GoingMyWay
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- Joined
- Oct 11, 2017
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SouthRider said:I have found that most coffee scoops that come with pots are measuring relatively the same amount (haven't bothered to see what that amount is).
The scoop that came with the Moccamaster is for "2 cups". We have found that for most coffee and our tastes when making a small pot we use 2 scoops (4 cups) of ground coffee and fill with filtered cold water to 7 cups (between the 6 and 8 lines on the machine).
This method makes about 3 1/2 actual cups of coffee to a strength that we like using most medium roast coffee (drinking it black). It also works well for darker roast coffee if you use some type of creamer and/or sweetener.
For a full pot we use 4 scoops, and fill the machine just shy of overflowing.
Really? I was going off the amount of scoops in the Moccamaster manual. For 4 cups of water I was using 3 scoops and for a full 10 cups I was using 7 scoops. The 7 scoops of grounds was just about full. Maybe your scoop is bigger than mine? My scoop is equivalent to 2 TBSP.
Gregor said:One thing to keep in mind: the finer you grind the coffee the more surface area is created. Finer grounds and a finer filter is needed. Surface area, temperature and time determine how much of the contents you'll extract.
In case you want to taste something interesting: take a french press, fill with normal amount of ground coffee and cold water, put on a lid and store in the fridge for 10h, then press. Cold extraction, some like it, some don't.
I think I tried a cold brewed coffee at Starbucks before - seemed like regular iced coffee to me. Nothing really that special, but it seems like cold brew is all the rage lately.
This morning I made 4 cups of coffee and used 25 grams of whole beans ground on 19. I meant to change it to 20 but only remembered when the grinding was just about done. Today's cup tastes much better! I don't taste the acid or bitterness so I'm going to try to drink it black.