• @NewNewAccount
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    11 months ago

    Find a local roaster and buy directly from them. Near guaranteed you’ll like it more than what’s available from Target. Price should be similar as well.

    • @eating3645
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      411 months ago

      If you can’t find a local roaster, a good backup is to buy beans from a local coffee shop. While they probably don’t roast their own beans, they likely will sell good quality beans which have been roasted within the past week or two by their wholesale provider.

      Anything roasted within a month is fresh enough to produce nicely complex coffee.

      • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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        11 months ago

        I usually used local roasters but had a giftcard for target and wanted one of those back up bean bags for when my local stuff ran out hence the target coffee. Been tight on money recently since getting married.

        • @eating3645
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          211 months ago

          Great use of the gift card! So how does it compare to your typical source?

          • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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            311 months ago

            It’s a good coffee, very one dimensional though. That’s the main thing I’ve noticed from the grocery store single origin to roaster single origins. I never knew coffee was fruity until I got a small roaster brand from Ethiopia and never looked back. It’s nice everyone once and a while to go back to a simple coffee though and I usually keep a bag like that for when people come over and don’t want a fermented and acidity light roast

    • HidingCat
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      111 months ago

      Freshness is the thing; for my local coffee there are actually versions available in the supermarket, but they’re never as good as what I can buy from a local source that has them roasted within the last few days.

  • @KammicRelief
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    411 months ago

    I just received the shipment from Onyx that you recommended last week ;) I tried a quick pourover of the Burundi, but I got TOO excited and tried a brand new (-to me) V60 recipe when I should’ve used my standard recipe. It was still really good but a new recipe always takes me a few tries before I get the grinds and timings right… so, tomorrow I’m going to try this one again with my standby V60 recipe. BUT – it was really delicious and I can’t wait to try it again with a better pour – the aromas are super promising. Also the packaging is beautiful. Thanks again!

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      211 months ago

      I’m glad you checked them out!! The aromas are what first stuck out to me about Oynx and made me realize what coffee could be

  • @16ozlatte
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    411 months ago

    Bean: +1 for your local roaster! Always good to support your small businesses, and they will likely be fresher. If you don’t have anything local, many roasters will ship (S/O my roaster, Black & White coffee)

    Brew: Large batch of Chemex every morning for the household, with an early afternoon single cup pour over for myself. Hoffman method for both!

    Whipping out the Silvia in the near future to get back on the daily espresso grind (sorry), will probably take over my afternoon slot

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      211 months ago

      Black and white is a great roasters! Lucky they’re your local roaster. Chemex was my first brewer and holds a special place in my heart

  • @jeansburger
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    311 months ago

    I’ve been really digging Corvus Coffee specifically their Dead Reckoning espresso blend.

    It’s been really good for lattes in the morning and making japanese iced coffee in the afternoon (sub half your water by weight in ice in your brewer carafe, and just brew onto the ice with the remaining half of the water halving the pour weights).

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      211 months ago

      TIL Japanese iced coffees, this why I love this coffee community. Thought I knew it all

      • @KammicRelief
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        211 months ago

        Japanese iced coffee is also so fun to make… It’s so pretty when the coffee comes down and the ice starts to melt and crumble. I can’t not take a picture every time I do it XD

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      211 months ago

      Looks delicious, I’ve never heard of Flower Child before but I’m really interested in trying now.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Tiny local-to-me roaster, for more info Brian Quan has an interview with the guy. The coffees are light roasted, washed coffees, so generally in the same family as Sey.

        There are a lot of cool small roasters in the area, like Hydrangea as well which is at the other end of the coffee spectrum in terms of focusing on funky experimental processes.

        Many of them use a shared roasting facility called Coro which seems really neat.

  • atlhart
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    311 months ago

    French press is my morning go to. I generally follow James Hoffman’s method. Boiling hot water, stir for the first couple of minutes, and then let it sit for as long as you can patiently wait to let the fines settle. For me this is 3, 4 minutes max. My total brew time is 6-7 minutes. He recommends like 7-8 minutes rest for a total brew time of about 9-10 minutes.

    If I’m just itching for an extra cup, I have a pour over I use.

    The flavor difference between brew methods is always interesting. If I had to pick, I’d say the full mouthfeel of French press is my preference, but I’m glad I have both options.

    I used to have a nice 15 bar espresso maker but I found I just didn’t use it enough to justify the counter space it took up.

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      211 months ago

      Hard to go wrong with a classic French press, I do love a full body that they give over a pour over

  • @[email protected]
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    211 months ago

    Yeah, I think like a recurring “what are you brewing this week” post makes sense!

    I’m still experimenting with the Orea. Most of the way through my bag of Rogue Wave Doi Seket, and while I never really quite got the hang of this coffee, it become much easier to work with after resting properly. I’ve also almost finished of the recent Sey Fellow drop, and that coffee is delicious.[1]

    I have to say, I want to hate Fellow Drops, because it’s very stupid to have to text a corporation to order a bag of coffee, but it is a fun way to try out new roasters without feeling like I need to order two or three bags. (Yes I know there’s nothing stopping me from just ordering one bag from any store like a normal human being.)

    My sister recently gave me some of Verve’s Sermon to try, and that’s pretty tasty as well.


    1. You can just buy it normally from Sey still ↩︎

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      111 months ago

      Verve is one of my favorite roasters and sermon is amazing, good picks good sir!

  • @[email protected]
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    211 months ago

    I’ve been pulling some shots of Grounds for Change Dolce Espresso. Getting good results, but I need to replace the gasket on my group head - I’m starting to get a little clear-water dribble around one edge!

  • @WASTECH
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    211 months ago

    I have been getting my beans from Fellow Drops for about a year or so now. I haven’t had a single bad bag from them, and I am always getting to try new things. Their bags can be a bit more pricey, but so far I would say it is worth the price.

    My two favorite bags I’ve gotten from them so far have been from Onyx. Their stuff is expensive, but damn is it good.

    • @BestBunsInTown_OP
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      111 months ago

      You should try out verve or sey! Both similar but less know roasters. But I will say Oynx is kind of a standard for me when it comes to roasters

      • @WASTECH
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        211 months ago

        I’ve had Sey and enjoyed it as well! Verve sounds familiar, so I might have had it before.

  • PAPPP
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    211 months ago

    I’m making at least a partial tour of my local roasters’ espresso blends to exercise my recently upgraded home espresso setup (I’m tipping my location here, but have decided that’s fine for this account). I live in a sufficiently hipstery city that it’s going to take months to work all the way through at my rate of consumption, we’ve got at least 8-10 roasters in the area now, and …most… of them aren’t known to be wildly distasteful businesses.

    First two candidates:

    An 8oz bag of 4th Level Roasters’ Espresso Blend. Not terrible, but $18/lb, darker than I prefer, and “robusta forward” in that great body but unfortunate tire-fire flavor sort of way, so I don’t think I’ll get it again.

    A pound of Nate’s Coffee’s Nate’s Espresso Blend which is $15/lb, and delicious. I’ve been meaning to visit their brick-and-mortar for a while, it’s in easy biking distance, and they have a lovely “Free local shipping OR $2 drink credit if purchased in their brick-and-mortar” deal on pound bags, so I rolled myself down one afternoon to pick up the beans and a cup of coldbrew made with their After Midnight Dark Roast, which was delicious enough that I might interrupt my plan and grab bag of that soon for some hottest-months coldbrew.

    Barring that diversion, I think next is Magic Beans, a lot of folks seem to be in to them and their espresso blend isn’t super dark, which I usually prefer. garagebeand’s EspressYoSelf is also on my list.