• @[email protected]
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    1119 hours ago

    What’s the deal with pour over?

    It’s not at all popular here. Everyone has pod machines.

    • @[email protected]
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      57 hours ago

      I drank pods and drip for years before ordering a pourover thingy. The first time I tried nice, freshly ground pourover it was like I was drinking coffee for the first time. The taste is sooooo much better! I’ve also done French press, but pourover is easier to clean. I like pourover better than anything else.

      I can’t drink coffee anymore—caffeine ruins my body and makes me think I’m dying. But I miss it so!

    • @[email protected]
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      58 hours ago

      In my experience, pod machine coffee (specifically Keurig) tastes way worse than auto drip machine coffee, which is worse than the best coffee that you can make via manual pour over.

    • @[email protected]
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      2518 hours ago

      It’s easy and makes good coffee and you don’t have to fuck about with a machine or pods and all kinds of waste

      • @[email protected]
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        6 hours ago

        How does the coffee compare to espresso though?

        I’m not a connoisseur so genuinely asking.

        I don’t have a pod machine. I grind coffee by hand and use an espresso machine.

        My understanding, rightly or wrongly, is that you need the pressure to “crack” the ground coffee and get the good stuff out.

        Edit: it’s ok people I get it.

        • @[email protected]
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          68 hours ago

          I’d say that it’s almost completely different. With pour over you’re getting a longer drink, very different texture (in general a clean cup, varies a bit depending on pour over style) and with good quality light roasted coffee beans a ton of flavor and tasting notes.

          you need the pressure to “crack”

          I’ve never heard this (which doesn’t mean much) - my understanding is that pressure is simply another form of extraction.

        • @Landless2029
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          6 hours ago

          Another point in pour over vs espresso is flavor profile. You get totally different notes and zero bitterness from pour over.

          The key with pour over is controlling how much water and how long it “brews” to prevent over extraction.

          If you have a grinder I’d recommend getting a basic pour over and a gooseneck kettle. Electric ones are fantastic for tea, pour over coffee, moka pot coffee, french press and more.

        • @nBodyProblem
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          6 hours ago

          A well made pour over will be every bit as “good” as a well made espresso. It’s also way less demanding in terms of equipment and technique.

          Making an espresso on par with the best coffee shops requires a great deal of skill/experience and thousands of dollars in equipment. If you don’t have the skill or equipment, straight espresso is usually pretty disgusting.

          You can make a phenomenal pour over with a YouTube video and $150 in gear.

          However, they’re different styles of drinks. A pour over is much less concentrated and doesn’t have the crema/body of espresso.

        • @asdfasdfasdf
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          18 hours ago

          Not true at all. You just grind it at the right level.

    • @ytorfOP
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      315 hours ago

      It’s surprisingly easy to make (but with a ton of room for finesse I am learning). You do need a coffee grinder to take advantage of maximum bean freshness, though, but taste difference is huge

      • @[email protected]
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        28 hours ago

        Taste difference compared to what though?

        Obviously real coffee is better than instant, but pressurised extraction (espresso) always seems a lot more flavourful than say a french press.

        • @ytorfOP
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          15 hours ago

          Compared to machine drip for sure, but it can pull out a lot of different flavors than you’d get from espresso (whether you want those flavors is another issue). My friend turned me on to the 4:6 method if you’re curious about methodology. I wouldn’t argue that it’s better or worse than espresso or drip (okay maybe drip 😂) but it’s giving me the flavors I want out of coffee right now.

        • @[email protected]
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          58 hours ago

          French press is an immersion brewing method, also typically unfiltered. It produces a mellower, more full-bodied brew. Pour-over is a percolation brewing method, typically filtered. It produces stronger, clearer flavors with less body. Both are excellent, cheap alternatives to using an auto drip machine and will absolutely produce better coffee than most pod machines. Which brew method is better depends on personal preferences.

        • @ytorfOP
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          413 hours ago

          For old man reasons: coffee oils can raise cholesterol in some people and using a paper filter lowers the oil levels

          • @[email protected]
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            28 hours ago

            I’m somewhat incredulous. I don’t mean that in a “you’re totally wrong you idiot” kind of way, just that I’m surprised I haven’t heard it before. I’m a cardio patient and drink too much coffee all day long.

            • kadup
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              26 hours ago

              They’re correct, but also exaggerating it. If you ask somebody to brew you a cup using a french press, and using the same ground coffee, a batch of a pour over, you’ll notice some oils floating on the french press cup and not the pour over. So indeed, the paper filter will remove lipids from the brew. But are those in a quantity that could “raise cholesterol in some people”? Absolutely not, you’d have to be chugging coffee like a monster and even then, the tablespoon of butter you use in your toast is a much bigger concern.

              • @ytorfOP
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                13 hours ago

                I am definitely not an expert and probably a poster child for “a little knowledge is a dangerous thing” but after hearing about cafestol and kahweol and reading articles like this, I figured better safe than sorry since I tend toward borderline high.