Well my journey continues
I had an Amazon gift card burning a hole in my wallet so Wed I ordered a Cosori electric gooseneck, a digital scale, and the Hario V60 kit.
I've been loving my French press results, but haven't dialed in how to just make a cup or two. I've had great results making enough to fill the mug I take on the water, but when I'm just around the house (my son tested positive for covid on Wed morning so I have just been kinda hanging at home with him and not going out just in case) find that's a bit too much. Plus I just wanted to try pour over.
This morning I got up and gave pour over my first go. I used Hoffman's method and went with 30g coffee to 500g water, which I discovered makes the perfect amount of coffee for the ceramic mug I usually use at home.
I feel like I screwed up the pour time, gotta get a feel for how fast to pour, I actually ended up pouring a little slow. I didn't have high hopes for this first attempt, but I'm actually fairly pleased. I used the last of the Ethiopian beans I've been drinking all week, and it turned out quite pleasant. Maybe not quite as flavorful as my recent efforts in the FP, but considering how I didn't feel my first attempts went super well I'm very pleased with the results. I have another bag of a different Ethiopian bean I'm going to open in a bit and continue this learning process. I'm also looking forward to using the kettle and scale to really fine tune my FP efforts.
The one thing that really jumped out at me is that I really need to pick up a burr grinder. I used my blade grinder set between medium and fine, and without laying the grounds out on a flat surface and really examining them, to the naked eye it looks like a pretty nice grind. Well looking at the grounds left in the filter after brewing I was blown away at the inconsistency. With Hoffman's method you swirl the V60 and use a spoon to stir mildly at one point, partly to get keep any grounds from remaining stuck to the sides, but with this grind I was left with many larger grounds stuck to the side after. Like quite a bit larger. So clearly my grinder isn't doing as well as I would have thought.
Money is tight right now so I'll probably wait a month or two, but a new grinder will absolutely be my next investment.
Still, this is a very solid cup of coffee. I'd give it a solid B. I have a feeling a burr grinder and refining my technique and I'll be into the A category very soon. One other thing I REALLY like about the V60 is the easy cleanup compared to the FP
This little journey has been a ton of fun. I really enjoy going down these sorts of rabbit holes, and it's fun to have something new to research and learn. My wife is also enjoying it, as she seems to have an endless amount of coffee nerd jokes to work with.