The French press is one of the simplest and most rewarding ways to brew coffee at home. With just coarse grounds, hot water, and four minutes of patience, you can produce a rich, full-bodied cup that highlights the natural oils and flavors of your beans.
What You Need
- French press (any size)
- Coarse-ground coffee
- Water heated to 200°F (93°C)
- Timer
- Stirring spoon
The Ratio
A good starting point is 1:15 — that’s 1 gram of coffee for every 15 grams of water. For a standard 34oz French press, use about 56g of coffee and 840ml of water.
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Both pour over and automatic drip machines use the same basic principle — hot water passes through a bed of ground coffee and a filter. But the results can be dramatically different. Here’s why.
Pour Over: Full Control
With a pour over (like a Hario V60 or Kalita Wave), you control every variable:
- Water temperature — you decide exactly how hot
- Pour rate — slow spirals, pulses, or continuous
- Brew time — typically 2:30–3:30 for a single cup
- Agitation — how much you disturb the coffee bed
This control lets you dial in a recipe for each specific bean, bringing out bright acidity or smooth sweetness as you prefer.
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The beans you choose matter more than any piece of equipment. A $300 grinder can’t save stale, low-quality coffee. Here’s how to make better choices at the store or online.
Roast Levels Explained
- Light roast: High acidity, fruity/floral notes, lighter body. Best for pour over.
- Medium roast: Balanced acidity and body, caramel and chocolate notes. Versatile for any method.
- Dark roast: Low acidity, smoky/bitter notes, heavy body. Traditional espresso and French press territory.
There’s no objectively “better” roast — it depends on your palate and brew method.
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If your coffee tastes bitter, sour, or just flat, the grind is probably wrong. Grind size controls how quickly water extracts flavor from coffee — get it wrong and no amount of technique will save you.
The Science
Finer grinds expose more surface area, so water extracts compounds faster. Coarser grinds slow extraction down.
- Under-extracted (too coarse or too fast): sour, thin, lacking sweetness
- Over-extracted (too fine or too slow): bitter, astringent, harsh
- Just right: sweet, balanced, clean finish
Grind Size by Method
| Method |
Grind Size |
Looks Like |
| Cold brew |
Extra coarse |
Raw sugar |
| French press |
Coarse |
Sea salt |
| Drip / pour over |
Medium |
Table salt |
| AeroPress |
Medium-fine |
Fine sand |
| Espresso |
Fine |
Powdered sugar |
| Turkish |
Extra fine |
Flour |
Burr vs Blade Grinders
Blade grinders chop beans randomly, producing a mix of fine dust and large chunks. This causes uneven extraction — some particles over-extract while others under-extract in the same brew.
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Cold brew isn’t just iced coffee. It’s a completely different extraction process that produces a smooth, naturally sweet concentrate with roughly 60% less acidity than hot-brewed coffee. And it’s absurdly easy to make.
What You Need
- A large jar or pitcher
- Coarse-ground coffee
- Cold or room-temperature water
- A strainer and cheesecloth (or a nut milk bag)
That’s it. No special equipment required.
The Recipe
Ratio: 1:5 for concentrate, 1:8 for ready-to-drink
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