Coffee - gween tea

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I keep trying to make cold brew, it keeps coming out tasting not as good as the store-bought stuff. What am I doing wrong?
I never tried store-bought cold brew, but the one I made tasted similar to regular coffee that I make in my french press. And all I do is add ground coffee into a jar, pour in some cold water and put it into the fridge for at least 12 hours. Also, while it's brewing I take it out and shake it every once in a while.
 
I never tried store-bought cold brew, but the one I made tasted similar to regular coffee that I make in my french press. And all I do is add ground coffee into a jar, pour in some cold water and put it into the fridge for at least 12 hours. Also, while it's brewing I take it out and shake it every once in a while.
That's what I've been doing and it still tastes a little "off".
When I make regular coffee with the same beans it doesn't taste odd, only when cold.
 
That's what I've been doing and it still tastes a little "off".
When I make regular coffee with the same beans it doesn't taste odd, only when cold.
Could it be some thing about your fridge? Like there's no food thats gone bad or like off smell? Cold brew in my experience is definitely something that can "Pick up" a weird taste. And you only mentioned it tasting strange coming from the fridge. I had some fermenting kefir and a bell pepper happened to go bad one time and oh boy did that kefir taste like bell pepper
 
Could it be some thing about your fridge? Like there's no food thats gone bad or like off smell? Cold brew in my experience is definitely something that can "Pick up" a weird taste. And you only mentioned it tasting strange coming from the fridge. I had some fermenting kefir and a bell pepper happened to go bad one time and oh boy did that kefir taste like bell pepper
I make it in (large) a sealed glass bottle. Does it need to breathe? Is the fact that it's closed a possible cause?
 
What about adding baking soda to your coffee?
Generally a pinch should be enough.
I heat about 8 oz of water with 1/2 tbsp of baking soda a few times a week as needed for terrible acid reflux. It will get all gas out of your system through both ends and neutralize the acid in your stomach. It tastes disgusting and is an exercise in masochism, but it is the lesser evil to having stomach acid come up your esophagus. If, for whatever reason, I ever mix shit up and get baking soda in my coffee, it completely destroys what makes the coffee great. I advocate drinking heated baking soda water separate from your coffee, because baking soda in any quantity will make your coffee taste funny.
 
Tried a French press. I now understand why people say those who use machines are making coffee wrong. It's not bitter at all. Really, it's the most refreshing coffee I've ever had. Holy shit.
 
I once again am advocating for pour over and ultralight roast supremacy.
I have been doing pour overs the past month or so and I forgot how much I like them, thank you for the reminder.

Tried a French press. I now understand why people say those who use machines are making coffee wrong. It's not bitter at all. Really, it's the most refreshing coffee I've ever had. Holy shit.
It really is a different drink at a certain point. Like I don't mind coffee from a machine at all, it has a certain charm and its kinda nostalgic. But when you get into French press/ pour over it elevates it to an entirely different experience.

What gear do you all use out of curiosity? I used to use a glass French press, but then switched to a stainless steel one as I found it kept brewing temperature higher (and I like my coffee at the temperature of the sun). Has anyone made a small change in gear and found a decent size improvement?
 
I have been doing pour overs the past month or so and I forgot how much I like them, thank you for the reminder.


It really is a different drink at a certain point. Like I don't mind coffee from a machine at all, it has a certain charm and its kinda nostalgic. But when you get into French press/ pour over it elevates it to an entirely different experience.

What gear do you all use out of curiosity? I used to use a glass French press, but then switched to a stainless steel one as I found it kept brewing temperature higher (and I like my coffee at the temperature of the sun). Has anyone made a small change in gear and found a decent size improvement?
not a gear change per say, but water change. There is some interesting research on mineral concentration and alkalinity of water effecting flavor profile. Another is temperature adjustments, using a lower temp can help with things like clarity and a more tea like body since you're extracting at a lower temp and some compounds will extract only at higher temps or really increase the rate of extraction of certain compounds. Of some of said compounds you don't want some of them. That said you can also just grind more coarse. There's many levers to pull with this kinda thing.
 
I've been making my own coffee creamer since the start of the year and it's been incredibly simple.

I usually just mix equal part whole milk and half+half, then however much flavored syrup to desired sweetness. For instance, about 1.5 cups each of the dairy and 1/2 cup syrup in a quart mason jar and stir. You could use heavy cream instead of half+half, but I don't like how thick it is, plus it's slightly more expensive. Even the syrup is super easy. Just a simple syrup with equal parts sugar and water, and flavoring. For vanilla creamer I use vanilla bean paste, and I just made peppermint mocha syrup with a few tablespoons cocoa powder and mint extract. I'm thinking of trying to experiment with making butter pecan next. Depending on brand, making it from scratch costs 2/3 to 1/2 the cost of store bought. The only downside is it keeps up to a week or so, but I froze leftovers into ice cube trays and it worked fine in iced coffee.

I got a cheap espresso machine recently (well, it was a gift so it was free) and I can make pretty nice coffee drinks for a fraction of the price. A $6 drink from Starbucks costs me under $1.
 
I don't have fancy coffee, I drink regular shop brand instant coffee (not the cheapest), black no sugar in the week.
I do add one ingredient at the weekends. A few grains of frankincense resin.
If you get the chance, try it. They completely complement each other.
 
I tried our Dear Feeder's recommendation of Caffe Bustillo, I thought it was very ok
 
I tried our Dear Feeder's recommendation of Caffe Bustillo, I thought it was very ok
I can't get it in the tin or the foil pouches where I live anymore. They only sell it in the big-ass plastic tubs. I couldn't drink it fast enough to make that add up for me, so I usually end up buying Cafe La Llave instead. It's fine for its purpose, making café cubano.
 
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I've been trying out some more heavily processed coffees like co-ferments or honey processed coffee (an in between of washed and natural) I've had good experiences with honey processed coffees. They're alot easier to get good extraction out of and the taste profile tends to very fruit forward even when you're not really min maxing. I normally do super light roasted coffee with a 98mm burr set (am very autistic about this) so I normally run into under extraction being an issue rather than over extraction. I haven't yet really gotten what I could call over extraction from honey processed beans, though that could be due to a combination of a more unimodal burr set and/or my water profile. Either way, i'm drinking some of that coffee made via frenchpress which anyone can do and grind doesn't matter nearly as much so I shill it.
 
my favorite grocery store brand is peet's and it's pretty much all i drink when i make coffee. major dickason is my favorite followed by their french roast and then big bang. i buy it as whole beans and grind it with a good hand grinder. i've tried several methods and always default back to french press because of how no frills and idiot proof it is and it makes robust full bodied coffee that isn't weak and watery feeling/tasting. a couple days ago i was curious about k cups and tried one with the one they had in the lobby after i was done with an appointment somewhere. it sucked balls, it tasted exactly like what i brew with a french press to avoid. i took 2 sips and poured the rest out in the parking lot.

as for tea, my favorite is honey oolong from upton tea imports. if anyone decides to give this a try i recommend brewing it in a kyusu style teapot with a strainer at the base of the spout rather than a teapot with a removable mesh infuser basket. oolong needs a lot of space to fully unfurl. aside from that i also like a strong earl gray, and kroger/smiths store brand, private selection, has a nice cinnamon herbal tea called sweet cinnamon spice. i believe it is sweetened with stevia. to me stevia often tastes weird but it's a good fit for this.
 
Black.

No sugar.

No milk.

Just give it to me straight, excellent for appetite suppression - highly recommended for those who are getting into intermittent fasting.
 
My go to when I could be fucked making my own coffee was locally roasted beans ground in a hand grinder, then into this thing that was like a cross between a pour over and a french press. You put a paper filter in, let the coffee brew, then lift and let it filter through a valve. It was good and didn't require any fancy machinery, but cleaning the hand grinder was a fucking nightmare.
 
Any other Kiwis into "Turkish" style coffee? It's strong stuff. One cup of this and I am wired.
I've tried to get into it, but I need to do more experimentation. I don't mind the sweetness but the super thick texture kinda fucks with me
 
That's what I've been doing and it still tastes a little "off".
When I make regular coffee with the same beans it doesn't taste odd, only when cold.
It may have something to do with how coarse the grind is. Different brewing methods need different prep. With cold brew you want a coarser grind to keep things from overextracting due to the extended steep. It could also just be your coffee straight up not working well for cold brew.
 
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