all! 3:15 is the total time of the brew.
If you want to make two cups of coffee (40g coffee/640 g water) do you need to double the brew time too? Or does that remain the same?
This is a great question and a difficult one. There's no easy answer for this since the V60 was meant to brew just one cup at a time. That being said, if you're brewing more coffee then yes, it will require a longer brew time. It may not be twice as long, but expect it to be fairly longer.
A side pro tip, with higher coffee doses you might want to consider grinding coarser! Adjust to your taste preference for the best brew.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters One cup at a time? But the box on my Hario V60 said "1 to 4 cups"…🤷🏻♂️
@@NiCo-87 With all things coffee, we need to consider how big cups are. Most of the time, those on coffee makers are much smaller than a traditional cup.
Can you technically pre-grind your coffee, and then measure the pre-ground grinds? I wanna bring this for camping but I'd rather pre-grind my beans.
Yes, that should work just fine.
Is this same process possible for a larger brew with a pour over? Or does anything change?
Hi Hannah! This is generally the same process. For the individual pours in this video, you might want to pour more water proportionally to your ending water yield.
The time markers will also change so don't worry if it takes longer for the water to draw down since this a larger pour.
In general, the concept and ratio can be scaled up to what you want. If your final brew is bitter, you can coarsen up the grind and if it's sour, you can make the grinds smaller.
Feel free to ask any other questions if you need to. Enjoy!
Good brew👍Good info🙂only thing missing there is Kramers coffe table book 😂
Haha we need one!
Love love my new Keurig. But...I keep forgetting to push the brew button!! lol
Yeah me too. I don't remember the last time I remembered to click the brew button.
Is the brew time from the very beginning? ( first 50g water pour)? Or just once you hit the 320g?
That's from the very beginning, from the first pour.
Awesome thank you!!!
You're from Jacksonville FL?!? I'm a regular at Bold Bean when I visit, I love that place.
I lived in Jacksonville for quite some time, and now relocated to Bellingham, WA. Bold Bean is a solid spot to hit!
Nice I'll have to try this my pour over always tastes like crap
Best of luck! Hopefully this helps. If you need any help improving it, feel free to send us a message on Instagram or email us!
Great video thank you! question, what effect does it have on the brew by letting the second pour drain 10-15 seconds?
Hey, sorry for the late response! It helps give an even extraction to your brew as well as helping with the draw down time. You might end up noticing a little more of a flat, even bed to your grounds.
Awesome, thank you!!
Great video, clean shots with clear info 👌
Thanks Michael! That's good to know, we appreciate the feedback.
Did you wet the filter 1st? I’m new to this.
Yes, rinse the filter first before putting coffee in.
No worries! Feel free to reach out with any questions you may have, we'd be happy to help.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters Cheers, great vid 👌
I thought the whole point was to have water under boiling temp. I guess it cools a bit while you’re doing the other steps?
Yes, you're right that it cools a bit while you're doing the other steps, but also, by the time the water hits the coffee and sits over the coffee, the water has already cooled several degrees.
Hello, which coffee filter do you recommend? Thanks from New York City!😊
Hario has some great filters. We're using the ones with the tab on the filter.
@@MirrorCoffeeRoasters thanks 😊
@@hepsiprem No problem!
What is the general consensus if we're to do a circular motion while pouring or just plainly pouring in the middle? Read something that middle pouring is the best and that doing circulars will ruin the taste of the coffee?
We would recommend doing a circular motion although we have seen many people enjoy pours pouring in the middle. Doing circulars will definitely NOT ruin the taste of the coffee. That's often times actually what's preferred.
Water temperature? Temperature greatly affects draw down time. I've also seen that some paper filters are 'faster' than others. In general, what temperature do you recommend? Thanks
You're right! Those variables will affect your brew. For light roasted coffee, we'll brew right off boil. That will be different depending on your elevation, but for us in WA that's 212F. If you're brewing darker roasts, you can come down on the temperature 4-5 degrees or so.