French press
Would someone please recommend a good French Press? I'm moving and am seriously downsizing, and the venerable coffee maker is going!
RR |
Re: French press
This is the one I got a few weeks ago to replace the Bodum that began letting too many grounds through.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 |
Re: French press
Skip the french press, get an Aeropress instead.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_no...Ck%3Aaeropress http://aerobie.com/products/aeropress.htm 30 seconds to about the best coffee I've had, and it certainly feels like I've tried probably almost every machine or method out there looking for it. Only thing else that comes close is my Chemex or some insanely expensive machine costing thousands of dollars. Don't bother with the stainless filters, they kind of defeat the purpose/method of brewing. |
Re: French press
I've been buying these for the last four or more....
They last about a year before the screen starts to break down, but for the price.... http://www.ikea.com/ca/en/catalog/products/60241389/ |
Re: French press
All of these look great! Particularly curious about the Aeropress. Looks like that allows one to make a strong coffee. Can a French Press make strong coffee?
:confused: |
Re: French press
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French Presses yield more bitter coffee that is kind of murky and grainy. Aeropress coffee, being a pseudo-espresso pushed through a filter and then diluted to an americano coffee, is brighter and less muddled, body is a bit thinner though. Depending on how you dilute, I think the aeropress can actually make a stronger coffee. Pushing that much soggy grind with a French Press tends to blow by the sides of the screen and end up in your cup.:2 |
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I think I need to try the aeropress... |
Re: French press
Go with Chemex. Makes THE BEST pour over/ drip coffee.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8h-0ewcbHko http://www.chemexcoffeemaker.com/ |
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I beat the crap out of my aeropress, haven't broken it yet. I did lose the bottom guard and paddle once, but that was my mistake. If you do lose or break parts, replacements are inexpensive, just call Aerobie in California directly and they will ship them out to you. |
Re: French press
Best "heirloom" French presses are made by Alessi; not cheap, but worth it IMO. The next higher quality brand is Melior, which is the classic French made French Press...
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Re: French press
After reading the 'how to' on the Aeropress, have a question...
Directions say 2 scoops coffee with water poured to the number 2 line. Can you use 3 scoops with water poured to the number 3 for more coffee with the same strength and flavor? Same question for the number 4. RR |
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I agree that Aeropress is the way to go. I also really like my chemex for brewing multiple cups.
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Re: French press
my Aeropress is ready to pack it in after a few years of use. Coffee grinds eventually wear the walls of the cylinder so the rubber plunger doesn't seal anymore.
Also it's worth it to get the stainless steel filter after all your paper filters run out. |
Re: French press
Ok... If you chose only ONE... Which would it be? Chewed or Aeropress?
If Chemex, which size? RR |
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I think the aeropress makes a tastier cup though. For me, I'd choose the chemex for the greater capacity. However, in reality I chose both, because I can :) In fact I have 2 Chemex brewers and 2 aeropress'. |
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Re: French press
I was looking into getting a plastic french press for travel a couple months ago. I'm glad I didn't end up getting one because I'm thinking the aeropress will be a better option. It'll take up less space in my bag and to hear some of you talk, it makes a better brew. I do enjoy espresso. My mind's made up. Thanks guys.
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