|
How to Brew the Perfect Cup
Regardless of the brewing method there are a few
prerequisites to brewing a great cup of coffee:
- Use high quality, freshly roasted coffee.
- Grind the beans just before
brewing.
- Use clean brewing equipment.
- Ensue that your brewing equipment operates at the correct
temperature.
- Use good quality water.
There are two basic methods of brewing coffee: espresso
and infusion. All other methods are variations
on these. The espresso method uses pressure
to push superheated water through the coffee
grounds. In the infusion method coffee grounds
steep in water and release their soluble flavour
molecules to brew the coffee.
Infusion
Infusion methods of brewing coffee are many and
varied. They include French Press,
perk pot, Brew 'n Touch, Vacuum Pot, Neapolitan
Flip Pot, Turkish coffee, and most commonly,
the automatic drip maker.
According to the Specialty Coffee Association of
America (SCAA) infusion methods should ensure
that the water is between 195 and 205 degrees
Fahrenheit. Hotter and the delicate molecules
are destroyed, cooler and the flavours are
not leached properly from the grinds.
The SCAA also recommends that infusion
should lasts for about 3 minutes. More than
3 minutes and coffee is over-extracted and
becomes bitter. Less time and coffee is under-extracted
and the coffee flavour is not able to develop
in the brew.
Automatic drip coffee makers are the most common
method of brewing coffee. With these coffee makers it is important
to make sure that the water is hot enough and that the brewing cycle
is neither to fast nor too slow. Many automatic drip coffee makers
adequately meet these requirements, even inexpensive ones. Over time,
though, scale builds on the heating elements and coffee residues build
up in the basket and water head. The scale reduces the brewing temperature
and the coffee residues go rancid making even fresh coffee taste bitter.
To prevent or reverse these problems, you can use
a specially formulated coffee maker cleaner
such as Cleancaf™.
Try this before sending your coffee maker to
the dump!
For best results try a permanent coffee filter.
In recent years the fibres in coffee filter
paper have become pressed very tightly in an
effort to reduce production costs. This can
result in the paper preventing some of the
great flavours from passing through the filter.
You should also use a grind that is somewhat
coarse and not powdery. It requires a bit more
coffee, but it is the best grind for this brewing
method.
The French press is a method that allows the brewer
more control over the brewing. Coffee is placed
in a cylinder and hot water is added. The coffee
steeps in the water and after a few minutes
you use a fitted screen to press the coffee
grounds to the bottom which separates them
from the brewed coffee.
If you follow the SCAA guidelines this
can be a great brewing method. You should
wait a minute or two after boiling the water
before adding it to the coffee grounds to let
it cool to 205 degrees Fahrenheit and you
should decant it after 3 minutes to end the
extraction. You will also benefit from a consistent
coarse coffee grind when using a French press.
An alternative to the French press is the new patented Brew
'n Touch. As with the French press, grounds
and hot water are mixed in the infusion chamber.
After about 3 minutes the brewer is placed
on top of a cup which opens a valve that releases
the brewed coffee into the cup.
Turkish coffee is brewed using extremely finely
ground coffee in a specially designed stove
top pot. The coffee and the water are placed
together and set
to boil. On boiling the coffee grounds sink
and the coffee is brewed. There is no attempt
to remove the grinds from the brew.
Espresso
Espresso makers come in many
shapes and sizes from low cost stove top models
to high end commercial models. Recently several
manufacturers have introduced fully automatic
espresso machines that grind the coffee, tamp
the coffee, and brew it with the touch of a
button.
Great espresso requires a very consistent finely
ground coffee. This is required so that it
can be consistently tamped down into the brewing
head. This is very important because the water
is forced through the grinds with pressure
and if there are nooks and crannies for the
water to flow through it will not brew correctly.
Once brewed, espresso coffee is used as the base
for several familiar coffee drinks: latté, cappuccino,
Americano to name a few. Latté mixes espresso with warm milk.
Often milk will be steamed to heat it. Cappuccino
mixes espresso with frothed milk. Steaming is
used with a particular frothing technique to obtain
cappuccino rather than latté. Americano is a shot of espresso
with about 2 shots of hot water.
While the Americano
may not sound very appetizing, it is actually
our favourite coffee brewing method. We find
that it accentuates the flavours of the coffee.
|