Battle of Pourovers | Scott Rao vs James Hoffmann vs Tetsu Kasuya vs April Coffee
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- Опубликовано: 27 июл 2024
- Today I'm reviewing and comparing V60 recipes from Scott Rao, James Hoffmann, Tetsu Kasuya and April Coffee!
0:00 Intro
0:09 Scott Rao
15 g of medium fine coffee to 250 g of 97° water
1 - Rinse filter and preheat V60
2 - Pre wet with 45g water ( about 3 times weight of grounds)
3 - Gently excavate with spoon
4 - At 45 seconds: Main pour up to 250 g (Fairly high pouring height)
5 - Gently stir around the rim
6 - At 1 minute and 45 seconds swirl the V60
7 - Drawdown 2 minutes and 50 seconds
• (old) V60 Method. See ...
1:54 James Hoffmann
15 g of medium fine coffee to 250 g of 100° water
1 - Rinse filter and preheat V60
2 - Dump in coffee grounds and create a well
3 - Start timer and pre wet with 2x the weight of the coffee (Here 30 g)
4 - Immediately swirl the V60
5 - At 45 seconds pour up to 60 % of final weight (Here 150 g)
6 - When 60% reached switch to a slower pour, pouring until final amount
7 - Grab a spoon and stir clockwise and anticlockwise
8 - Swirl the brewer for a more even extraction
9 - Drawdown 3 minutes
• The Ultimate V60 Techn...
3:41 Tetsu Kasuya
1 - 1:12 brew ratio: 25 g finely ground coffee to 300 g of water at 95 96 degrees
2 - Start the timer and pour 300 g of water in 15 seconds. First 10 seconds in a circle pour and last 5 in a center pour. You pouring should be quite aggressive.
3 - Drawdown should be around 1 minute and 30 seconds.
• Coffee with April Epis...
4:58 April Coffee
The recipe is dosed 13 grams of coffee to 200 grams of water. Grind size is relatively coarse and water temperature sits at 90 degrees.
Pouring consists of 4 50 g pours. Each pour sits for 30 seconds.
0 - 50 g pour
30 - 50 g pour
1.00 - 50 g pour
1.30 - 50 g pour
2.30 - Drawdown
• Our Current V60 Recipe...
6:01 Sum up
If you have any questions you can leave them in the comments below.
Coffee with Carl is now on instagram!
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Or at coffeewcarl
Can you please do a review of Tales coffee no bloom single pour recipe? It's very interesting and one I've been using lately with the Hario switch, "stalling the fall" at to 30 seconds then stirring with a chop stick. Delicious!
I love you for writing out the times and information for each segment. You are GREAT! Thank you.
Very well done! I love your calm style and brevity.
Edit: I wanted to add that your summaries and links in the description are also top notch!
Great video! I like much more when the coffee techniques are explained right to the point, without long explanations. Thanks!
Awesome material, thank you for including us.
Thanks for watching!
Thanks Carl, for introducing me to April.
Pour so aggressive that I called the cops on it.
Great video Carl! But judging from the t-shirt you were already on team April to begin with 😉
😅😉
I came here to write the same; he beat me to it 😄
Great video. Short and precise, no wasting of the viewer's time. Thanks
This is a great video! Super helpful with a thorough break down. Great job! Thanks for the video.
Great video! This is the first comparison I've came across. Very helpful!
You're the MVP for recipes in the description, definitely bookmarking this video. Also really liked the calm vibe while explaining each of the methods. Overall great stuff, thanks for sharing!
This video is amazing! April technique resulted in the best v60 brew I've made so far
A very professional and informative video. Great camera work showing the methods; very clear, concise and helpful information presented very well. Great job! :)
Thanks for compiling! Looking forward with dabbling with each of these methods :)
Great video 👏🏼👏🏼
Always testing/dialing in different recipes is definitely one of the funniest part of making coffee imho
Keep up the good work ✌🏼
I'm a big fan of Hoffman's method but you've convinced me to try April's. Thanks for the home brewing inspiration!
Great stuff. I'm also a big fan of the April brewer. Looking forward to more videos from you.
I was just having my afternoon coffee with James Hoffman brew method. I'll try other methods tomorrow. Thanks for the video.
Great video Carl! I have all my favorite recipes in one spot now!
Thanks for watching!
Damn, this video was such a nice change of pace for me, I have been using the James Hoffmann method but will try the other ones for sure. Keep up the great content!
Thanks a lot!
Ohhhh Lovely comparison of the styles! I especially love how precise your descriptions are of the resulting brew. Awesome! Also, I enjoy your super chill video style. Subscribed and followed on IG!
Okay, now that is amazing :D
I loved that comparison! Subscribed!
Thank You!
Thank you for sharing your video. The April coffee pour over method looks interesting. I shall give that a try!
Thanks for watching!
I like this format, to the point right away.
Thank you!
Very nice video! I look forward to trying the recipes. Thank you 😀
Great video. Good walk-through, nice tempo, simple setup and a nice look and feel of your video. Well done. Subscribed.
Thanks!
Carl! This was wonderful. Keep up the great content!
Thanks for watching!
Very good video Carl! Also the description below is very convenient!
Great video, thanks. I'm going to make all variations starting tomorrow morning.
That was a very nice video, I'm surprised no one had made the comparison yet. I would suggest adding a brief summary of the resulting taste in the description. Hope your channel grows!!
Good idea. Thanks for watching!
Insanely good very informative vid, thanks a lot 👍🏼
Great work on the video! Feels like a more easier recipe to follow than the original counterparts
Thanks!
I really enjoyed my 19grams Coffee X-mas calender, I hope you liked it too :-)
My go-to method is the James Hoffmann method, but I will try the other ones you presented here as well. Thanks for sharing!
This was really useful, I was actually looking for a video showing how to do a smaller cup using the Hoffman method
Wow this is very well done. I'll have to try them all. Love the tasting notes.
Thanks! good luck :)
LEGEND, well done lad, love the vids.
I wanted to search for some alternate V60 recipes to the one of James Hoffmann!
So I am actually super gald that this video got recommended to me!
Very well done video!!
I love this young man's videos :)
Thanks!
thank you so much for sharing your video. it's simple with clear instructions. perfect for newbies like me :)
Thank you 🙏 brilliant presentation 👌
Carl i sincerely want to thank you. I have been using the Hoffman recipe for like a year, and had such a hard time finding the balance. Your video made me realise i did it wrong in one stage. After 1:15 i have been waiting for 1:45 and continued to pour at that time point. Instead of keep pouring but slower and more gentle. I really looking forward to brew a cup of coffee now knowing what i did wrong. 🙏
Any updates on how the adjustment to technique worked out for you? I'm more or less just getting into making my own filter coffee properly so am still rather amazed at how small nuances can influence the resulting cup
@@Lyander25 I have actually changed method :-). But it worked wonders to follow Carls instructions. One important insight i have learned is that when it tastes sour you might have gone to course on the grind, and if its bitter it might be to fine grind. At least its a good starting point. For me the balance is all about grind size and pour effectiveness (rotation speed, flow speed). Either changing the pour or the grind (when using Hario V60 because Kalita evens the pour out a bit). Brewing methods affects sour/bitter results a lot. When you are affected by channeling, water running in small tunnels through the coffee bed instead of extracting it even, you get a kind of sour empty taste. And when you pour for example too slow with a fine grind, the coffee might be over extracted (But not necessarily!! :-)). So its important to kind of find a method and work on it, learn how changes affect taste. What happened when i poured more aggressiv? Stearing up the coffee bed? What if i use courser coffee? And then you have all the small things to worry about like cleaning the filter, grinder and storing the beans at a good location etc. :D Its a fun craft! Others please fill in if i missed something or misunderstood something!
Great video! I really think your channel has huge potential, keep it up!
Your video is a most excellent, and concise pour-over production I have yet seen, amigo. Count me as a new subscriber.
Nice video man, real concise and helpful 👍
Thanks!
Great video! Helped me with my V60, thank you!
Glad I could help :)
Cool video, I was on Hoffman side for the whole time but all recipes caught my attention, and will definetly try them out.
Good luck!
Great video, thank you.
My personal experience is also that the April method is the most delicious and the coffee actually tastes like the notes on the bag. I finally tasted the jasmine tea or orange peel. Other methods were either too bitter for me or too bland.
I feel like I'm still getting my grind size wrong. What grind size would be good on a Baratza Encore or 1Zpresso JX?
@@ram_bam I dont brew with a V60 but for the Chemex I use around 22 to 24 on my Baratza Encore. Lence Hedrick brought out a Video with his v60 method and he says the grind size for the v60 its around 12 or 13 on a Baratza Encore. I would try his grind size and when its to bitter or to watery you always can adjust the grind size from there.
@@ryurenyama Thanks! This is helpful.
@@ram_bam no problem, I can highly recommend Lences videos for more information on pour over, expresso and more, cuz he explains a lot of useful coffee theory very nicely. In his v60 video he also mentions the grind size he uses in microns if you really wanna be precise xD
@@ryurenyama Yeah Lance is great. I've been using his pour over technique exclusively as of late. He brings the passion!
Thanks for this now I know what I am doing this weekend
Great video. I’ll go try these out 👊
April mathod seems to be a simplized version of 4-6 mathod. Nice filmed vids. Good job dude.
Wow nice video, just recently got into coffee and only been using James technique. It does make sense that some technique are not suitable for small batch brew. I usually only brew 15-20g of coffee so I definitely will try April technique next.
Lovely video. I am a practitioner of Kasuya's 4:6 method and even got his model of v60 for it. I love the consistency and characteristics of it, especially for my setup. However, I'm really glad you highlighted his "new" method as I am both very curious about it but also skeptical? It feels as though it needs a bit of workshopping but I am excited by the results that you got and would love to try it out, as well as all the other methods you noted!
It’s a very small cup
Nice. Definitely gonna try these out tomorrow
Happy that I could help!
Excellent video. Great to see new people on the coffee youtube, cheers
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the great video!
Amazing content! Just got into pour over after being an espresso and hoffman snub for sometime. Found this video aaaandd subscribed! Thanks for making this video, can’t wait to try them out! I have also been making mistake with the hoffman technique so thanks for that as well.
Edited: I have been using the adjusted chemex recipe. Looks like there aren’t chemex alternatives for some of these. FWIW April does have a non single cup different recipe for the chemex
👏 great vid!! 🙌
Just tried April method, produced excellent results, explosion floral and long after sweet taste
Nice!
I was hoping you were going to do Tetsu's 4:6 method. I did his sweet version, and it blew my mind how sweet the coffee smelled compared to how I used to do pour over
Great Video Carl, especially for a pourover Newbie like me. It would be helpful to share the Type of Grinder and used Settings for the recipes. Despite different Coffees...
Thanks for your helpful Videos!
In this video I used the JS grinder from 1Zpresso. Will add settings in future videos. Thanks for watching!
Nice 👍🏼 happy new year dear Carl & may god bless you 😇
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for amazing video 👍
This is actually a really cool video!
Thank you!
Great video! Thanks!
Your welcome !
Good job on the video!
Thank you!
Wow I've been using Hoffman's method but tried out April Coffee's one cause of this video and the difference was ridiculous, definitely will be using April Coffee's method from now on
Glad I could help you make better coffee!
whats the difference
Very interesting. My recipe is very basic, 15g coffee 90C, 30ml bloom. Then I just fill up the V60 and keep it topped up until 250mls of water has been poured. I preferred that to Hoffmans and Kasuya's - however April Coffee's one is piquing my interest with letting the coffee 'relax' between pours
Great video man!
Thanks for watching!
New subscriber here! Thank you for sharing your coffee insights with us💯
Thank you for watching!
Late to the party here. I would like to argue that Kurasu’s (Kyoto) method is the best. Using a blend of all these techniques (except the aggressive pouring). I do however feel that most recipes don’t use quite enough coffee. I go around 45 grams per 500ml and grind slightly coarser than you do. Gives a bit more of a chocolaty taste and less of an almost-tea-feeling. I learned to up the amount of coffee by own of the best baristas in Sweden by the way.
Just tried the Tetsu Kasuya brew method with Columbian & Honduran beans and it was actually sweeter! The aftertaste was muted tho.
Can’t wait to try it with Ethiopian beans for an even sweater cup.
Awesome video!
Tetsu also noted himself that the aftertaste was quite short. Thanks for watching!
Nice and succinct, great video!
Glad you liked it!
Excellent video! Very easy to follow, and I really appreciate your top down view so we can see exactly what’s going on during the brew. What grinder is that?
The JS grinder from 1Zprezzo. Thanks for watching!
Happy new year kiddo!
You too!
Great vid!
Great video. 🍹
Great video! you have a new subscriptor, grettings from Argentina!
Great Video!
Thanks for watching!
Great content. Whats worth noting however regarding the Hoffman recipe is that he actually recommended using 30 grams instead of 15. Changing the dose of ground coffee, even if you keep the water ratio constant, tends to change the resulting character and nuances of the coffee. Especially when ur brewing on the same dripper(v20 here), when the max flow rate stays the same while the depth of coffee bed changes, its quite natural other factors such as total brew time are affected as well.
I do say in the video that the recipe works much better with 30 g to 500 g. Thanks for sharing your tips and thoughts
Great vid! In methods like April's, if you were to do a larger brew (350-500ml), would you suggest splitting the pours from 4 to instead 5-6 equal pours and grinding a bit coarser?
Yes, just keep doing 50 g ours every 30 seconds and go a bit coarser
I'm using Hoffman's pour as I find it more balanced. You should do 120ml of water at 60% since you did 30ml already for the bloom. Also I find less grounds stuck on wall if you stir and swirl less aggressively. Great vid.
Thanks for the recommendations! Will definitely implement next time I brew the Hoffmann V60 recipe
How much time did you take to pour first 60percent and next 40percent, in consideration with 250ml of total volume
@@rishoo007 Timing really varies on the grind and filter type. Right now I'm brewing 22g of coffee with 350ml using the original hario v60 02 untabbed bleached filters as they have faster brew time. My timing (from start to finish) is usually 45seconds, 1:35 and 2:15. Roughly as it aslo depends on how fast your pouring.
Great video 👌🏻💯
Theoretically water temperature are of my main concern as well as drawdown time.
But the roaster still the major factor to me... which I still couldn't find one to my liking in my neighborhood
With water temperature if you want more extraction or a light roasted bean you want higher temperature (just under boiling). If you want less extraction or have a darker roast use a lower temperature (93 to 95C).
Is there a difference when using a single cup V60 vs double cup V60 (while using the same amount of coffee grounds/water in both)?
Just subbed, great video keep it up!
Thank you!
Good evening, a nice scent came from the screen. The brewing method is different from mine, but it is a wonderful drip. I'm sorry I don't understand the language.
Thanks for this video. I hadn't ever heard of the April method and am excited to try it out. Could you please share the grind settings you used on your JX? Is that basic or pro?
It is actually the JS grinder from 1Zpresso, so the grindsettings wont work on JX. Thank you for watching
Neat video love it :)
I really like the April one too, especially because it’s so simple
Agree! Thanks for watching
Not nearly as simple as a single pour, no stir, no swirl.
Great content
Does it making any difference in test, because of the slightly different brewing method!!!!
Great vid 👍
Thanks for watching!
Great video! Can I ask how you would upscale the April recipe for a 20g/300ml brew? Thanks
Continue doing 50 g pours every 30 seconds and go a tiny bit coarser
Dank je wel!
How would you brew April’s recipe for 500g of water? Would you do 4 pours of 125g of water every 30 seconds?
April coffee themselves have done a video on that topic: ruclips.net/video/X-fXQKqkYxI/видео.html Thanks for watching!
The 1 cup v60 technique that Hoffman released about 7 months ago is actually very similar to the April technique. It has the same ratio, grind size, and water temperature as the larger cup Hoffman technique, though. I think the lower temp and coarser grind is better for darker roasts.
Cool comparison. I will the April method a try. BTW Have you tried osmotic flow? If I do it well (which is not always possible) the resulting coffee is very rich with pronounced taste. It has been my go-to in the last few months.
I have tried it. Big fan
It's nice to see v60 examples side by side, great job. Which filters did you use in this video?
The light roast filters from Cafec