Bobw235
Senior Member
- Location
- Massachusetts
I'm sharing an article from the NY Times about brewing coffee. I love a good cup of coffee, grinding it each morning, but from this article it seems I have a ways to go to improve upon my morning brew.
So, who amongst us grinds their own beans? After reading the article, I'm tempted to try some of these suggestions. I wonder if it would make a difference.
Who knew brewing coffee was so complex? For the record, I brew two large cups to start my day and usually that's it. I enjoy each cup in one of the artisan pottery mugs I've collected over the years during my travels. Just milk in the coffee, no sugar. I tend towards dark roast these days.
The article starts:
For many, making coffee is a morning routine you sleepwalk through, following a formula that somehow established itself as your preference: this much ground coffee, this much hot water and you’re ready to jump-start your day.
Yet the coffee landscape has changed radically in the last few years. The pros have rethought everything — roasts, brewing gear, brewing techniques — and it’s up to you to take advantage of it.
Some of what you will need to do may seem excessive or even neurotic. It’s hard to argue the point: It’s much easier to make bad coffee than good coffee. But once you get down the basics and pick up some decent equipment, you may find some pleasure in what should be a satisfying rite.
Here are three steps you can take to get to that place. You can proceed one at a time, or do them all at once.
So, who amongst us grinds their own beans? After reading the article, I'm tempted to try some of these suggestions. I wonder if it would make a difference.
Who knew brewing coffee was so complex? For the record, I brew two large cups to start my day and usually that's it. I enjoy each cup in one of the artisan pottery mugs I've collected over the years during my travels. Just milk in the coffee, no sugar. I tend towards dark roast these days.
The article starts:
For many, making coffee is a morning routine you sleepwalk through, following a formula that somehow established itself as your preference: this much ground coffee, this much hot water and you’re ready to jump-start your day.
Yet the coffee landscape has changed radically in the last few years. The pros have rethought everything — roasts, brewing gear, brewing techniques — and it’s up to you to take advantage of it.
Some of what you will need to do may seem excessive or even neurotic. It’s hard to argue the point: It’s much easier to make bad coffee than good coffee. But once you get down the basics and pick up some decent equipment, you may find some pleasure in what should be a satisfying rite.
Here are three steps you can take to get to that place. You can proceed one at a time, or do them all at once.