What's the lowest micron capable electric grinder that you're aware of available to buy for Turkish coffee? Hand grinding for turkish is a pain in the a** when getting ready for work in the morning, at least when I tried the Comandante. All the electric ones I looked into seem to be more suited for espresso.
In this video I've used a basic espresso grinder. As for the manual ones, Kinu m47 is my favorite. Then goes timemore c3. Also pretty fast. And then - 1zpresso jx or similar. They're very fast compared to comandante. So there is no need to look at an electric one. At least with the smallest grind size possible. Espresso grind size is perfectly suitable
@@wendstudio_coffee I discovered goat story ARCO coffee grinder that is a manual hand grinder that also has the option to do electric motor, and when I emailed them they claim it can achieve sub 50 micron grind. However, I have never owned one, and I don't know anything about it beyond what's advertised and what they claim, but I thought I'd share. I'm also looking at m47 that you suggested, which is cheaper, and if it’s easy to grind like you say it might be the better route. Thanks for videos and reply, I am learning a lot about coffee. I am new to the coffee rabbit hole, and was just a machine drip pre-ground coffee user up until this point for many years.
@noobsabbot1133 it's not necessarily easy, but fast) The amount of force required is just where it needs to be. Not a gym workout like with c60, but my co-host finds it hard sometimes. Because he is not used to it. For me it is effortless
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And about coffee. What a great apricot notes in this natural processed Ethiopia Sidamo (roasted for espresso)
What's the lowest micron capable electric grinder that you're aware of available to buy for Turkish coffee? Hand grinding for turkish is a pain in the a** when getting ready for work in the morning, at least when I tried the Comandante. All the electric ones I looked into seem to be more suited for espresso.
In this video I've used a basic espresso grinder. As for the manual ones, Kinu m47 is my favorite. Then goes timemore c3. Also pretty fast. And then - 1zpresso jx or similar.
They're very fast compared to comandante. So there is no need to look at an electric one. At least with the smallest grind size possible. Espresso grind size is perfectly suitable
@@wendstudio_coffee I discovered goat story ARCO coffee grinder that is a manual hand grinder that also has the option to do electric motor, and when I emailed them they claim it can achieve sub 50 micron grind. However, I have never owned one, and I don't know anything about it beyond what's advertised and what they claim, but I thought I'd share. I'm also looking at m47 that you suggested, which is cheaper, and if it’s easy to grind like you say it might be the better route.
Thanks for videos and reply, I am learning a lot about coffee. I am new to the coffee rabbit hole, and was just a machine drip pre-ground coffee user up until this point for many years.
@noobsabbot1133 it's not necessarily easy, but fast) The amount of force required is just where it needs to be. Not a gym workout like with c60, but my co-host finds it hard sometimes. Because he is not used to it. For me it is effortless
I have one in this shape but aluminum from Cairo
I've never seen a calculator that would allow 250 - 30% = 175.
It's quite convenient :) Instead of 250 * 30 / 100 and then 250 - result. Shorter.
Pay attention, it's not ÷, but percentage :)
Nooo from Turkish Coffee to Greek Coffee 😭😭😭😭
Jokes aside, are there any differences aside from name?
It's just made in Greece, that's why it's called Briki) I suppose the shape popularized by Greeks, but not sure
@@wendstudio_coffee Understood, thanks!